The Red Ball Method
A High-Velocity, Question-Driven Innovation Protocol for Interdisciplinary Teams
Author: Gunnar Øyvin Jystad Fredrikson
Version: Draft for professional and academic review
Abstract
The Red Ball Method is a high-velocity innovation protocol designed to compress both effort-time and calendar-time from problem framing to minimum-value delivery. Unlike many innovation approaches that prioritize structured ideation or controlled failure, the Red Ball Method optimizes for rapid forward momentum by combining interdisciplinary equality, question-driven exploration, and immediate build-to-answer cycles.
Rather than treating convergence as the primary objective, the method treats convergence as a byproduct of accelerated insight generation and minimum value delivery. It can operate independently or function as a protocol embedded within larger frameworks such as Design Thinking, Dual Track Agile, and Lean Startup.
This document formalizes the method, articulates its positioning and novelty, defines boundary conditions, and proposes falsifiable hypotheses for future empirical validation.
1. Positioning and Core Thesis
Most innovation frameworks optimize for one of three things:
- Quality of exploration
- Quality of validation
- Quality of execution
The Red Ball Method optimizes for velocity toward usable value, without structurally sacrificing interdisciplinary equality or learning.
Its central thesis:
Innovation velocity increases when interdisciplinary teams are allowed to own questions, explore them in parallel, and build minimum value artefacts that answer those questions while delivering real value.
Velocity is defined along two dimensions:
- Effort velocity — minimizing unnecessary meetings, permission loops, and idea filtering
- Calendar velocity — minimizing time to something real that stakeholders can use
2. The Shift: From Idea-Led to Question-Led Innovation
Traditional brainstorming is idea-led.
The Red Ball Method is question-led.
A Red Ball is not merely an idea. It is:
A question with enough shape to explore through action, and enough potential to become a minimum value product.
This shift has structural implications:
- Questions reduce ego attachment
- Questions invite exploration rather than defense
- Questions expose unknowns explicitly
- Questions enable build-to-answer cycles
Where some methods promote “fail fast,” the Red Ball Method promotes:
Advance fast toward anything that can work.
Failure is not eliminated. It is de-prioritized in favour of credible forward motion.
3. Core Design Principles
3.1 Velocity as a Primary Metric
The method explicitly optimizes:
- Time from question to build
- Time from build to stakeholder exposure
- Total effort spent per iteration
3.2 Distributed Ownership as Structural Rule
Every participant:
- Selects one Red Ball
- May adapt or reframe any ball
- Cannot cancel another’s ball — only add to it
Equality is designed, not assumed.
3.3 Interdisciplinary Team as Latent Toolbox
Teams are treated as dynamic toolboxes.
The full capability of the team is not known at the outset.
It reveals itself through exploration.
This is a critical departure from role-based models.
3.4 Minimum Value Product (MVP 2.0)
A Minimum Value Product must:
- Be usable by a real stakeholder
- Deliver measurable value
- Answer at least one key innovation question
- Enable forward movement
This differs from many MVP interpretations that focus solely on hypothesis testing.
4. The Red Ball Velocity Loop
Step 1 — Assemble a Small Interdisciplinary Team
Maximum seven including facilitator.
Step 2 — Frame the Strategic Question Space
Define what we know, what we do not know, and what must become true.
Step 3 — Generate Question-Balls
Each participant selects one question worth pursuing.
Step 4 — Parallel Exploration
Participants explore independently through rapid builds, reframing, and critique.
Step 5 — Build-to-Answer
Each ball must produce something tangible.
Step 6 — Momentum Selection
The team selects the ball with the strongest forward momentum.
Step 7 — Minimum Value Delivery
The selected ball becomes a usable artefact.
Step 8 — Continue or Release
Evidence determines scaling, adaptation, or archive.
Convergence is present, but velocity is the driver.
5. Embedding Inside Other Frameworks
The Red Ball Method is best understood as a high-velocity upstream protocol.
Inside Design Thinking
Design Thinking emphasizes empathy, problem framing, and iterative prototyping.
Red Ball can replace or compress:
- Early ideation workshops
- Extended brainstorming phases
It accelerates the move from empathy insights to tangible artefacts.
