What does innovation mean? This presentation looks at how large businesses can overcome self imposed red tape and create opportunities for Innovation. It also looks at what leaders can do to drive successful innovation and the methods you can use.
I wrote this a few years ago when I did the Great Brain Debate. At the time there was a strong view that young people were shallow, narrow and disconnected. I didn't, and still don't believe it. I thought i would write down what i did believe.
Be Competitively Unpredictable! - Make it happen with innovationStefan Lindegaard
Competitively unpredictable: two words that spell the key to success in today’s fast paced, highly competitive business arena. If your company has the ability to consistently outmaneuver the competition in ways they never see coming, then the future is bright.
Why is being competitively unpredictable so essential now? One key reason is the ever-shrinking window of opportunity. In the past decades, depending on your industry, you could count on having three or five or even seven years after bringing something new to market to make good money before you needed to come up with the next new thing to keep revenues growing.
This is no longer the case. While the pace of innovation used to be fast but still manageable, now the window of opportunity is getting shorter and moving faster so you’re forced to innovate ever faster. One of the best examples is the mobile phone industry where they are now counting in months.
Open innovation and business model innovation are key concepts for becoming competitively unpredictable and in this session Stefan Lindegaard shares his views on how companies can embrace these concepts in order to bring better innovation to market faster.
Specifically, he provides:
• an overview of the current state of innovation and what the future will bring us
• examples on how leading-edge companies merge open innovation and business model innovation
• insights on why companies must embrace failure for better innovation
• insights on how companies can use social media for their innovation efforts
"The Corporate Innovation Playbook” is the one of the most comprehensive studies on the pragmatic aspects of getting innovation planned and done inside companies. What are the biggest contributors and barriers to mapping out and implementing innovation inside companies? What are companies doing now? Why? What is innovation’s potential impact on their overall business? What will change in the future? What are their unfair challenges & advantages vs. startups?
This study, conducted by an futureproofing and transformation firm Wikibrands and built in partnership with global innovation experts at Catalyst3, 5&Vine, IScale, J Five, Liminal, New Cottage Industries & Co, Paul Barter & Associates and Scope Communications, will interview over 40 corporate innovation leaders and survey more than 250+ innovation practitioners and experts to answer these questions and more. We find too much innovation research to be focused on early stage, elegant but “head in the clouds” observation or strictly academic analysis - we want to distill the DNA of “innovation in the wild”.
We are hoping the results go to some length in providing answers to: improving corporate innovation growth & success rates, identifying the right types of leadership, ambitions and routes to market, presenting relatable lighthouse examples, and understanding the future pace, evolution, attractive business models, headlines and debates facing corporate innovators over the next 5 years.
In the world of the enterprise, innovation must extend from the initial ambitious ideas gathered from R&D labs around the world, all the way through applied R&D with industry partners, and into the development and commercialization of technology products and platforms.
Innovation starts with the spark of the right culture and talent meeting that ambitious and once hidden idea. But it doesn’t stop there. In the world of the enterprise, I see the practice of innovation as encompassing a full lifecycle. It starts with those crazy and ambitious ideas that are then iterated and shepherded through a rigorous process of applied R&D. For the ideas that finally prove their worth, new technology products
and platforms that address significant business problems are created and taken into the marketplace.
I call this multi-phase process: Full Lifecycle Innovation. It is a practical approach to one of the most creative and essential practices in business today:
Transforming Ideas form the Lab Into Marketplace Realities
The practice of Full lifecycle innovation requires a layer of processes, resources and decision criteria – each one a little different for the four phases of the journey:
1. Open Innovation
2. Applied R&D
3. Product and Platform Development
4. Commercialization
At each step, truly powerful events are triggered, explored and nurtured as different players, technologies and ideas enter the mix. All of them are serving the goal of creating something that is substantially bigger and more impactful than the simple sum of its parts. Something that is truly remarkable.
At NTT i3, we believe that Full Lifecycle Innovation is about:
Curating a culture of ambitious ideas
With rebellious talent from around the world
Dedicated to turning hidden opportunities into real products
That make a difference for the enterprise
I wrote this a few years ago when I did the Great Brain Debate. At the time there was a strong view that young people were shallow, narrow and disconnected. I didn't, and still don't believe it. I thought i would write down what i did believe.
