Shin Yamashita’s approach to innovations is as unconventional as it is effective. Instead of relying on ready-made solutions, he begins each innovation process with a thorough examination of the customer’s problems. “Eighty percent of my work is developing my own ideas and interacting with other industry experts,” he explains: “and to come up with ideas, you need knowledge, experience, and an understanding of customers’ pain points and hidden needs.” One of his major projects is a software-driven order fulfillment solution that incorporates the operating principle of the Dematic Multishuttle picking station and a routing solution.. This solution can add any additional functions that are required by simply updating the software and without needing to make any mechanical adjustments. This is how innovation works at Dematic: “It involves brainstorming for the specific case and creative processes,” says Shin.
This process, which Shin describes as the “upstream” process, forms the foundation of his work. He skillfully combines top-down and bottom-up approaches to generate ideas. “Some ideas come to me in a matter of a few hours,” but he admits: “Even if the idea itself is good, it’s worthless if nobody wants it.”
The initial brainstorming session is therefore followed by a critical step: the validation stage. “I talk to industry experts within Dematic,” says Shin about his approach. The idea then emerges from the drawing board and is given a reality check. “We need to find out how practical the idea is for Dematic solutions and how likely it is that it will work.” Shin always keeps the market and the competition in mind, to ensure that the solutions being developed are not just innovative but also help to reduce or overcome customers’ underlying issues.