TRIZ – Blessing in Disguise

Blessing in Disguise is normally applied as follows:

1. Use harmful factors (in particular, harmful effects of the environment or surroundings) to achieve a positive effect.

aie Use waste heat to generate electrical energy

2. Remove the primary harmful action by adding it to another harmful action to solve the problem.

aie Add a buffer material to a corrosive solution

3. Amplify a damaging factor to such an extent that it is no longer harmful.

aie Use a counterattack to remove fuel from a forest fire

Blessing in Disguise is essentially the idea of ​​turning lemons into lemonade. How can you turn a negative factor into a positive one?

For example, some enterprising motor managers have learned that they can use leftover cooking oil from restaurants as fuel to power their car engine. Basically, they are taking a waste product and turning it into a valuable resource. Or think about singing the blues. Some of the best recording artists of our time have taken a bad stage and turned their experiences into a hit record.

Another example is computer virus attacks or firewall breaches. When a hacker breaks into your company website, how can you turn that into a blessing in disguise? A great idea is to hire people. In fact, I have worked for companies that did just that. Some hacker would break into the firewall and discover something we didn’t know. Instead of getting angry, we decided to use their knowledge to our advantage and made them part of our team.

Breakfast with the birds

Recently my wife and I took a trip to Australia. One of the stops on our trip was Port Douglas, a small town in Far North Queensland. Port Douglas has beautiful beaches that are truly remote and unspoiled. On our first morning at the hotel, we asked the concierge, “What are some of the most popular things people do while here?”

The concierge immediately suggested Breakfast with the Birds, a popular tourist attraction in the region. The show sounded like a unique concept, so we decided to give it a try.

The concept sounds a bit strange, but the breakfast was pretty good. They had a breakfast buffet set up outside with a canopy suspended over the eating area. All of these different species of birds were allowed to walk on the ground under (and sometimes on) the tables. When you’re done eating, you can wander through the rest of the habitat and feed and pet the kangaroos. Getting to know exotic bird species up close and personal was a really pleasant experience; and a very unique idea.

When the founders initially came up with their concept, they were most likely trying to figure out how to keep birds away from food. The birds that fly over your head and let you drop you know what was not on the client’s plates on the agenda. So they thought, “How can we make this work?”

That is a question you should always ask yourself. “What would it take to make this idea work?”

The founders eventually ended up designing the canopy over the dining area so that most bird species couldn’t fly over the tables. Rather than viewing the birds as an obstacle to their plan, they turned lemons into lemonade and made the birds a key selling point for their product. The birds were, in fact, a blessing in disguise. The owners of Breakfast with the Birds took the available resources and applied them much more effectively.

We had also included a Rainforest Safari in our Australia itinerary. The Safari had caught our attention because of the way the trip was advertised – small groups only. The Safari website promised that there would never be more than four people on the tour.

David Armbrust, the founder of Rainforest Safari and our tour guide, arrived at the hotel on the day of our trip and picked us up in his Jeep. I quickly realized that the group size restriction mainly applies because David can only pick up four people in his Jeep.

David took us about 40 minutes to the mountains and into the rain forest. Sure enough, once we got out of the Jeep, kangaroos, kangaroos, and exotic birds came to our group looking for the goodies that David had stuffed in a bag around his waist.

While we were there, watching David distribute sweet potato and peanut sandwiches to all the animals, a question occurred to me. I asked David: “How do you have access to the rainforest?”

He informed me that he owned the land and said, “Well, this is basically my house.”

This guy picks you up in his Jeep and takes you to his backyard. He used all his available resources, things he already owned, to start his own business.

I asked David how long he had been feeding the animals and he told me that he had been doing it every day for the past 20 years.

I said: “Okay, so you were already feeding the animals, when one day it occurred to you to bring people for the ride and charge them $ 250 a piece?”

David just smiled.

You have booked about five days a week on this Safari Tour using your available resources and applying them more efficiently and effectively.

Look at all the resources available to you in your business. Some of these resources may seem a bit invisible at first, but there are all kinds of resources that you already have that you can use more effectively to better market your product or provide a better product or service.

Available resources. How can you use them better? Can you make lemons with lemonade in your business?

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