Be Competitively Unpredictable! - Make it happen with innovationStefan Lindegaard
Competitively unpredictable: two words that spell the key to success in today’s fast paced, highly competitive business arena. If your company has the ability to consistently outmaneuver the competition in ways they never see coming, then the future is bright.
Why is being competitively unpredictable so essential now? One key reason is the ever-shrinking window of opportunity. In the past decades, depending on your industry, you could count on having three or five or even seven years after bringing something new to market to make good money before you needed to come up with the next new thing to keep revenues growing.
This is no longer the case. While the pace of innovation used to be fast but still manageable, now the window of opportunity is getting shorter and moving faster so you’re forced to innovate ever faster. One of the best examples is the mobile phone industry where they are now counting in months.
Open innovation and business model innovation are key concepts for becoming competitively unpredictable and in this session Stefan Lindegaard shares his views on how companies can embrace these concepts in order to bring better innovation to market faster.
Specifically, he provides:
• an overview of the current state of innovation and what the future will bring us
• examples on how leading-edge companies merge open innovation and business model innovation
• insights on why companies must embrace failure for better innovation
• insights on how companies can use social media for their innovation efforts
"The Corporate Innovation Playbook” is the one of the most comprehensive studies on the pragmatic aspects of getting innovation planned and done inside companies. What are the biggest contributors and barriers to mapping out and implementing innovation inside companies? What are companies doing now? Why? What is innovation’s potential impact on their overall business? What will change in the future? What are their unfair challenges & advantages vs. startups?
This study, conducted by an futureproofing and transformation firm Wikibrands and built in partnership with global innovation experts at Catalyst3, 5&Vine, IScale, J Five, Liminal, New Cottage Industries & Co, Paul Barter & Associates and Scope Communications, will interview over 40 corporate innovation leaders and survey more than 250+ innovation practitioners and experts to answer these questions and more. We find too much innovation research to be focused on early stage, elegant but “head in the clouds” observation or strictly academic analysis - we want to distill the DNA of “innovation in the wild”.
We are hoping the results go to some length in providing answers to: improving corporate innovation growth & success rates, identifying the right types of leadership, ambitions and routes to market, presenting relatable lighthouse examples, and understanding the future pace, evolution, attractive business models, headlines and debates facing corporate innovators over the next 5 years.
In the world of the enterprise, innovation must extend from the initial ambitious ideas gathered from R&D labs around the world, all the way through applied R&D with industry partners, and into the development and commercialization of technology products and platforms.
Innovation starts with the spark of the right culture and talent meeting that ambitious and once hidden idea. But it doesn’t stop there. In the world of the enterprise, I see the practice of innovation as encompassing a full lifecycle. It starts with those crazy and ambitious ideas that are then iterated and shepherded through a rigorous process of applied R&D. For the ideas that finally prove their worth, new technology products
and platforms that address significant business problems are created and taken into the marketplace.
I call this multi-phase process: Full Lifecycle Innovation. It is a practical approach to one of the most creative and essential practices in business today:
Transforming Ideas form the Lab Into Marketplace Realities
The practice of Full lifecycle innovation requires a layer of processes, resources and decision criteria – each one a little different for the four phases of the journey:
1. Open Innovation
2. Applied R&D
3. Product and Platform Development
4. Commercialization
At each step, truly powerful events are triggered, explored and nurtured as different players, technologies and ideas enter the mix. All of them are serving the goal of creating something that is substantially bigger and more impactful than the simple sum of its parts. Something that is truly remarkable.
At NTT i3, we believe that Full Lifecycle Innovation is about:
Curating a culture of ambitious ideas
With rebellious talent from around the world
Dedicated to turning hidden opportunities into real products
That make a difference for the enterprise
As I have recently included some new content in my presentations and sessions, I would like to share these insights with you in the form of an updated presentation deck. Here, I focus on the the following views and messages:
- A general state of innovation and what you need to know about it these days
- What open innovation is and how it is relevant in the context of big companies and SME´s and startups
- What it takes to be successful with innovation today as an individual and as a team
When I give talks and sessions, I draw upon a comprehensive set of content which you can look further at www.innovationupgrade.com.
