Posts Tagged ‘ideator interview’

  • Mon, Jun 13 2011

    As Mantis starts shipping out to light up people’s lives, we caught up with ideator, Clinton Fleenor, a man as versatile as the product he helped create.

    1. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

    I’m originally from Idaho, but Luey and I currently live in a loft in downtown Richmond, Virginia, with Chief the dog. I “work for free”, volunteering on the administrative side of the kid’s ministry at church, and with the neighborhood civic association. Luey and I enjoy the art galleries and restaurants around the neighborhood, the local pro soccer team, and driving over to visit our first grand kid in central Illinois.

    2. When did you join Quirky?

    February, 2010

    3. How did you find out about us?

    I read about Quirky in a Delta Airlines in flight magazine article about crowd sourcing.

    4. When and how did you think up the idea for this product?

    I thought of the idea when the “Cool Light” brief was announced.

    When trying to think of a lighting problem I wanted to solve, two ideas kinda came together.

    I’d read an article in the summer about the future of ambient light in automobiles (apparently the use is going to explode, since visual awareness of the interior really reduces night driving anxiety – and the resulting wrecks), and thought the idea would be innovative in a desk lamp – and less anxiety would be useful.

    I’d like a light that hides, doesn’t take up desk space, and can illuminate my keyboard (since “loft” means “no doors” – ha, and Luey is an early-rising farm girl).

    So, I submitted an ambient light desk lamp that attaches under a computer monitor.

    5. Had you tried to make this thing on your own already?

    No.

    6. What do you think of the final product?

    It’s great! It’s a desk light that’s off the desk, the community added great ideas, and Jess did a great job with the design. I do miss the colored ambient light function that Quirky edited out, but I think of that as the difference between an amateur dreaming and the pros making a marketable product.

    7. In your opinion, what is the most innovative product ever invented?

    The switch from analog to digital…and the resulting products.

    8. What inspires you?

    People’s needs. I’m always trying to fix something – ha.

    9. What are some of your quirks?

    I always wear wool socks. Always.

    10. What’s your favorite cereal? Deli meat?

    My favorite cereal is either Rice Chex or Froot Loops, and my favorite deli meat is Ham.

    11. Any parting words?

    Quirky rocks!

  • Thu, May 12 2011

    Pivot Power is going to turn heads as easily as its power outlets turn. We caught up with the man behind the product, Jake Zien, as we started shipping these babies out.

    1. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

    I’m Jake Zien, a proud native of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and a student on the cusp of graduation from Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). I’m a graphic design major and a computer science minor. I feel that designing and programming are remarkably analogous activities: both, at their core, are about creating beautiful systems. To me, though, each is at its best when used in service of the other: design is most interesting when it solves a problem of usability, and programming is most useful when it is made to feel organic and knowable. I’m passionate about great user interfaces and great cheeseburgers, and I hope to become an expert in the creation of both.

    2. When did you join Quirky?

    The day I submitted Pivot Power, if I remember correctly. Feel free to fact-check me against my profile page.

    3. How did you find out about us?

    For the few years between coming up with the idea during RISD Precollege and submitting it to Quirky, I had been working with a close family friend, a corporate intellectual property lawyer, on researching and applying for patents to protect my concept. He called me one afteroon to tell me about an article he had just read on American Airlines’ (?) in-flight magazine, which wrote up a new company called Quirky. We agreed that, pending a little investigation of its IP policy, Quirky seemed to precisely fit the bill of what I needed.

    4. When and how did you think up the idea for this product?

    I thought of Pivot Power during the summer of 2006, when I was a rising senior in high school. I participated that summer in a 6-week “precollege” program at RISD, the college I would later attend, during which I was an industrial design major. Our final project (yes, even in the summer, we had finals, a fitting taste of the rigor of RISD’s curriculum) was to ideate a product, and to develop it via sketches, models, and presentation. The product I worked on was the same one I would later submit to Quirky.


    Jake's school project

    5. Had you tried to make this thing on your own already?

    I was taking some steps. Because it began as a school project, I had plenty of material to support the idea and tell its story, and as I mentioned above, my discussions and research into protecting the idea, and the landscape of similar concepts and patents, were certainly steps towards a goal. That said, the government fee for a patent to truly protect this idea was at least $10,000, and beyond that, I considered the process of attempting to produce the product alone extremely daunting.

    6. What do you think of the final product?

    From what I can tell, it really is the best power strip available, and I say this with a true and complete disregard for my royalties from its sale. Not only does it solve a real problem, but it does so in an elegant, even delightful way, and looks better than anything else on the market while doing it. It’s better than my initial idea. Even if it didn’t pivot, the level of fit and finish of the thing — essentially the fact that it doesn’t feel like a creaky, cheap office supply — would still make it the best power strip around. I hope it makes calamari of the Power Squid.

