By designing a high-performance basketball shoe for an athlete with cerebral palsy, Nike solved for the most challenging use case. This "highest order of need" approach creates a superior, non-token solution that ultimately benefits a broader audience with similar, less-extreme needs.
Instead of inventing solutions from a blank slate, Nike's innovation team focuses on discovering pre-existing needs within the athlete. The user becomes a "living, breathing brief," meaning ideas are found through exploration, not forced creation, thus eliminating creative blocks.
Building delightful products isn't guesswork. A four-step process involves: 1) identifying functional and emotional user motivators, 2) turning them into opportunities, 3) ideating solutions and classifying them, and 4) validating them against a checklist for things like inclusivity and business impact.
A coach's criticism about athletes training barefoot—a threat to a shoe company—sparked an "aha moment." Instead of dismissing it, Nike innovated by creating a shoe that replicated the benefits of barefoot running, thereby capturing the user's intent and creating a new product category.
Nike hired a former coach for a technical materials role, believing his deep understanding of athletes' needs was more critical than a chemistry degree, which could be learned on the job. This approach highlights prioritizing user empathy in hiring for product-centric roles.
For Nike's innovators, the ultimate measure of success isn't market performance but the user's genuine joy upon experiencing the product. This "athlete's smile" confirms that a meaningful problem has been solved, serving as a leading indicator that commercial success will naturally follow.
Don't design solely for the user. The best product opportunities lie at the nexus of what users truly need (not what they say they want), the company's established product principles, and its core business objectives.
Instead of starting with a blank slate, Nike's team prototypes new ideas by physically cutting and modifying existing products. This "cobbling" method enables rapid, low-cost testing of core concepts before investing in new designs and expensive molds, allowing them to fail fast and forward.
Avoid the trap of building features for a single customer, which grinds products to a halt. When a high-stakes customer makes a specific request, the goal is to reframe and build it in a way that benefits the entire customer base, turning a one-off demand into a strategic win-win.