Accelerate 2017_What LEGO + The New York Times have been learning about disru...Certus Solutions
We are in a time of dizzying change. It’s estimated that nearly half of all jobs could be at risk over the next two decades because of Artificial Intelligence, automation, Cloud and IoT.
Humankind has entered uncharted territory in terms of the pace of technological change. The Fourth Industrial Revolution will confront us all - so how do we make sense of it and prepare ourselves for a not-so-dystopian future?
Telenet Idealabs: First Vertical Accelerator in BelgiumCedric Deweeck
On May 15 we launched our partnership with Telenet. We're launching a vertical accelerator in the media & tech sector. Find all details on www.telenetidealabs.be
70% of Transformational Change programmes fail. 68% of IT projects fail. Most of what we are working on will never succeed. How can we prevent this huge waste of resources. This deck explores the role of innovation labs in early stage testing and fast failure..
Laicos is a technology Startup Studio led by Ryan Negri and Kyle Matthews. With 20 years combined operational and startup experience, Negri and Matthews want to shape the up-and-coming startup ecosystem of Tampa, Florida, developing their own ideas to create a new tech hub of innovation and entrepreneurship.
A “Startup Studio” is a structure whose aim is to repeatedly build products into companies. Thanks to its infrastructure and resources, a startup studio increase a product’s chance of success and optimize its creation and growth.
The difference between incubators/accelerators and Startup Studios is the vested human capital involved around an idea. At the core of the startups studio model are dedicated teams helping business ideas develop into beautiful products and successful companies.
Laicos’ flagship inaugural product, Fuse, is a social media management platform for the consumers and power users, with a simple price model and a clean and attractive UI. In addition, Laicos is developing four additional products: BusFinder, currently in beta version, an app utilizing data from the Tampa Public Transportation System; $1Market, to offer many different services to users for $1 dollar/mo, Order to Seat, for fans to order food to their seat while at a stadium or arena, and FoodStops, a food truck tracking app for consumers and marketing platform for vendors. In 20I7, we plan to work with other founders to help turn their ideas into reality.
Open Innovation Projects - 10 tips for corporations working like startups, wo...Tomasz Rudolf
How can corporate leaders leverage startups as a source of innovation? In this keynote presentation from international PMI congress, I share 10 tips for corporations that want to work like startups or work with startups for digital transformation.
Experience Probes for Exploring the Impact of Novel ProductsMike Kuniavsky
This presentation includes an overview of PARC, of Innovation Services at PARC and our use of social science, and a description of a process we use, experience probes, to reduce the risk of adopting novel technologies while still making breakthrough innovations.
Eric Ries, Author/Speaker/Consultant, The Lean Startup500 Startups
Presentation by Eric Ries (Author/Speaker/Consultant, The Lean Startup) at the 'Lean Startup, Lean Investor' event on November 3, 2010 (Produced by 500 Startups & Nokia/Nokia Growth Partners)
As I have recently included some new content in my presentations and sessions, I would like to share these insights with you in the form of an updated presentation deck. Here, I focus on the the following views and messages:
- A general state of innovation and what you need to know about it these days
- What open innovation is and how it is relevant in the context of big companies and SME´s and startups
- What it takes to be successful with innovation today as an individual and as a team
When I give talks and sessions, I draw upon a comprehensive set of content which you can look further at www.innovationupgrade.com.
Accelerate 2017_What LEGO + The New York Times have been learning about disru...Certus Solutions
We are in a time of dizzying change. It’s estimated that nearly half of all jobs could be at risk over the next two decades because of Artificial Intelligence, automation, Cloud and IoT.
Humankind has entered uncharted territory in terms of the pace of technological change. The Fourth Industrial Revolution will confront us all - so how do we make sense of it and prepare ourselves for a not-so-dystopian future?
Telenet Idealabs: First Vertical Accelerator in BelgiumCedric Deweeck
On May 15 we launched our partnership with Telenet. We're launching a vertical accelerator in the media & tech sector. Find all details on www.telenetidealabs.be
70% of Transformational Change programmes fail. 68% of IT projects fail. Most of what we are working on will never succeed. How can we prevent this huge waste of resources. This deck explores the role of innovation labs in early stage testing and fast failure..
Laicos is a technology Startup Studio led by Ryan Negri and Kyle Matthews. With 20 years combined operational and startup experience, Negri and Matthews want to shape the up-and-coming startup ecosystem of Tampa, Florida, developing their own ideas to create a new tech hub of innovation and entrepreneurship.
A “Startup Studio” is a structure whose aim is to repeatedly build products into companies. Thanks to its infrastructure and resources, a startup studio increase a product’s chance of success and optimize its creation and growth.
The difference between incubators/accelerators and Startup Studios is the vested human capital involved around an idea. At the core of the startups studio model are dedicated teams helping business ideas develop into beautiful products and successful companies.
Laicos’ flagship inaugural product, Fuse, is a social media management platform for the consumers and power users, with a simple price model and a clean and attractive UI. In addition, Laicos is developing four additional products: BusFinder, currently in beta version, an app utilizing data from the Tampa Public Transportation System; $1Market, to offer many different services to users for $1 dollar/mo, Order to Seat, for fans to order food to their seat while at a stadium or arena, and FoodStops, a food truck tracking app for consumers and marketing platform for vendors. In 20I7, we plan to work with other founders to help turn their ideas into reality.
Open Innovation Projects - 10 tips for corporations working like startups, wo...Tomasz Rudolf
How can corporate leaders leverage startups as a source of innovation? In this keynote presentation from international PMI congress, I share 10 tips for corporations that want to work like startups or work with startups for digital transformation.
Experience Probes for Exploring the Impact of Novel ProductsMike Kuniavsky
This presentation includes an overview of PARC, of Innovation Services at PARC and our use of social science, and a description of a process we use, experience probes, to reduce the risk of adopting novel technologies while still making breakthrough innovations.
Eric Ries, Author/Speaker/Consultant, The Lean Startup500 Startups
Presentation by Eric Ries (Author/Speaker/Consultant, The Lean Startup) at the 'Lean Startup, Lean Investor' event on November 3, 2010 (Produced by 500 Startups & Nokia/Nokia Growth Partners)
Rapid Prototyping - Bringing an idea to Lifepeter williams
A workshop that helps people bring ideas to life through rough sketching and prototyping. This one was virtual which is slightly more difficult but also can be done face to face
A paper on the Dawn of the Digital Era in PNG. New Infrastructure including the Coral Sea Cable and the Kumul Domestic Cable network will see capacity increase 1000 fold. The people of PNG have a voracious appetite for digital technology especially mobile phones and social media however around 85% of the population have access to electricity. Business can play a positive role in leveraging the new infrastructure and helping the people of PNG build their digital capacity throughout society.
Thoughts for Food - Megatrends, Business and Technologypeter williams
Slides from a presentation I did at the South Australian Food Summit put on by Food SA. The presentation looks at the long term mega trends and how people across the supply chain can take advantage of technology, together with some thoughts and resources.
Talk i did at the Summer School for Qld Department of Health about taking the Core to the Edge. You sort of had to e there to make sense of it but the crowd liked it
Stepping Up to the Digital World - ASFA 2014peter williams
A presentation I delivered to Trustees of Superannuation Funds in Australia at ASFA 2014. Covers digital disruption, cloud, mobile, social, data, personalisation, innovation and embracing edges
A presentation I did on behalf of Salesforce.com for their Cloud Executive Series. It covers four immutable trends of clomosoda:cloud mobile social and data. The underlying message that the pace of change is increasing and Institutions are not keeping pace with customers and employees. It also covers opportunities with crowds and development communities with a number of real life examples. It includes results from a recent survey of HR people across Australian organisations to highlight the current attitudes to Social Media and seeks to break the myth that Social reduces productivity when the reality is that it can significantly increase it.
My view of why open government makes sense and how to do it, Include how we built www.builditback.org presented at Victorian Public Service Innovation Forum #vpsif10
The case study discusses the potential of drone delivery and the challenges that need to be addressed before it becomes widespread.
Key takeaways:
Drone delivery is in its early stages: Amazon's trial in the UK demonstrates the potential for faster deliveries, but it's still limited by regulations and technology.
Regulations are a major hurdle: Safety concerns around drone collisions with airplanes and people have led to restrictions on flight height and location.