Inside Dual Track Agile
Dual Track separates discovery and delivery.
Red Ball can serve as:
- The discovery engine within the discovery track
- A bridge between discovery and backlog-ready delivery
Inside Lean Startup
Lean assumes hypotheses are clear.
Red Ball operates before hypotheses are stable.
It generates testable hypotheses through action rather than speculation.
6. Comparison with Adjacent Frameworks
| Framework | Primary Focus | Speed Orientation | Ownership Structure | Question-Driven? | Minimum Value Focus? | Red Ball Differentiator |
| Design Thinking | Empathy & divergence | Moderate | Collective | Partially | Iterative | Faster divergence-to-build |
| Google Sprint | Time-boxed validation | High (fixed) | Centralized decision | Limited | Prototype validation | More flexible, parallel ownership |
| Lean Startup | Hypothesis testing | Iterative | Founder-led | Yes | MVP | Operates before hypotheses stabilize |
| Agile/Scrum | Delivery | Iterative | Role-based | No | Incremental delivery | Upstream velocity engine |
| Dual Track Agile | Continuous discovery | Continuous | Mixed | Yes | Backlog ready | Stronger parallel exploration |
| Lean UX | Collaborative UX | Moderate | Shared | Partially | Prototype feedback | Structured equality rule |
| Double Diamond | Divergence/convergence | Moderate | Phase-based | Partially | Not explicit | Velocity prioritization |
| Jobs To Be Done | Customer need framing | Slow/moderate | Analytical | Yes | Not build-centric | Build-to-answer emphasis |
| TRIZ | Structured problem solving | Analytical | Expert-driven | Yes | No | Hands-on interdisciplinary builds |
| Effectuation | Entrepreneurial logic | Adaptive | Founder-centric | Yes | Action-based | Formalized team equality |
| Stage-Gate | Governance control | Slow | Hierarchical | No | Formal validation | Radically higher velocity |
| Continuous Discovery | Ongoing testing | Continuous | Product-led | Yes | Yes | Explicit parallel ownership |
| Cynefin-based experimentation | Context classification | Contextual | Expert-led | Yes | Varies | Less analytical, more build-driven |
| Theory of Constraints (innovation flow) | Bottleneck removal | Flow-based | System-level | No | No | Micro-level question velocity |
7. Strengths Emerging from This Reframing
- Structural velocity as measurable outcome
- Distributed agency embedded in process rules
- Question-driven exploration reduces ego defence
- Build-first mentality compresses theory-to-practice gap
- Flexible insertion into other frameworks
8. Boundary Conditions and Safety Constraints
The method is not ideal when:
- Regulatory validation must precede exploration
- Strategic direction is fully defined and stable
- Hierarchical decision control cannot be relaxed
- Psychological safety cannot be reasonably established
Safety rule:
Ideas violating legal, ethical, or safety standards are filtered before exploration.
9. Falsifiable Hypotheses for Validation
H1: Teams using parallel question-balls will reach usable artefacts faster than teams using serial ideation.
H2: Explicit distributed ownership increases engagement and iteration throughput.
H3: Question-led framing reduces defensive behaviour compared to idea-led brainstorming.
H4: Minimum Value Products produced under velocity constraints will produce comparable learning outcomes to traditional MVP cycles but in shorter time.
10. Is This Novel or a Remix?
The Red Ball Method is not a rejection of existing frameworks.
It is a recombination with a different center of gravity.
Its novel contribution lies in:
- Making velocity the primary design constraint
- Treating distributed ownership as structural rule
- Replacing brainstorming with question-driven build cycles
- Formalizing minimum value delivery as both learning and value instrument
- Operating as a bridge protocol across frameworks
If future validation shows it is merely a variant of existing discovery practices, it may be best positioned as:
The Red Ball Protocol: A velocity loop for interdisciplinary innovation teams.
Closing Statement
The Red Ball Method is an attempt to formalize a practice observed across multiple innovation contexts over a decade: interdisciplinary teams move fastest when they are equal, question-driven, and building immediately toward value.
This document is an invitation for critique, testing, and refinement.