    7. In your opinion, what is the most innovative product ever invented?

    Please. As if anyone, much less a design student, could ever answer that succinctly. My kneejerk is to say the iPhone, and though it shows amazing inspiration, it feels a little shortsighted: there have been countless earlier innovations without whose shoulders the iPhone couldn’t stand. That in mind, I think I consider Sketchpad, the 1963 project of Ivan Sutherland, to be the among humankind’s most innovative inventions. It paved the way to graphic user interfaces and object oriented programming, and showed that computers could be used for creative purposes as well as it could technical ones. Jargon aside, the takeaway is that it was the 60s, and this guy made a computer screen you could draw on with a “light pen”.

    8. What inspires you?

    Great computer interfaces; problems well-identified and well-solved; hand-lettered typography, especially if midcentury; things that do one thing and one thing well; Apple, everything about them; the potential to surprise and delight; David Fincher; consideration for human factors; and often, music, especially Radiohead, Boards of Canada, Skalpel, Flying Lotus, Dirty Projectors, Blur, Madvillain, and DJ Shadow.

    9. What are some of your quirks?

    I’m a graphic designer, but I think that most graphic design comes down to “flat stuff that doesn’t move”. Lemon juice could be my favorite condiment. When I take a shower, I usually face away from or perpendicular to the showerhead. Every night, without fail, I brush my teeth for two complete minutes before I go to bed. I spend more time reading about technology than anything else, but I don’t think books are an endangered species. I clean my room often but make my bed rarely. I know the truth about Shake Shack, which is that it’s the same burger-and-custard stand we have literally hundreds of in Wisconsin, but made sleek enough for New York. I can’t do a cartwheel, but I can download probably anything, and I can do it within two hours.

    10. What’s your favorite cereal? Deli meat?

    Crispix. Tie between corned beef and turkey breast.

    11. Any parting words?

    To everyone at Quirky and its manufacturer, thank you a thousand times! I hope all of you realize that you’re in the business of making dreams real as much as you are in product development.

  • Fri, Mar 18 2011

    Contort is USB-eautiful! As it gets ready to ship, we catch up with the man behind the product, ideator Emad Yahia.

    1. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

    I like poetry, and I watch and play soccer as much as I can. I am originally from Sudan, so soccer is big there. We used to play it in the street “bare footed” all the time. I came to America ten years ago to study and received my MS in Computer Science from the Polytechnic University of New York (now the Polytechnic Institute of NYU). I remember I took this class about emerging technology and was introduced to the patenting process. The professor asked us to come up with a new idea or design for a new product and mine was about a smart fridge that scanned the tags of all the food you purchased and created a shopping list based on that. It was a lot of fun.

    2. When did you join Quirky?

    I joined Quirky last year, a couple of weeks before I introduced the idea of Contort to the community.

    3. How did you find out about us?

    I did a Google search for companies that help inventors to bring new products to life and Quirky was in the search results, so I checked it out. I was really excited to learn about you guys, and I felt that this is what I was looking for all along. Many companies promise to help you with your idea, but they deliver very little or nothing at all. I had an experience with another company but it was horrible and it actually cost me money before I realized what a scam it was. It was a relief to find an honest and straight forward startup willing to take the risk and spend this type of time and money to bring something different to consumers.

    4. Had you tried to make this thing on your own already?

    I had not tried other companies. I first introduced it to Quirky, and the community took it from there. I did some market research and worked on my drawings and other things but had not tried to manufacture the product on my own.

    5. What do you think of the final product?

    The final product is very unique, and I am confident that it will sell well. I do not see anything like it in the market and it certainly has character and personality. I hope this evolves into a line of products. When I compare it to the original design, I see a big difference. But that’s normal and what should naturally happen with a process like this: the crowd decides what they would like to buy. It’s like going to a restaurant and making your own food.

    6. In your opinion, what is the most innovative product ever invented?

    I think the most innovative product ever invented is the computer mouse. The design is so good it has not essentially changed for more than 40 years! That is impressive.

    7. What inspires you?

    I get inspired by simple people who do not have much, but they still smile and work hard.

    8. What are some of your quirks?

    I can not swim. I tried forever but just cannot do it. It is really embarrassing at times. Might be because sharks freak me out.

    9. What’s your favorite cereal? Deli meat?

    I love pastrami, olives, and everything that is grilled. Can you grill cereal? Coz if you can, I will eat any brand.

