Monday, September 21, 2020

Faucet Design Saves Water By Swirling It.

One of the design students at  London  Royal College of Art has designed a posh Faucet that helps save water by causing it to form spiral swirls that are not only stunning to observe but also beautiful when in use.


Simin Qiu, the creator, and designer of this concept designed the faucet such that it passes water via a double turbine.T he latter rotates as the water courses through it thus bring about a lattice of elaborate and beautiful jets of water. Less water is used to form this intricate swirls, in fact, it reduces the flow of water by 15%. This means that less water is utilized at any point in time, thus saving you water. Three nozzles are available all creating different water swirl patterns.

The  Design concept award in 2014 was awarded to Qiu for this concept. In order to retain the sleek and elegant design, the operation of this faucet is carried out with a simple touch button at the top.





 


Friday, February 14, 2020

Your Startup Idea Isn’t New And Your Audience Doesn’t Care.

Your customers buy your interpretation, not your product


Mackenzie Freemire
Let’s be real here, what you’re selling can probably be found somewhere else.
A lot of entrepreneurs swear me to secrecy to not share their top-secret startup idea with anyone else — but what I don’t tell them is that I’ve actually heard their idea before because another entrepreneur is currently working on it.
First-to-market is complete baloney if it’s not aligned with great execution, and the numbers show that most startups don’t last long enough to make a mark even if they do carry this badge.
Someone else will always be selling a variation of your product or service. That’s a given.
Despite this, your customers actually don’t care that your product exists elsewhere because that’s not the reason why they buy from you.

Customers Buy Your Interpretation, Not Your Product

Customers buy from you because of the unique interpretation you bring to that product.
This is why there are rows of organic chocolate bars to choose from at the grocery store and why there are hundreds of takeout restaurants in your neighborhood that are still in business.
Different interpretations delight different folks.
The businesses that thrive are the ones that understand their lack of specialness in this big world and capitalize on the interpretation that they bring to the table.
They understand that their interpretation of fair trade, vegan, organic dark chocolate is going to appeal to their people.
They understand that their competitors can copy their products all they want, but that their customers buy from them because their YouTube channel has that hilarious host who somehow makes content about harvesting cocoa super entertaining.
Interpretation is the personality, style, perspective, and narrative that a brand brings to a product.

Ideas Are Easy To Steal, But A Brand Is Not

You are missing the point if you spend the majority of your time protecting your startup idea. Ideas are easy to steal, and the cat’s out of the bag as soon as you put your product on the market.
Ideas are easy to steal but a brand is not.
Why not focus your energy on the asset that can’t be stolen rather than the one that’s easy to copy?
The companies that go out of business because of copycats do so because they made their business dependant on the product and not their interpretation of the product.
They spent their time on the wrong form of intellectual property.
Go into your business with the mindset that your product can and may be copied, but that your brand will be hard to steal.
Have you seen a copycat try to steal a competitor’s brand or style before? It’s usually terrible, really cheesy, and you can tell that it’s a fake from a mile away.
It’s like buying a fake Chanel bag and noticing that the iconic double C’s are crooked and that the stitching doesn’t line up at the seams.
Steal the idea all you want, but style can’t be faked.