1 / 14

SCAMPER TECHNIQUE

SCAMPER TECHNIQUE. Please use this power point as a guide to help you understand this technique. SCAMPER. This acronym provides a checklist for asking questions and testing assumptions so that changes can be made to existing products and services to identify new opportunities.

trixie
Télécharger la présentation

SCAMPER TECHNIQUE

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. SCAMPER TECHNIQUE Please use this power point as a guide to help you understand this technique.

  2. SCAMPER This acronym provides a checklist for asking questions and testing assumptions so that changes can be made to existing products and services to identify new opportunities. Translation: This is a fun way to help you remember how to change parts of a story to make it your own. 

  3. SCAMPER This technique can be used in a variety of ways. In writing, it can be used to create new, original sentences, paragraphs, or compositions. There are NO limits to its uses! Be creative! The SCAMPER Technique is used to produce original ideas.

  4. • S—Substitute (e.g., components, materials, people) • C—Combine (e.g., mix, combine with other assemblies or services, integrate) • A—Adapt (e.g., alter, change function, use part of another element) • M—Magnify/Modify (e.g., increase or reduce in scale, change shape, modify attributes) • P—Put to other uses • E—Eliminate (e.g., remove elements, simplify, reduce to core functionality) • R—Rearrange/Reverse (e.g., turn inside out or upside down

  5. What does “S” stand for? S -Substitute • Think about substituting part of the product or process for something else. • Typical questions: What else instead? Who else instead? What other materials, ingredients, processes, power, sounds, approaches, or forces might I substitute? Which other place?

  6. What does “C” stand for? C -Combine • Think about combining two or more parts of the product or process to make something new or to enhance synergy. • Typical questions: What mix, assortment, alloy, or ensemble might I blend? What ideas, purposes, units, or appeals might I combine? • Synergy may be defined as two or more things functioning together to produce a result not independently obtainable. (Doesn’t normally happen.)

  7. What does the “A” stand for? • A –Adapt/Adjust • Think about which parts of the product or process could be adapted or how you might change the nature of the product or process. • Typical questions: Does the past offer a parallel? What else is like this? What other idea does this suggest? What might I adapt for use as a solution? What might I copy? Who might I emulate

  8. What does the “M” stand for? • M- Modify/distort/magnify/ minify • Think about changing part or all of the product or process, or distorting it in an unusual way. • Typical questions: What other meaning, color, motion, sound, smell, form, or shape might I adopt? What might I add?

  9. What does the “P” stand for? • P -Put to other purposes • Think of how you might put the product or process to another use or how you might reuse something from somewhere else. • Typical questions: What new ways are there to use this? Might this be used in other places? Which other people might I reach? To what other uses might this be put if it is modified?

  10. What does the “E” stand for? • E -Eliminate • Think of what might happen if you eliminated parts of the product or process and consider what you might do in that situation. • Typical questions: What might I understate? What might I eliminate? What might I streamline? What might I make smaller, lower, shorter, or lighter

  11. What does the “R” stand for? R- Rearrange/Reverse • Think of what you might do if parts of the product or process worked in reverse or were sequenced differently. • Typical questions: What might be rearranged? What other pattern, layout, or sequence might I adopt? Can components be interchanged? Should I change pace or schedule? Can positives and negatives be swapped? Could roles be reversed?

  12. REVIEW • S • Substitute • What or who can be used instead? What other ingredients, place, or time? Other material? Other Process? Other power? Other place? Other approach? Other sounds? • C • Combine • What materials, features, processes, people, products, or components can be combined? • A • Adapt • Is there anything that can be changed? What else is like this? What could be copied? • M • Modify, Magnify, or Minify • Can you change the meaning, color, motion, sound, smell, form, or shape? Can you distort it? • P • Put to Other Uses • Are there new ways to use or reuse it? Is there another market? • E • Eliminate • Can you reduce time, effort, or cost? Can you remove part of it? • R • Rearrange • Can you interchange components or patterns? Can you change the pace or schedule? Can it be reversed?

More Related