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Hybrid
Mad Libs®
By
Tom Pryor
Every
time my family took cross-country car trips, Mom would pack snacks, a
pencil and a Mad Libs® book.
Mad Libs®, as
you may recall, are short stories created by filling in blanks with an
assortment of names, nouns, verbs, and adjectives. Miles and time would
pass by as Mom, Dad, my brother and I took turns offering up random words
to create funny stories.
Mad Libs® also
have practical applications. Combining pre-existing items to create
a new outcome… commonly called a hybrid… is a time-tested, but sometimes
overlooked method, for solving problems or creating opportunities.
Past
Hybrid Mad Libs®
You likely own several
“Hybrid Mad Libs®”. Trevor Bayliss had an idea years ago to combine
his wind-up alarm clock with his electric radio. Today, clock radios are
commonplace. Someone put a luggage cart and a suitcase together to produce
the rollerboards, commonplace at any airport. Or how about the person
who had the idea of putting a copier and telephone together, now commonly
called your fax machine.
Present Hybrid
Mad Libs®
Inventions and solutions
don’t always start with a blank sheet of paper and pen. Combining pre-existing
methods and items has given birth to several hybrids the past couple years:
- Lean Six Sigma…
“Lean Six Sigma combines the two most important improvement trends of
our time: making work better (using Six Sigma) and making work faster
(using Lean principles).” [1]
Led by Mayor Graham Richard, the employees of Fort Wayne, Indiana have
had success in using Lean Six Sigma to simultaneously improve stewardship
of tax dollars while improving the quality of city services.
- Hybrid cars...
With the advent of $3 gas, gas-electric hybrids, once considered a Mad
Libs® idea by Detroit, are selling out at premium prices. “Competitors
used to pooh-pooh the hybrid gasoline-electric motor as an expensive
gimmick appealing mainly to tree-huggers. But now that Toyota is on
track to sell 400,000 hybrids next year, they’ve changed their tune.”
[2]
- Great American
Songbook…
What do you get when you combine a sixty year old rock-star with 1940’s
pop songs? The answer is over ten million CD sales in the past couple
years. Rocker Rod Stewart has rejuvenated his career singing the old
standards.
- CostMapping™…
Combining process mapping with Time-based Activity Based Costing gave
birth to CostMapper™, ICMS’ exciting new software product. Combining
pictures, words and numbers into one screen, CostMapper™ makes ABC a
simple “point & click”. To watch a demo of CostMapper™, go
to www.ICMS.net.
- Hybrid classes…
College courses that combine 50% classroom with 50% web-based online
instruction are growing in popularity. California State University Long
Beach and the University of Wisconsin use hybrid classes to add student
capacity without adding expensive buildings and professors.
- The Principles…
What do you get when you combine the clergy with a consultant? Some
might say “an argument” or others “naptime”. In this case, the result
was a popular business book titled The
Principles. It combines Biblical absolutes with business best
practices to form a personal and professional life-changing story.
Steps to create
Hybrid Mad Libs®
Are you or your organization
searching for a fresh approach to improve sales, costs and profits? Instead
of starting over, use what you’ve already got. Look for combinations of
existing products, services, activities and partnerships to create value.
Hybrid Mad Libs®
is a simple method to create practical ideas by looking for weird combinations
of things that pre-exist. The three steps to create Hybrid Mad Libs®
are:
Step One:
Instead of nouns, verbs and adjectives, on a sheet of paper label five
vertical columns: (1) Suppliers; (2) Product Lines; (3) Services (e.g.,
activities); (4) Processes; and, (5) Customers.
Step Two:
Create a list of items in each column. For example, Kinko’s might list:
| Suppliers |
Products |
Services |
Processes |
Customers |
| FedEx |
Paper |
Copies |
Procurement |
Businesses |
| Champion |
Boxes |
Shipping |
Fulfillment |
Individuals |
| Xerox |
Posters |
Printing |
Marketing |
FedEx |
Step Three: Scan
horizontally looking for new combinations of products, services, activities
or partnerships. Most new ideas are hybrids of things that pre-exist.
Scanning the example above, it should be no surprise why my local Kinko’s
store has a new Hybrid Mad Libs® name: FedEx Kinko’s!
Potential Hybrid
Mad Libs®
Hybrid Mad Libs®
are the result of left brain logic and right brain creativity:
- Combine the
cost of auto insurance with gasoline. According to authors Barry
Nalebuff and Ian Ayres, “This would eliminate the need for uninsured
motorist coverage and allocate liability costs to people who drive the
most.” [3]
- Combine nutritional
value with monetary value. To encourage food stamp recipients to
eat wisely, Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee has proposed positive and
negative consequences linked to choices ... $1.00 of food stamps used
for a healthy food would equal $1.25 at checkout while $1 spent on junk
food would be worth only 75 cents.
- Combine conventional
ideas with weird ideas. “Reward success and failure, punish inaction.”
[4]
After graduating from college, I worked for Johnson & Johnson. CEO
Jim Burke never fired people for mistakes. J&J fired people for
either repeating mistakes or never making mistakes.
When I trade in my
Ford truck next month, I will seriously consider purchase of a hybrid.
How about you? Do you need to purchase or create a hybrid? Fill in the
blanks:
If I combined
_________ and __________ I’d get _____________ .
Let me know what
Hybrid Mad Lib® you create. Send your Hybrid or your comments to me
at TomPryor@icms.net.
[1] What
is Lean Six Sigma?, Mike George, Dave Rowlands & Bill Kastle,
McGraw Hill, 2004
[2] Hybrid Envy, Alex Taylor, Fortune Magazine, October 3, 2005
[3] Why
Not?, Barry Nalebuff & Ian Ayres, Harvard Business School Press,
2003
[4] Weird
Ideas That Work, Robert Sutton, Free Press 2002
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