The Anti-Fragile Playbook podcast

Refining the Vision and Engaging New Activists Through Rapid, Low-Fidelity Prototyping

0:00
1:48:51
15 Sekunden vorwärts
15 Sekunden vorwärts

Imagine a product in a store named "Seed," which will:

  • Preserve community
  • Create economic opportunity
  • and leverage technology to define the future

What's in the box?

  • 150 hours of hands-on community activation
  • 24/7 virtual community marketplace, where creating a job is as easy as creating a listing
  • Additional household revenue, and access to assistance to launch and sustain a home-based business.

But "Seed" is not an actual product.

"Seed" is the product of a single day's collaboration, using less than $3 in materials (cardboard box, printouts from the Internet, no more than 50 words, and ordinary Scotch tape).

In this podcast, Ruth Glendinning and Kent Dahlgren discuss the use of low-fidelity prototyping tools (such as hypothetical retail products like the imagined "Seed") to secure and retain the attention of new team members, enlisting their assistance to bring about the desired outcome, while refining the project's aspired vision.

As discussed in the prior podcast, the three core team members (Ruth, Trudy, and Kent) have been joined by two additional contributors, but it’s important for the new team members to hit the ground running, and from a place of ownership and an authentic spirit of shared attribution.

This podcast introduces the methodology for rapid and streamlined onboarding of management-level collaboration, because the team might have not the luxury to invest months or even years for new team members to acquire all of the requisite background and context.

Low-fidelity prototyping: using an empty cardboard box, printouts from the Internet, no more than about 50 words, and scotch tape, Ruth, Kent, and Trudy created a physical prototype, representing what they would hoped to deliver to their pilot community in the first three months.

This crude, “low fidelity“ prototype stimulated within the team significant and high context discussions around how the concept and the plan might be further streamlined, the overall message further refined.

For this is vital and important: these core team members will be “training the trainer“ of those who will join at a later date, and those “third generation“ participants will be on the front line for community members seeking a safe refuge where they can vent their sense of justified anguish and outrage.

For the local Anti-Fragile pilot, things are coming together in a very real way.

This podcast discusses a variety of practical, battle-tested, and accessible tools for navigating a community activation process worthy the investment.

Further, Ruth and Kent discuss pragmatic reasons why activists might want to actually recruit "the broken" to participate as peers, so the collective effort is able to deftly navigate the community engagement process as it evolves.

Therefore, it's discussed why the core activist team may care to invest in a spirit of forgiveness and redemption, in reference to the Japanese art of Kintsugi (金継ぎ), where a broken dish is repaired with gold, creating something new, and of transcendent value.

Ultimately, this plan delivers a structured series of transactions and interactions to bring about a transformational experience.

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