![]() Commentary by Katie Barry |
January 19, 2009
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Not-so-live From iSixSigma Live! Summit & Awards |
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Last week I was in Miami for iSixSigma Live! Summit & Awards. (iSixSigma is a sister publication to Real Innovation.) Innovation made its way into the agenda in a few places. (Readers of Real Innovation and The TRIZ Journal are familiar with TRIZ expert Ellen Domb who joined us for two days – talking about TRIZ in a breakout session and a workshop on the final day.) Innovation was also a topic for the first day's general session – David Silverstein, President and CEO, Breakthrough Management Group International – spoke about "Six Sigma and Innovation: A Distinction Without a Difference."
A few key points from his presentation include:
He also discussed the principle of separation in time. (It's something most of us have probably used to solve problems without knowing "it" had a name!) Separation in time can be explained by the following: you're working on a problem, you get stuck, you go to a colleague's office, you explain your problem and you come up with the idea during the explanation. The collaboration was with yourself – you could have been in anyone's office, whomever was there listening was irrelevant to the solution. The solution came about because you had to re-process and re-state the problem at another time. If only every problem could be solved so easily... |
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| Categories: Conference, Methodology | |
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