I just spent several days at the Do Lectures, a magical event in Wales with the motto “ideas + energy = change”. We talked a lot about the process of bringing ideas to life, and the barriers that stand in the way.
A physician and technologist named Mohammed Al-Ubaydli shared the concept of “Trojan mice”, which I found inspiring for anyone trying to introduce ideas to an organization or a market.
Mohammad Al-Ubaydli founded a company called Patients Know Best to allow patients to take control of their health records. It was a great idea, but he knew he would face serious obstacles from risk-adverse hospitals and the medical community.
So, rather than pursue the initiative all at once, he introduced Trojan mice, small-start slivers of the big idea. He approached one hospital and offered simple communication tools to patients. When the hospital saw immediate positive response from these simple tools, they started to ask for more. Before long, Mohammad had implemented the entire idea. Not from the top down, but from the bottom up.
Peter Hadfield coined the term “Trojan Mice”:
“Trojan mice are small, well focused changes, which are introduced on an ongoing basis in an inconspicuous way. They are small enough to be understood and owned by all concerned but their effects can be far-reaching. Collectively a few Trojan mice will change more than one Trojan horse ever could.”
(Marketoonist Monday: I’m giving away a signed print of this week’s cartoon. Just share an insightful comment to this week’s post. I’ll pick one comment by midnight on Monday (8 am UK time, where I’m traveling this week). Thanks!)
Hugh Griffiths says
Good to see you and have the opportunity to chat this week at the Do Lectures. I too was very struck by the ‘Trojan Mice’ concept. I’d like to think that we ourselves are now ‘Trojan Mice’ as a result of these inspiring few days. That is, even as individuals, we can profoundly affect our own professions, specialisms and organisations and ‘be the change we want to see’ because of what we have heard from all the fantastic speakers.
Carla says
I like the idea that the Trojan Mice contain something bigger than a Trojan Horse!
David says
The idea of “trojan mice” exactly lines up with the idea of driving change and improvement over the long view. When doing continuous improvement, the notion of doing many small changes, to create a bigger change in the end, almost always results in better adoption, more effective change management, and lower risk in implementation. It’s a great term and I’ll adopt the metaphor for my work.
BTW, nice use of a “trojan horse” cartoon to lure readers into reading a really insightful post! Talk about a modern day Odysseus!
Jeff says
The ‘Trojan Mice’ concept seems perfect for technology investments that can be scaled cost effectively. I’ve seen Healthcare RFID Tracking companies do this very effectively. The initial “mouse” involves selling in the basic infrastructure to track medical devices. Once the hospital has done this, the incremental effort and cost to get more benefit out of the infrastructure is significanlty less. Before they know it there are “mouse droppings” all over the hospital as they track beds, patients, and staff.
lynn says
Great term for the continuous improvement processes from over 20 years ago. Might be a great way to bring younger workers into the mindset that you don’t need to change the world overnight, but work in the right direction a little bit at a time.
Greg Krauska says
Change does not have to be difficult. When people WANT the next step, you create momentum.
The Trojan Mouse is a great way to create a “positive virus.”
Carl says
I find the concept intreresting and inspiring.
Only downside of this for me is that it “rewrite” the concept of mission. Organizations are sometime so scared of change. In a healty organization you should be able to present the “horse” at first and then explain that it is formed of many “mice”. Or anyway something like that, I’m not that sure of all these metaphorical animal images!!! 😉
Yaniv says
This sounds similar to the MVP (minimum viable product) concept. You build something very small, you try it and learn from it, and continue to improve it.
tomfishburne says
Hi all,
Great comments all around. Sorry it took me a couple extra days, but I’m traveling this week.
This week’s cartoon goes to Jeff. I love the Healthcare RFID case study and the corollary of “mouse droppings”.
Thanks!
-Tom