Innovation challenge to zap pimples

UC students take the lead in Bioré's mobile campaign

Pimples are trespassers with the capability of instantly ruining your day.

Last fall, Bioré tasked University of Cincinnati students to assist with its launch of a new product in the fight against acne.

The Bioré brand, owned by the Tokyo, Japan-based Kao Corporation, is known for its skincare products to unclog pores, such as nose strips, cleansers and facial scrubs. 

Wired for innovation

Through a corporate partnership with UC inside the 1819 Innovation Hub, Kao USA Inc. connected with UC students for an innovation challenge to create a mobile game promoting the new Bioré Blemish Patch. The idea was to help generate buzz and interest for the new product using a platform appealing to the teen/young adult market.

Why it matters

Innovation challenges allow students to apply classroom knowledge to practical business problem-solving. UC corporate partners gain new perspectives from students, who also often represent target markets for their products.

“These students give a fresh perspective to the challenge. They are our consumers for many of our brands, so their perspective is critically important to the success of our brands. There’s no better way to resonate with Gen Z consumers than having their hands-on support to launch a new product,” said Lindsay Stricker, a UC alumna who is the technology innovator and university partnerships lead at Kao USA Inc. 

The challenge

The winning team incorporated our brand aesthetics, provided background research on successful game designs and creatively inserted our products into the game. The clickable wireframe game prototype was very much an on-brand game with sustaining potential.

Lindsay Stricker, UC alumna New technology innovator and university partnerships lead at Kao USA Inc.

Nineteen students were divided into five teams across majors that included marketing, industrial design, computer science, engineering, business analytics and visual communications. Teams had one week to create the first mobile-digital interactive pimple game. Students incorporated various elements such as the “pimple monster” to engage consumers in continued play.

“We worked in close partnership with our UC relationship manager, RJ Sargent. He was a big help in spreading the word to university professors and various student organizations across the Cincinnati Innovation District’s social media channels and on UC campus,” Stricker said.

Contributing to the well-being of communities is a guiding principle of KAO. The brand accomplishes this by supporting education, cultural exchange and the promotion health and hygiene worldwide.

The reward

All participating students received a $100 gift card. Bioré gave additional gift cards to the following:

  • First place team: $300 per team member
  • Second place team: $200 per team member
  • Audience choice (the participating students voted on this): $100 per team member

Each student also received a certificate of completion for their portfolios and to post on social media.

The Bioré Blemish Patch product has launched online and in-stores, and officials are reviewing the winning mobile game design, with hopes to launch soon, Stricker said. 

Corporate partnership

The KAO philosophy is based on the concept of "Kirei," pronounced k-EAR-RAY, which means beauty or cleanliness in Japanese.

Read more about the Bioré brand.

Related Stories

986 Results
1

UC, Lt. Gov. Husted celebrate success of Ohio IP Promise

November 16, 2022

University of Cincinnati President Neville Pinto, UC Executive Vice President Ryan Hays, Ohio Lt. Gov. Jon Husted and entrepreneurs within the Cincinnati Innovation District today celebrated the economic impacts of the Ohio IP Promise — a statewide commercialization initiative launched in 2019 that streamlines the patent and licensing process, enabling inventors to own their intellectual property.

5

Delivering fresh discoveries

November 21, 2022

A boomerang best describes Dan Whitacre’s career path. No matter where the flight course led, he always returned to Kroger. Five times over the last four decades. As senior director of Kroger Labs and Transformation, a University of Cincinnati alumnus and adjunct professor, Whitacre is the first to tell you that his career journey studying to be an electrical engineer and computer programmer has had many twists and turns.

6

‘Empowered to drive innovation’

November 22, 2022

For the second year, four students from the University of Cincinnati have been named University Innovation Fellows (UIF), a program run by Stanford University’s Hasso Plattner Institute of Design.

7

UC senior licensing associate paves way for invention success

July 6, 2023

Meet Madison Bourbon, a University of Cincinnati staffer who helps harness the intellectual capital discovered at the university. Bourbon is a senior licensing associate for the Technology Transfer team in the 1819 Innovation Hub and is pursuing her master’s in molecular genetics, biochemistry and microbiology at UC.

8

University of Cincinnati Esports highlights eventful first year

July 5, 2023

In August 2022, UC opened the esports lab in the 1819 Innovation Hub. Since then, the lab has become a hub of activity, providing a home base for the UC esports club and a tournament venue for statewide esports programs, benefiting gamers and STEM students.