Winning innovation competitions or innovation awards can be a major achievement and proof of you and your teams ability to innovate. Which innovation competitions or awards should you submit to? Are there any downsides to submitting and winning a competiton or an award?
In this weeks show, we discuss the structures and thinking behind innovation competitions and innovations awards and I share the 5 most common mistakes I've experienced as a judge.
Innovation Awards
* A special guest, Tom Kuczmarski, shared an update on the Chicago Innovation Awards.
* This award is now in its 15th year.
* Of the ~200 awards given in the past, 100% of the companies and organizations are still around.
* This year they will give out 10 awards including some new ones such as; Social Innovation, Peoples Choice Awards and Neighborhood Awards.
* Criteria they use to select the winner of the Chicago Innovation Award?
* What was the customer need the innovation addressed?
* What was the impact from the innovation?
* Was their a competitive response? (indication of impact since others attempt to copy)
* Did the innovation create a new category?
Innovation Competitions
* What are the different type of innovation competitions?
* Solution search like Idea Connection
* Broad new ideas
* Narrow/focused new ideas
* Approaches to applying to a competition
* Forward approach: Read the competition and solve for the ask proposed in competition material
* Backward approach: Take an idea you already have and find a competition where it can be applied
5 Most Common Mistakes
* Not doing sufficient research on the space to fully understand the problem/ask beyond what was presented in the competition material.
* Not fully reading/understand the ask. Make sure you don't inject assumptions and bias into crafting your solution to a misunderstood ask.
* Not following the guidelines on submissions. Understand what/how/format of the submission.
* Submitting an weak/shallow submission. Apply some deep thinking (go beyond the obvious) and create a killer presentation/pitch. Don't short change it.
* Not understanding the IP (intellectual property) rules for the competition.
Show Links:
* Idea Connection
* Chicago Innovation Awards
* Tom Kuczmarski interview on a previous episode of Killer Innovation