Other challenges exist: Who will use drone delivery the most? Is it cost-effective compared to traditional delivery trucks?
Discussion questions:
Managerial challenges: Integrating drones requires planning for new infrastructure, training staff, and navigating regulations. There are also marketing and recruitment considerations specific to this technology.
External forces vary by country: Regulations, consumer acceptance, and infrastructure all differ between countries.
Demographics matter: Younger generations might be more receptive to drone delivery, while older populations might have concerns.
Stakeholders for Amazon: Customers, regulators, aviation authorities, and competitors are all stakeholders. Regulators likely hold the greatest influence as they determine the feasibility of drone delivery.
The Team Member and Guest Experience - Lead and Take Care of your restaurant team. They are the people closest to and delivering Hospitality to your paying Guests!
Make the call, and we can assist you.
408-784-7371
Foodservice Consulting + Design
Senior Project and Engineering Leader Jim Smith.pdfJim Smith
I am a Project and Engineering Leader with extensive experience as a Business Operations Leader, Technical Project Manager, Engineering Manager and Operations Experience for Domestic and International companies such as Electrolux, Carrier, and Deutz. I have developed new products using Stage Gate development/MS Project/JIRA, for the pro-duction of Medical Equipment, Large Commercial Refrigeration Systems, Appliances, HVAC, and Diesel engines.
My experience includes:
Managed customized engineered refrigeration system projects with high voltage power panels from quote to ship, coordinating actions between electrical engineering, mechanical design and application engineering, purchasing, production, test, quality assurance and field installation. Managed projects $25k to $1M per project; 4-8 per month. (Hussmann refrigeration)
Successfully developed the $15-20M yearly corporate capital strategy for manufacturing, with the Executive Team and key stakeholders. Created project scope and specifications, business case, ROI, managed project plans with key personnel for nine consumer product manufacturing and distribution sites; to support the company’s strategic sales plan.
Over 15 years of experience managing and developing cost improvement projects with key Stakeholders, site Manufacturing Engineers, Mechanical Engineers, Maintenance, and facility support personnel to optimize pro-duction operations, safety, EHS, and new product development. (BioLab, Deutz, Caire)
Experience working as a Technical Manager developing new products with chemical engineers and packaging engineers to enhance and reduce the cost of retail products. I have led the activities of multiple engineering groups with diverse backgrounds.
Great experience managing the product development of products which utilize complex electrical controls, high voltage power panels, product testing, and commissioning.
Created project scope, business case, ROI for multiple capital projects to support electrotechnical assembly and CPG goods. Identified project cost, risk, success criteria, and performed equipment qualifications. (Carrier, Electrolux, Biolab, Price, Hussmann)
Created detailed projects plans using MS Project, Gant charts in excel, and updated new product development in Jira for stakeholders and project team members including critical path.
Great knowledge of ISO9001, NFPA, OSHA regulations.
User level knowledge of MRP/SAP, MS Project, Powerpoint, Visio, Mastercontrol, JIRA, Power BI and Tableau.
I appreciate your consideration, and look forward to discussing this role with you, and how I can lead your company’s growth and profitability. I can be contacted via LinkedIn via phone or E Mail.
Jim Smith
678-993-7195
jimsmith30024@gmail.com
Artificial intelligence (AI) offers new opportunities to radically reinvent the way we do business. This study explores how CEOs and top decision makers around the world are responding to the transformative potential of AI.
Oprah Winfrey: A Leader in Media, Philanthropy, and Empowerment | CIO Women M...CIOWomenMagazine
This person is none other than Oprah Winfrey, a highly influential figure whose impact extends beyond television. This article will delve into the remarkable life and lasting legacy of Oprah. Her story serves as a reminder of the importance of perseverance, compassion, and firm determination.
31. Network
Connections
with others to
create value
Process
Signature
or superior methods
for
doing your work
Product System
Complementary
products and
services
Channel
How your offerings
are delivered to
customers and users
Customer
Engagement
Distinctive
interactions
you foster
Profit Model
The way in which
you make money
Structure
Alignment
of your talent
and assets
Product
Performance
Distinguishing features
and functionality
Service
Support and
enhancements
that surround
your offerings
Brand
Representation
of your offerings
and business
Managing across your innovation portfolio | Ten Types of Innovation