Monday, August 25, 2025

MKT 309 is now "Principles of Innovation": all new syllabus, instructors, and projects

Update on this class required for all business school majors (so, many sections each semester), after a full revamp.

Below is an excerpt from the team project guidelines. The revised Libguide provides general suggestions for the 3 projects plus for each one separately: https://uncg.libguides.com/mkt309

Once I begin doing instruction and consultations, I'll probably add some suggested steps or some kind of additional documentation.

As always, feel free to refer students to me as you please! Thank you.

--Steve

Project Overview

Innovation doesn’t happen in a vacuum—it happens in complex ecosystems filled with stakeholders, systems, and constraints. In this semester-long project, your team will act as innovation consultants tasked with tackling a real-world challenge.

You’ll follow the process outlined in Chapter 3 of Managing Innovation (8th Edition):

Search → Select → Implement & Value

Throughout the course, you will:

  • Investigate an unsolved problem through interviews and observation
  • Analyze the innovation ecosystem surrounding that problem
  • Generate and test solution ideas with real users
  • Select a concept and build an implementation roadmap
  • Present your solution and show how it would create real value

Why This Matters

Great innovation solves real problems for real people—and it does so with an understanding of what’s already been tried, what stands in the way, and what resources are available. This project asks you to think like innovators, not just idea generators.

By engaging with users, stakeholders, and systems, you’ll learn to design solutions that matter—and how to communicate those ideas like professionals in the field. You’ll also build skills in: Collaborative problem-solving evidence-based innovation, visual communication and presentation, business modeling and implementation planning.

This document outlines the key phases, provides an example memo, grading rubrics, and a description of peer feedback requirements

Challenge Topics

Your team will choose one of the following topics. Each topic includes a sample “How might we…” question to guide your early research. 

Sustainable Transportation 

How might we make sustainable transportation choices more appealing to UNCG commuter students who live off-campus? 

You'll investigate why many students continue to drive alone despite having access to alternatives like buses, carpools, or biking. Through interviews and observation, you’ll uncover the real reasons—time? safety? convenience? habit? 

Your solution might involve new technology, behavior nudges, system redesigns, or policy tweaks. 

Why this matters: 

Transportation is one of UNCG’s largest sources of carbon emissions. Changing how students commute could impact thousands of people and provide a scalable model for other campuses. 

Small Business Innovation 

How might we help small, local businesses in Greensboro compete with large chains by leveraging AI or digital tools they can actually afford and use? 

You’ll speak with local business owners to understand why many are losing customers to Amazon, Target, and other chains. It’s rarely just about money. Maybe it's time. Maybe it's fear of tech. Maybe it’s not knowing where to start. 

Your solution should be usable by someone with limited time, budget, or tech comfort—and still powerful enough to create value. 

Why this matters: 

Small businesses employ nearly half of Greensboro’s workforce and shape the identity and resilience of the community. Helping them innovate sustains jobs, families, and neighborhoods. 

Telehealth & Human Connection 

How might we make virtual healthcare visits feel more personal and trustworthy for elderly patients who are uncomfortable with technology? 

Many older adults avoid telehealth visits—even when it would save them time, travel, or money. But what’s really missing for them? Emotional trust? A human voice? Simplicity? 

You’ll explore how virtual care can be reimagined to build comfort, reduce confusion, and restore connection. 

Why this matters: 

An aging population needs accessible, reliable care—but telehealth systems are often not designed with empathy or inclusion in mind. This is a chance to rethink healthcare at the human level. 

Phase 1 – Problem Discovery & Search

Due by 11:59 PM ET on September 28th

Worth 25% of Project Grade

Deliverables:

·         2-page business memo

·         Evidence of at least 3 stakeholder interviews

·         Attachments (see below)

Memo Assignment Description

Your goal in this phase is to deeply understand the challenge space you've chosen. You’ll investigate the core problem, identify key stakeholders, explore what’s already been tried, and uncover where innovation might create value.

This phase is about searching—not for answers, but for insights. You will submit a professional memo summarizing your work and attach supporting materials.

Required Memo Sections (use these headings):

1.      Executive Summary

2.      Key Insights from Research

3.      Innovation Opportunity

4.      Next Steps / Open Questions

5.      Attachments Summary

Memo Formatting Requirements

Length: 2 pages max (not including attachments)
 Format:

·         Times New Roman, 12 pt font

·         1.5 line spacing

·         1-inch margins

·         Submit as Word (.docx)

·         Include AI Use Statement

Required Attachments

Attachments should be clear, labeled, and easy to read.

Attachment

Description

A. Interview Evidence

Number: Minimum 3 interviews

Length: Aim for 10–20 minutes each. Shorter conversations are fine if they yield useful insights, but avoid one-sentence answers.

Format: Interviews can be in person, by phone, or via video call.

Recording/Notes: If possible, record audio (with permission) to ensure accuracy. At a minimum, take detailed notes during the interview.

Submission: Include in your attachment:

·         A table listing each interviewee’s role/title (no names), interview date, and 2–3 key quotes or insights.

·         Any observation notes or supporting materials that help illustrate findings.

No full transcripts are required—only the most relevant, concise excerpts.

B. Any other relevant documents

Observation notes, stakeholder maps, screen captures, etc.


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