• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar

IRL Experience Design

  • Best Of
  • My Work
  • About
  • Austin Experiences
    • 60+ Weird Things To Do In Austin
    • The Top 13 Immersive Experiences in Austin, Texas
    • 45+ Unique Things To Do in Austin (A local’s guide)
    • Things to Do in Austin When it Rains
    • 5 Fun & Unique Austin Team Building Activities for Small Teams
    • Austin Halloween Guide
    • Austin Christmas Guide
    • Austin Easter Guide
  • Contact

Productivity

Innovate One Thing at a Time

May 27, 2022

If you’re the type of person (like me) who has lots of ideas and wants to create novel things, it’s easy to start “novelizing” everything. 

For example, I created the new experience The Eureka Room. It’s an experience that is unlike anything else people have done (as far as I know).

It’s tempting have the website for The Eureka Room reflect The Eureka Room’s personality. To make the website navigation clever and surprising and the ticketing system a unique experience.

In my mind I’m giving them the full end-to-end Eureka Room experience and the throughline is consistent. Awesome.

But in the mind of someone who lands on the website it is just totally confusing. Put yourself in their shoes: You clicked on a google ad that said “cool unique Austin experience” and it directed you The Eureka Room’s site.

You land on the site to get more information but instead you are given a challenge. You don’t want a challenge. You don’t want cleverness. You want information. You have a problem that needs solved You want to know “What is this thing The Eureka Room?” and all I did was give you an additional problem to solve, “What the hell is up with this confusing website?”

With this strategy, I would soon see that I’m spending a lot on ads to drive traffic to the website. But the booking rate would be miserably low. When I see these terrible conversion rates, there’s too many false conclusions I could draw. Maybe they don’t like my offer. Maybe the price is too high. Maybe the website is confusing. Maybe the booking process is confusing. Who knows.

For those of us “idea people”, the temptation to innovate everywhere is strong. But innovative isn’t the right word here. We’re actually being creative. Or maybe expressive. But not innovative.

If we were being innovative we would act more like scientists.

When you innovate in science, you change one thing at a time and test it. You change one ingredient, one part, one method – just one thing. Then you see what the result is and adjust just one thing for the next test. Chemists don’t throw every chemical they can find into a beaker and hope something good happens. It’s possible something good might happen, but it’s highly improbable. 

Two related notes…

If you find yourself being creative in all areas, turn back to your mission statement for direction. The mission helps keep you on the path by showing you which actions to take and all the many many actions to not take. (Assuming you have a well written mission. More on developing a great mission here.) The mission of The Eureka Room is to create charming absurd experiences, not novel websites. Testing find this out through testing one innovation at a time.

If someone is on a website looking for information, that is a transactional moment – not one a moment to turn into an absurd experience. It should be mostly prosaic and over quickly. You must understand what type of experience they are seeking at each touchpoint. (I recommend the book Designing Experiences to understand the different types of touchpoints.)

Posted Under: Experience Design, Productivity Tags: #CreativeProcess, #Productivity, #Business

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 65
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

About Me

I make awesome experiences for people. Read More

Search my blog

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

See My Favorite Books

  • For IRL XD
  • For Learning
  • For Getting Things Done

@IRL_Experience_Design

instaglogo

Secondary Sidebar

See My Halloween Event Guide Featuring Halloween events for over 1000 cities!

A cute ghost holding a map of Halloween Events

See My Holiday Event Guide Featuring Holiday events for over 1000 cities!

A cute elf holds a map of Christmas and holiday events around the city.

VISIT MY BOUTIQUE IMMERSIVE EXPERIENCE

SEE MY AUSTIN EVENTS WALL CALENDAR

Austin Events and Things to Do 2025 Wall Calendar Cover

Read My Recent Posts

  • Bulk Cold Emailing For Beginners
  • IRLXD Update 9/12/2024
  • Eureka Room Update 6/18/2024
  • A Creator’s Trap: Confusing the Joy of Creating with the User Experience
  • Lessons Learned: Don’t fall in love with a challenge that does not need taken on.
  • Where to find 1000’s of books on creating successful experiences
  • Designing With Experiential Modes (Part 2)

  • Contact
  • About
  • Privacy Policy