1 / 19

Prof. Steve Tello Prof. Ralph Jordan

Workshop I: Identifying Problems Team Building. Prof. Steve Tello Prof. Ralph Jordan. Tonight ’ s Agenda. 6:00 – 6:30 Welcome, Introductions, Overview 6:30 – 7:00 What makes a “ good ” problem? 7:00 – 7:30 Team Building around problems. DifferenceMaker Team. Faculty Fellows

ldale
Télécharger la présentation

Prof. Steve Tello Prof. Ralph Jordan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Workshop I: Identifying Problems Team Building Prof. Steve TelloProf. Ralph Jordan

  2. Tonight’s Agenda • 6:00 – 6:30 Welcome, Introductions, Overview • 6:30 – 7:00 What makes a “good” problem? • 7:00 – 7:30 Team Building around problems

  3. DifferenceMaker Team • Faculty Fellows • Prof. John Brown GSE • Prof. Guanling Chen CS • Prof. Deb. Finch MSB • Prof. Ralph Jordan MSB • Prof. Val Kijewksi MSB • Prof. Ainat Koran CHS • Prof. Chad Montrie FAHSS • Prof. Dan Sullivan ENG • http://www.uml.edu/differencemaker Staff • Ha Pho • Holly Butler Coops • James Abdallah • Gianni Falzone • Michael Jannino • Faith Malay

  4. Welcome to the $25K Idea Challenge! • 25 applications as of todayAll Applications due Feb. 24! • All 6 Colleges Participating • New Products, New Services, New Causes • Thank you all for joining the Idea Challenge! • So what have you gotten yourself into?

  5. What Is Next? • 9 weeks to Idea Challenge Event – April 15 • Build your Team • Research your Problem, Opportunity and Solution • Prepare a 3-5 minute Rocket Pitch, Project Executive Summary and Poster • Build your online E-Portfolio • Then impress the Judges!

  6. So Tell Us About You, Your Team & Your Challenge • Introduce your Team • Tell us about the Challenge you are solving • Do you need additional help? • In 1 minute 

  7. Problem/Solution Model

  8. The Rocket Pitch • The Problem • What problem are you addressing? Customer pain? • Who is affected by the problem? • The Opportunity • Demonstrate your knowledge regarding the opportunity associated with solving this problem. • Estimate the number of people affected by the problem • The Solution • What is your proposed solution? • Who value does your solution provide? How will you sustain it? • Call to Action • What do you want? How will you use funds? • Funding, advice, contacts, board members?

  9. Rocket Pitch: Selling Your Idea • A Succinct Delivery of your proposed solution! • 3 slides in 3 minutes (alright, maybe 5 : - )

  10. What Makes a Good Idea Challenge Problem? • A problem that matters to you, and to others • Typically a problem with some social importance • A problem that others understand • Can you can quickly explain the problem in a way that others understand • A problem that elicits multiple perspectives • A problem with tangible solutions • A problem that maps to award categories

  11. 2013 Idea Challenge Categories • Campus-wide DifferenceMaker • Developing Nation Prosthetic • Contribution to a Sustainable Environment • Lowell Sprouts/Lets Grow Lowell, Hybrid Power Trike • First to Market • GrabABite, Point Stick • Innovative Technology • Robotic Feeding Arm, Notoja • Significant Social Impact • Healthy Habits, Bright Future Generation

  12. Step I – Define the Problem • Clearly state the problem you want to solve • Define who is affected by the problem • Specifics count here! • Who? How many? What color are their eyes? • How are they affected? • How important is it to solve this problem? • Details are important • Best way to find this information: • Research & Talking to People

  13. Step I – Define the Problem • Take 5 Minutes and Start to Define the Problem • What is the problem you wish to solve? • Who is affected by the problem? • How significant is this problem? • Why is it important to solve this problem? • What don’t you know about this problem? • What do you need help with? • Where can you find answers?

  14. Answering these Questions • Resources to help • First, talk to the people affected by the problem • Talk to the people you will implement or use your solution • Library – E Library • Contact the Reference Librarian for your area • DM Faculty Fellows • Fellow Students

  15. Workshop II – Assess the Opportunity • Demonstrate your knowledge regarding the scope of the opportunity associated with solving this problem • You already started this in Step I • How is the problem currently addressed? • Who is currently addressing this problem? • How can current solutions be improved upon?

  16. Homework • Before our next workshop, Feb. 19Try to answer these questions • Talk to 25 people about the problem • Develop a list of 5-10 questions • Who are the people affected by the problem? • Why is it important to solve this problem? • What bothers people the most about the problem? • Who else has attempted to solve the problem? • How effective are current solutions/attempts? Be prepared to discuss in the workshop.

  17. What’s Next? • Wed., Feb. 19, 6-7:30 PM • Identifying Opportunities • Application due Feb. 24, but get it in sooner!

  18. Upcoming Events

  19. Contact Us • differencemaker@uml.edu • www.uml.edu/differencemaker • @difference_uml

More Related