    10. Any parting words?

    I have an idea that I will introduce to the community soon, and I hope it holds the same appeal. I am crossing my fingers.

  • Tue, Feb 22 2011

    As MugStir gets ready to fly out of our warehouse and snuggle up to your mugs, we catch up with ideator Judi Sigler (also the brains behind Ember and our new “Super Bowl”). She totally can’t believe this is happening!

    1. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

    I am a mom of one beautiful 13-year-old daughter, Lydia, as well as a school counselor. I live in a tiny little town in Nebraska and get to work with 4 to 18-year-olds every day. I’ve had more education than I care to recite and I’m also an entrepreneur. I started and ran my own printing business in the past (still going strong almost 15 years later), then decided to challenge myself with a career in education. I love kids, museums, art, and traveling.

    2. When did you join Quirky?

    Joined Quirky in January of 2010.

    3. How did you find out about us?

    Through an article in Engadget, I think it was about the PowerCurl. I was totally hooked from day one.

    4. When and how did you think up the idea for this product?

    The MugStir idea has been percolating in my head for quite some time. I think preparing coffee in the teacher’s lounge and using communal spoons was a part of my motivation to come up with the idea. I don’t have an exact date of the idea concept, but I do know discovering the Quirky site is what motivated me to actually put something on paper and share it.

    5. Had you tried to make this thing on your own already?

    Quirky is the first and only place I shared the idea.

    6. What do you think of the final product?

    I am very happy with the final product. I was nervous in the beginning of creating the product because I had no idea what it would actually look like in the end. However, I think Jordan Diatlo did a fantastic job with the final industrial design.

    7. In your opinion, what is the most innovative product ever invented?

    I think the printing press is an incredibly innovative product. Mass printing and the spread of new ideas through printed media had an unprecedented effect on our world. The tedious amount of labor that went into setting type, the perfection of full-color printing, automating a sheet fed press, and many other innovations that stem from the invention of the press still fascinate me. It’s like magic to watch a blank paper become something.

    8. What inspires you?

    Travel inspires me, through trying new foods and interacting with vastly different cultures. Kids inspire me as well, they are so enthusiastic and I love the way they think.

    9. What are some of your quirks?

    Good question. Of course, I don’t think I have any, but if you asked my family and friends… I suppose they would say that I only drink milk from plastic cups, I can pack a suitcase like it was done at a factory, and I can operate an inordinate amount of heavy equipment, like Mack trucks and Caterpillar loaders.

    10. What’s your favorite cereal? Deli meat?

    Oatmeal that’s flavored and drizzled with honey and nuts is my favorite cereal. As far as deli meat, well, I’m from Nebraska and live way too close to the source not to mention that I likely eat prime rib and steak as often as some people eat deli sandwiches. In fact, I’m practically a vegetarian here because I don’t stock a separate freezer with half a cow or pig!  :)

    11. Any parting words?

    Thank you Quirky for bringing the MugStir to life! Nikki & Jordan for their extra work, and fellow Quirks Matthew Lanius, Kiwi, Jeff Jarosch, and Jerry Tirado. Thanks also to Matt Fleming for making a crazy video about my crazy idea too. I am so glad I found the site. I am so glad you have created a place to make invention accessible.

  • Fri, Dec 17 2010

    It’s looking like Digits will be the next Quirky product out the door. We catch up with ideator/mythical creature Brian Shy; he says he couldn’t be happier.


    Centaur pic posted by ideator request… we didn’t ask. ;)

    1. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

    I’m 28 and live in Chicago with my fiancée Kim and two cats. I’m in the middle of an MD/PhD program at the University of Illinois, mostly in the lab right now. We study stem cells.

    2. When did you join Quirky?

    A year ago, give or take.

    3. How did you find out about us?

    I read about Quirky in one of those in-flight magazines. Good thing I forgot my book!

    4. When and how did you think up the idea for this product?

    Also about a year ago. I sewed some conductive thread into my gloves so that I could use my phone and thought there should be an easier way.

    5. Had you tried to make this thing on your own already?

    Well, I made a prototype but I don’t think anyone would have bought it. It involved one of my old socks.

    6. What do you think of the final product?

    Couldn’t be happier.

    7. In your opinion, what is the most innovative product ever invented?

    Hmm this is hard. I guess I will go with the personal computer.

    8. What inspires you?

    Norman Borlaug  – In the 1960’s he developed genetically modified crops (by hand pollination) that were resistant to common pests in Mexico, India, and Pakistan. In doing so he saved about a billion lives from starvation.

    9. What are some of your quirks?

    I was found in the jungle as a baby and later taught myself to read. I also collect stamps.

