Imagine a Web site that detects a visitorโ€™s โ€œthinkingโ€ style and โ€œmorphsโ€ its look and feel to suit that visitorโ€™s style.  Professor Glen Urban and his colleagues at M.I.T. describe an approach in the Sloan Management Review article, โ€œMorph the Web To Build Empathy, Trust and Sales.โ€  They collaborated with BT Group, a UK telecom company, to create a Web site that learns whether a person is more analytical versus holistic, and whether the person is more visual versus verbal in how they process information.  Once the Web site learns this (based on a few preliminary clicks on the site), it adapts itself to present information in an optimal way:

Urban-s3

This is an excellent example of the Attribute Dependency Template, one of five templates in the Systematic Inventive Thinking method of innovation.  Attribute Dependency takes internal and external attributes of a product or service and combines them to create new dependencies (or break existing dependencies).  With Web site morphing, for example, the two attributes that have been linked are:

  • Web site appearance (an internal attribute)
  • Visitorโ€™s Cognitive Style (an external attribute)

Dependencies can be passive, active, or adaptive.  Passive dependencies are static โ€“ they donโ€™t change once they have been established.  Active dependencies are dynamic โ€“ an attribute changes only when another one changes.  Adaptive dependencies change the way they change.  In other words, they learn as they go.  Attribute Dependency is a great tool for creating โ€œsmartโ€ products โ€“ those that know and adapt to user preferences or environmental conditions.

Does Web site morphing work?  The MIT researchers report that Web-originated purchase intentions for BTโ€™s broadband service could increase 20% after morphing the site to match individual cognitive styles.