'Fortune 500' program
designs
next-generation products
Newswise — From automatic jar
openers to remote controls for washer and dryers, a new
program at the Rehabilitation Engineering Research Center on
Technology Transfer (T2RERC) at the University at Buffalo is
helping major corporations produce next-generation consumer
products that are "more usable and accessible to all,"
including persons with disabilities and the elderly.
The new "Fortune 500"
program is designed to advance the philosophy of involving
consumers in all phases of product design and development,
working with the nation's largest and most influential
corporations -- those Fortune 500 companies producing new
household products for consumers.
With the aid of the
Fortune 500 program, Black & Decker and White-Rodgers Inc.
recently introduced new mainstream consumer products, and
the Whirlpool Corp. and Eastman Kodak soon will roll out new
products with features designed both for the average
consumer and people who have difficulty using traditional
products due to physical limitations caused by age or
disability.
Tire maker Michelin, with
the assistance of the T2RERC, currently is evaluating
entering the market for products for people with
disabilities with the introduction of a longer-lasting
combination wheel/tire for wheelchairs, according to Jim
Leahy, project administrator and principal investigator for
the Fortune 500 program.
The Fortune 500 program is
just one component of T2RERC, which works with companies to
research, evaluate, transfer and commercialize assistive
devices for persons affected by disabilities. The center is
one unit under the umbrella of UB's Center for Assistive
Technology, which is part of the UB School of Public Health
and Health Professions.
"Companies are always
looking to broaden their market," explains Leahy.
"Historically, however, manufacturers of consumer products
have made product design decisions without factoring in the
needs, wants and expectations of the full range of
consumers.
"Our message is that when
companies are designing new mainstream consumer products,
they can expand their markets by considering the needs of
aging baby boomers and people with various levels of
impairment."
According to Leahy, the
Fortune 500 program helps companies develop new products --
and improve the functional design of existing products -- by
providing the companies with unique market research about
the needs of the elderly and people with disabilities, as
well as analysis of existing products and competitors'
products. In the end, partner companies receive suggestions
for design improvements and innovations, and are provided
with follow-up detailed focus-group analysis of product
prototypes and new products.
"When we provide the
companies with well-articulated consumer information on
needed design and functional features for a product, the
result is a more useful, well-received and financially
viable product being introduced into the marketplace," Leahy
says.
Collaboration with the
Fortune 500 program is free to the companies. Funding for
the program comes from the National Institute on Disability
and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR) of the U.S. Department
of Education. NIDRR funds research centers like the T2RERC,
whose mission is to commercialize advanced technologies and
innovative prototypes that increase the functional
capabilities of people with disabilities, including the
elderly.
Much of the research for
the Fortune 500 program is done by MBA students from the UB
School of Management. This gives the students valuable
hands-on work experience, in addition to providing the
company with valuable market data, and gives the students
entry-level experience in an emerging consumer-product
market: transgenerational and universal design.
Second-year MBA student
Liz Lagowski, for example, worked closely with Whirlpool
over the past year, conducting consumer focus groups,
researching the washer-and-dryer marketplace, and analyzing
the aging baby-boomer market. In the next year or so, with
the aid of the Fortune 500 program and Lagowski, Whirlpool
will introduce a new interactive device for washer and
dryers that will enable remote operation and interaction of
those appliances. This device will address the needs of
consumers having or aging into mobility, vision or hearing
disabilities, while serving the needs of the broader general
washer-and-dryer marketplace population.
"I've become interested in
the big-picture questions of new product development and how
it relates to consumer need and behavior," says Lagowski,
who also is working with Michelin on the evaluation of its
new wheel/tire for wheelchairs. "I'm looking forward to
applying what I learned working with Whirlpool after I
graduate."
Fellow MBA student
Jonathan Leahy worked with White-Rogers, a manufacturer of
thermostats, humidifiers and electronic air cleaners. The
collaboration in 2005 led to the introduction of the White-
Rogers 90 series Blue
thermostat, which features several design changes, including
large and easy-to-see characters; large, intuitive red and
blue temperature keys; audio programming, and a reminder
alert to change the furnace filter -- all on a large 12
square-inch touch screen display.
"When you have a good
design, you not only make mainstream products easier for the
elderly and people with disabilities to use, you make them
easier for everyone to use," he says. "I think that's an eye
opener for some companies and helps them see the bottom-line
value of what we can offer them."
The Fortune 500 program's
most successful product to date -- and the one that, in
effect, launched the program -- is the Black & Decker
Automatic Lids Off jar opener. In its second year of
production, the jar opener is a big seller for the company,
particularly as a gift for the elderly from friends and
family.
Moving forward, the
T2RERC's Leahy is working with Kodak on a new design for its
digital photography line, and is pursuing opportunities with
other mainstream consumer-product companies.
"We have an opportunity to
use our creditability and experience with major U.S.
manufacturers to significantly influence the next generation
of consumer products," he says. "There is tremendous value
in improving the functional features of everyday consumer
products by immediately increasing their accessibility and
usability."
The University at Buffalo
is a premier research-intensive public university, the
largest and most comprehensive campus in the State
University of New York.