    10. What’s your favorite cereal? Deli meat?

    Cereal: I like variety. Deli meat: prosciutto

    11. Any parting words?

    I would like to thank the Quirky staff and community. It’s an amazing group of passionate, creative, and motivated people and I am lucky to have found it.

  • Wed, Dec 15 2010

    We’re just about ready to ship out the Click ‘n Cook, but before we do, we wanted to catch you all up on one of our favorite ideator families: Fred, Laurie, and Baby Girl Ende.

    1. Tell us a little bit about yourself.

    I’m an eighth grade science teacher in Westchester County, New York. Along with my wife, daughter, and very child-like parrot, we live in Putnam County, which is about an hour north of New York City. We live in a beautiful townhome community which is the perfect size for a family of three (or three-and-a-half if you consider the parrot). We can’t wait to “trade up” to a house, but find we enjoy the perks of not having to shovel our walkways when the first snow arrives (which interestingly enough, was this morning :) ). As for where I’m from, I grew up in a small town towards the center of New York’s Long Island.

    2. When did you join Quirky?

    I joined Quirky almost a year-and-a-half ago, in September of 2009.

    3. How did you find out about us?

    I first learned about Quirky after reading an article about the company in the New York Times magazine back in September of 2009. I checked out the site and was hooked right away. I loved getting involved in all the phases of product development and eventually pitched a luggage/travel idea of my own. While the idea wasn’t a hit with community members at the time, I found the feedback received enlightening, and had a feeling I would be submitting quite a few more ideas in the future. When my wife, Laurie, and I had a “kitchen mishap” a few months later (involving a spatula and a runaway omelet), we brainstormed the idea for a kitchen tool which had interchangeable heads, and friction pads to reduce slippage. The friction pads didn’t hold the interest of the community for long, but the interchangeable heads appeared to be a smash hit, and the basis for the Click ‘n Cook, the world’s coolest spatula, was born!

    4. When and how did you think up the idea for this product?

    It was during what would be considered a fairly normal breakfast. After the omelet cleanup, we started talking about ways to make a spatula better. We ended up focusing on three items: interchangeable heads, friction tabs, and a way to reduce drawer/counter clutter.

    5. Had you tried to make this thing on your own already?

    No. In fact, the concept had only occurred to me and Laurie a week before the idea was pitched. It was truly a thought that was “in development.”

    6. What do you think of the final product?

    I love it. I was truly excited to watch the evolution of the Click ‘n Cook from its starting design to its final version. It was great to see how testing influenced the final product and led to different base models. I also enjoyed seeing how community input on aspects such as the counter footprint played a role in the final design. To me, the Click ‘n Cook truly feels like a partnership between the Quirky staff and the community.

    7. In your opinion, what is the most innovative product ever invented?

    I can’t think of one, but I can think of three. I would say radio, television, and the personal computer. These items weren’t only inventions, they were game changers. They created new media that are not only still present today, but are constantly changing. Whereas many products are forced to fit the mold of society, these technologies forced society to change to fit their mold. Truly amazing.

    8. What inspires you?

    My biggest inspirations would be my wife and daughter. I do everything for them, and they provide me with all the motivation I’ll ever need.

    9. What are some of your quirks?

    Too many quirks to list, but here are my top four (I would have given top three, but four sounded “quirkier”): 1. I collect Spider-Man comics… yes, I’m going to see it on Broadway, 2. I only eat cereal if at least three varieties are mixed together… no exceptions :) 3. My wife and I name our pets after famous scientists (our misunderstood parrot is named “Einstein”), and 4. I’m one heck of a mean beatboxer.

    10. What’s your favorite cereal? Deli meat?

    Any and all (as long as they meet the qualifications set above). As for deli meat, I tend to be a spicy food type of guy, and since wings aren’t a deli meat, I’ll just go with Boar’s Head Buffalo Chicken.

    11. Any parting words?

    My sincerest gratitude to all the Quirky staff for helping to turn this idea (and many others) into a reality. I also have to give my thanks to all the community members for their constructive criticism, positive feedback, and desire to get the Click ‘n Cook to the shipping point (big thanks to Chad S., Jene H., and Eric R. for their awesome naming, tagline, and logo work). The Ende family couldn’t be happier!

  • Wed, Sep 8 2010

    In this Ideator Interview, Mike McCoy chats a bit about what it was like working with Quirky to turn his idea for Cloak into a reality.

  • Fri, May 21 2010

    We just posted the first of many future “Ideator Interviews” on YouTube!

    In this installation, PowerCurl ideator Jeff Scholen discusses his experience working with Quirky to bring his power adapter cord management solution to life.

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