Posts Tagged ‘efficiency’

The Fun Theory

November 4th, 2009

I’ve been noticing a trend recently among car makers who are implementing game play in their products to change otherwise ingrained behavioral patterns. Note the following sequence of events:

First, a week ago, I was forwarded an email from my father which had a link to The Fun Theory. This is VW’s site wherein they try to get people to recycle more, or clean up their refuse, or even, god forbid, take the stairs occasionally. Here are the 3 videos from their site which are all delightfully addictive.

Next, I was watching TV when I spotted a commercial featuring a the new 2010 Ford Fusion. I’m unable to find the commercial, but below is a nice demo video. Notice around 45 seconds in, how increasing your MPG allows you to magically grow a tree or a bush or whatever that plant is. If driven in Florida, it will even sprout oranges.

The last component of this trifecta appeared before me in a brief apparition last night when I saw a commercial for the new Honda Insight Hybrid with “Eco” mode. The Honda site has a nice, albeit un-embeddable video which can be viewed here. Honda goes a few steps further than Ford and will notify you via 3 different meters how efficiently you are driving: 1) a color gradient which shifts fromĀ  green to blue as your MPG decreases, 2) a bar graph which will tell you if you are braking too hard or accelerating too quickly, and 3) surprise, surprise, plants that bloom when you are being efficient.

The true testament to whether these are gimmicks orĀ  not will be whether or not the 2011 editions of these cars will have the same notifications. I personally think that Honda has the right idea with the acceleration/braking bar graph and the color gradient…I just think a plant growing is too cheesy to be effective. Honestly, a better implementation of game play would be to set up target MPG’s and then see if you can surpass it with each tank of gas. Ford/Honda could even have a website dedicated to high scores – it would be an arcade game for adults! Let’s be honest, who wouldn’t drive like an 80 year old woman with cataracts in order to conserve gas then?

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80-20 Rule

October 4th, 2009

I’ve been thinking a lot about the Pareto Principle as it applies to my business, and it’s certainly been one of the harder things to learn in my first high tech venture. The Pareto Principle says that for any activity that you need to complete, you can get 80% done in 20% of the time. It’s the last 20% of any activity that takes 80% of your effort, so in effect, if you were just to get to the “good enough” mark, then you are saving a phenomenal amount of time.

In any company like this, there are only two shortages- time and money, and it seems like every day is a race against the clock. At first, our team was striving for perfection, and we wouldn’t release a product until it was perfect. Learning where that “good enough” mark is was a struggle, but I think we are slowly getting better.