The 2019 Consumer Electronic Show (CES) — the world’s largest and most influential tech event — concluded on Friday with a
record 1,200+ startups among the 4,500 exhibitors. More than 20,000 products
launched from the show floor, including 35 mighty innovations that do more than
improve your selfie game: They use technology to change the world.
I’d know. This time last year, I found myself at CES alongside a 4-lb, 11”
robotic companion with a social cause: My Special Aflac
Duck.
We worked with our partners, Aflac and Sproutel, to develop that
breakthrough idea, which received the 2018 CES Tech for a Better World
Award.
With this amazing accolade under our collective wings, here’s my take on this
year’s honorees, and what purpose-driven brands and organizations can learn from
them.
Polls show
that security and health top the list of issues Americans care about most, and
those concerns were reflected in this year’s honorees. Among the notable
inventions — including this year’s winner — that focus on health and wellbeing
are:
-
Atmospheric Water Generator (Watergen): GENNY is a water-from-air
generator that offers constant access to safe drinking water, eliminating
environmental waste and plastic bottles, as well as a dependence on tap
water. This product won the coveted 2019 Tech for a Better World top honor.
-
ChuangChuang, The Intelligent Commercial Service Robot (Chuangze
Intelligent Robot Co., Ltd.): Medical facilities and educational
institutions one day may use this intelligent service robot as a back-up
doctor or teacher. Remote transmission allows it to share resources as well
as expert guidance.
-
Oticon KAIZN™ (Oticon, Inc.): An AI
hearing aid that learns users’ hearing needs and sound preferences and
automatically adjusts to optimize sound settings in different situations.
-
QTrobot (LuxAI): A humanoid robot, built to reflect scientific
approaches to teaching new skills to children with autism spectrum disorder.
Other honorees are designed to promote safety and security, including:
-
App-Elles (Resonates): A SOS
bracelet connected to a free safety app for female victims of violence.
App-Elles® enables users to alert their contacts with easy, real-time GPS
tracking and live audio streaming.
-
E-vone, the Shoe with Fall Detection
(E-vone): A fashionable,
connected shoe. Designed for our aging population, E-vone can detect falls
and automatically alert caregivers.
-
Hive Link (Centrica
Hive): A service
that uses connected smart devices to learn the routine of a vulnerable
individual. Families can use an app to check their loved one’s activity log,
getting critical notifications related to changes in routine or unusual
activity.
With the 2019 Tech for a Better World honorees, CES makes the statement that
technology should not only be about greater speed or convenience in our lives;
it should positively impact humanity and the natural world. Technology needs a
deeper purpose.
Here are a few take-aways for purpose-driven innovators everywhere:
-
Respond to authentic social needs — safety and health are basic human
needs and there are many ways to address them. Make sure your social
purpose-oriented tech breakthrough doesn’t just sound cool, but addresses
real human needs such as clean water, the prevention of victim abuse or
improved hearing or vision.
-
Ground your innovation in critical needs and insights — for My Special
Aflac Duck, it took months to determine an unmet need — social and emotional
support — for children undergoing cancer treatment. Once the concept was
developed — a social robot — it took over one year of child-centered design
for Sproutel to create the needed functionality to its shape, features and
core interactive elements. Deep research brought the duck to “life.”
Thorough analysis and listening are key to developing breakthrough social
impact innovation.
-
Stand out by leading with the issue — CES reports that the number of
honorees in the Tech for a Better World category increased markedly this
year. It’s tough to get noticed. This year’s honorees didn’t lead with
technical specs, however impressive they were. They clearly communicated
about the issue they are addressing and how their product helps solve it.
Following these and other best practices resulted in an incredible year for My
Special Aflac Duck. It included thousands of miles traveled, more than a dozen
speeches, billions of media impressions and multiple accolades, all culminating
in the most important impact: providing social-emotional support to the
thousands of children undergoing cancer treatment across the U.S. I can only
hope that the 2019 honorees will create impacts that are every bit as profound.
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CEO
Carol is internationally recognized for her work in Purpose and CSR. Carol Cone ON PURPOSE is the return to her entrepreneurial roots and life’s passion: to educate, inspire and accelerate purpose programs and impacts for organizations, nonprofits and individuals around the globe.
Published Jan 13, 2019 11pm EST / 8pm PST / 4am GMT / 5am CET