Mike, you've been outed :-)
http://www.technologyreview.com//wtr_15900,1,p1.html?trk=nl "The conference was "a coming-out party" for ethnography, said Marietta L. Baba, an ethnographer at Michigan State University, during a rousing final address." "Ken Anderson, (of Intel) one of the conference's organizers and a design anthropologist at Intel Research, who has worked in the field for more than a decade, says ethnography clearly helps companies define market needs, which can drive product innovation." "Ethnography, a form of applied anthropology, sounds way too fuzzy and foreign to turn the heads of corporate types. Certainly, in the past, it has been something of an oddity; the only ethnographers inside corporations were holed up at places like Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center, where they worked on problems like how to make a photocopier's On button more obvious to users. Today, though, corporate ethnography is a blossoming field, as evidenced by the first-ever Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Conference (EPIC), organized by ethnographers at Intel and Microsoft and held at Microsoft's campus on November 14-15. The conference drew more than 200 working ethnographers from high-tech firms, specialist shops such as IDEO, and technology-intensive businesses such as Wells Fargo." -S _____________________________________________________________________ Stephen.Guerin at Redfish.com www.Redfish.com 624 Agua Fria Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 mobile: (505)577-5828 office: Santa Fe, NM (505)995-0206 / London, UK +44 (0) 20 7993 4769 |
Yep, thought about going but decided not for many reasons. Might have
been a mistake. Be interesting to look at the publication. Those who look at the article, be sure and read the final half of the second page. Wonder if anyone did a micro-ethnography of how obsession with shareholder value on a quarterly basis severely distorts corporate decision-making? (: Mike On Nov 17, 2005, at 9:28 AM, Stephen Guerin wrote: > Mike, you've been outed :-) > > http://www.technologyreview.com//wtr_15900,1,p1.html?trk=nl > "The conference was "a coming-out party" for ethnography, said > Marietta L. Baba, > an ethnographer at Michigan State University, during a rousing > final address." > > "Ken Anderson, (of Intel) one of the conference's organizers and a > design > anthropologist at Intel Research, who has worked in the field for > more than a > decade, says ethnography clearly helps companies define market > needs, which can > drive product innovation." > > "Ethnography, a form of applied anthropology, sounds way too fuzzy > and foreign > to turn the heads of corporate types. Certainly, in the past, it > has been > something of an oddity; the only ethnographers inside corporations > were holed up > at places like Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center, where they worked > on problems > like how to make a photocopier's On button more obvious to users. > Today, though, > corporate ethnography is a blossoming field, as evidenced by the > first-ever > Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Conference (EPIC), organized by > ethnographers at > Intel and Microsoft and held at Microsoft's campus on November > 14-15. The > conference drew more than 200 working ethnographers from high-tech > firms, > specialist shops such as IDEO, and technology-intensive businesses > such as Wells > Fargo." > > -S > _____________________________________________________________________ > Stephen.Guerin at Redfish.com > www.Redfish.com > 624 Agua Fria Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 > mobile: (505)577-5828 > office: Santa Fe, NM (505)995-0206 / London, UK +44 (0) 20 7993 4769 > > > ============================================================ > FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv > Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at Mission Cafe > Wed Lecture schedule, archives, unsubscribe, maps, etc. at http:// > www.friam.org |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |