Governments around the world seek to copy Silicon Valley and create their own innovation space. However, stimulating innovation without igniting the necessary success factors is a fatal and costly mistake.
Innovation Ring Germany is taking innovation development to an all new level. We are bridging the gap between innovation creation and the necessary commercial success of innovations that creates the sought after incremental prosperity in the society.
Alan is a niche-global innovation consulting firm based in EU and USA leveraging 20 years of experience of the founding partners in IT market innovations and International R&D management.
KTN Digital and Creative Business Briefing August 2019 with information on events, funding and support initiatives for innovative UK based digital businesses
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
Governments around the world seek to copy Silicon Valley and create their own innovation space. However, stimulating innovation without igniting the necessary success factors is a fatal and costly mistake.
Innovation Ring Germany is taking innovation development to an all new level. We are bridging the gap between innovation creation and the necessary commercial success of innovations that creates the sought after incremental prosperity in the society.
Alan is a niche-global innovation consulting firm based in EU and USA leveraging 20 years of experience of the founding partners in IT market innovations and International R&D management.
KTN Digital and Creative Business Briefing August 2019 with information on events, funding and support initiatives for innovative UK based digital businesses
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
The role of science, industrial and technology parksAntonio Sfiligoj
presented at UNIDO workshop "Fostering inclusive and sustainable local industrial development in Europe and Central Asia" Ljubljana Slovenija April 8 2014
HiTech is a cohort-based training Program that provides skills to participants in technology commercialization and entrepreneurship. HiTech translates cutting-edge technology and scientific discoveries into high-growth business opportunities, providing an innovation environment where teams can test market relevance of their projects and create a well-grounded business case, with the help of faculty, management students and business mentors.
HiTech runs in two alternative locations: Porto and Lisbon (currently, Porto Business School and Nova School of Business and Economics) with 6 to 8 projects each.
Existing and well-functioning regional or national innovation systems designed to support scienceand
technology-based innovation have to be further developed in order to be able to meet new
challenges from emerging global markets for technology and new forms of global knowledgesharing.
Across all countries, governments have recently been involved in research and education;
hence a need for new knowledge and new business skills will also have to be in the focus of
governmental interest. Governments have constantly been called upon to react accordingly and to
adopt innovation-friendly framework conditions. New policy tools have been created to be able to
better meet this challenge.
The regional dimension has also become of increasing significance. Nowadays, regions have come
up with own innovation strategies considering the individual regional strengths instead of spreading
public investments thinly across several frontier technology research fields and, as a consequence,
not making much of an impact.
Innovation policy has to acknowledge that traditional boundaries between manufacturing and
services are increasingly being blurred. The success of manufacturing depends, for instance, very
much on innovative services, such as design, marketing and logistics as well as on product related
after-sales services, and vice versa. More and more service providers are manufacturing goods
that build upon or are related to their service portfolio or distribution channels. But regional and
industrial development policies and tools are still not sufficiently taking account of these changes.
Service innovation is in fact a driver for growth and structural change across the entire economy. It
helps to make the entire economy more productive and provides fuel for innovation in other
industries. It even has the potential to create new growth poles and to lead markets that have a
macro-economic impact.
The so called systematic innovation policy approach, which has recently been introduced in many
industrialised countries, is based on the assumption that an effective innovation policy has to
improve all determinants that influence a given sector-specific innovation system.
The indicator-based Analysis of National Innovation Systems Approach (ANIS), developed by the
Institute for Innovation and Technology (iit Berlin) includes a comprehensive examination and
evaluation of the status of national innovation systems. It is mainly intended for emerging and
developing countries for which standard innovation benchmarking and monitoring approaches
might not be sufficient as statistical data is often missing or outdated. Policy-makers of these
countries can benefit from clear advice on how to overcome weaknesses within their national
innovation system and to identify determinants of specific relevance.
KTN Digital and Creative Business Briefing October 2019 with information on events, funding and support initiatives for innovative UK based digital businesses.
Startup Braga is an innovation hub designed to assist the inception and development of high potential entrepreneurial projects for international markets.
In partnership with Microsoft Ventures we provide business acceleration programs for startups with global ambitions.
KTN Digital and Creative Business Briefing September 2019 with information on events, funding and support initiatives for innovative UK based digital businesses
Robert Trzebski and Jeremy Stone - Extend into global marketsMelanie Innes
Presentation by Robert Trezbski, CEO Austmine and Jeremy Stone, Group Manager - Innovation GHD. An overview of the [EXTEND] supply chain development program and how businesses can learn to [EXTEND] into global markets.
FERNANDO SOUSA, PH.D.
CIEO/ UNIVERSITY OF THE ALGARVE (fernando.sousa@apgico.pt)
ILEANA MONTEIRO, PH.D.
CIEO/ UNIVERSITY OF THE ALGARVE
2013 MSKE (3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MANAGING SERVICES IN THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY)
FAMALICÃO (UL), 17-19 JULY
The Knowledge Transfer Network, (KTN), Monthly Digital and Creative Business Briefing update. Listing support and innovation opportunities for UK Digital Technology Businesses More info: www.ktn-uk.org
A business incubator is a company that helps new and startup companies to develop by providing services such as management training or office space.The National Business Incubation Association (NBIA) defines business incubators as a catalyst tool for either regional or national economic development. NBIA categorizes their members’ incubators by the following five incubator types: academic institutions; non-profit development corporations; for-profit property development ventures; venture capital firms, and combination of the above
Jes Baily (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jesbailey/) održala je webinar u okviru n Starter-a na temu stvaranja zajednice u doba pandemije koju možemo kasnije da aktiviramo i konvertujemo u kupce.
Jes Baily (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jesbailey/) was a speaker at the new nStarter Webinar where she spoke about how to create a community in times of a pandemic that will later be activated and converted into customers.
The role of science, industrial and technology parksAntonio Sfiligoj
presented at UNIDO workshop "Fostering inclusive and sustainable local industrial development in Europe and Central Asia" Ljubljana Slovenija April 8 2014
HiTech is a cohort-based training Program that provides skills to participants in technology commercialization and entrepreneurship. HiTech translates cutting-edge technology and scientific discoveries into high-growth business opportunities, providing an innovation environment where teams can test market relevance of their projects and create a well-grounded business case, with the help of faculty, management students and business mentors.
HiTech runs in two alternative locations: Porto and Lisbon (currently, Porto Business School and Nova School of Business and Economics) with 6 to 8 projects each.
Existing and well-functioning regional or national innovation systems designed to support scienceand
technology-based innovation have to be further developed in order to be able to meet new
challenges from emerging global markets for technology and new forms of global knowledgesharing.
Across all countries, governments have recently been involved in research and education;
hence a need for new knowledge and new business skills will also have to be in the focus of
governmental interest. Governments have constantly been called upon to react accordingly and to
adopt innovation-friendly framework conditions. New policy tools have been created to be able to
better meet this challenge.
The regional dimension has also become of increasing significance. Nowadays, regions have come
up with own innovation strategies considering the individual regional strengths instead of spreading
public investments thinly across several frontier technology research fields and, as a consequence,
not making much of an impact.
Innovation policy has to acknowledge that traditional boundaries between manufacturing and
services are increasingly being blurred. The success of manufacturing depends, for instance, very
much on innovative services, such as design, marketing and logistics as well as on product related
after-sales services, and vice versa. More and more service providers are manufacturing goods
that build upon or are related to their service portfolio or distribution channels. But regional and
industrial development policies and tools are still not sufficiently taking account of these changes.
Service innovation is in fact a driver for growth and structural change across the entire economy. It
helps to make the entire economy more productive and provides fuel for innovation in other
industries. It even has the potential to create new growth poles and to lead markets that have a
macro-economic impact.
The so called systematic innovation policy approach, which has recently been introduced in many
industrialised countries, is based on the assumption that an effective innovation policy has to
improve all determinants that influence a given sector-specific innovation system.
The indicator-based Analysis of National Innovation Systems Approach (ANIS), developed by the
Institute for Innovation and Technology (iit Berlin) includes a comprehensive examination and
evaluation of the status of national innovation systems. It is mainly intended for emerging and
developing countries for which standard innovation benchmarking and monitoring approaches
might not be sufficient as statistical data is often missing or outdated. Policy-makers of these
countries can benefit from clear advice on how to overcome weaknesses within their national
innovation system and to identify determinants of specific relevance.
KTN Digital and Creative Business Briefing October 2019 with information on events, funding and support initiatives for innovative UK based digital businesses.
Startup Braga is an innovation hub designed to assist the inception and development of high potential entrepreneurial projects for international markets.
In partnership with Microsoft Ventures we provide business acceleration programs for startups with global ambitions.
KTN Digital and Creative Business Briefing September 2019 with information on events, funding and support initiatives for innovative UK based digital businesses
Robert Trzebski and Jeremy Stone - Extend into global marketsMelanie Innes
Presentation by Robert Trezbski, CEO Austmine and Jeremy Stone, Group Manager - Innovation GHD. An overview of the [EXTEND] supply chain development program and how businesses can learn to [EXTEND] into global markets.
FERNANDO SOUSA, PH.D.
CIEO/ UNIVERSITY OF THE ALGARVE (fernando.sousa@apgico.pt)
ILEANA MONTEIRO, PH.D.
CIEO/ UNIVERSITY OF THE ALGARVE
2013 MSKE (3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MANAGING SERVICES IN THE KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY)
FAMALICÃO (UL), 17-19 JULY
The Knowledge Transfer Network, (KTN), Monthly Digital and Creative Business Briefing update. Listing support and innovation opportunities for UK Digital Technology Businesses More info: www.ktn-uk.org
A business incubator is a company that helps new and startup companies to develop by providing services such as management training or office space.The National Business Incubation Association (NBIA) defines business incubators as a catalyst tool for either regional or national economic development. NBIA categorizes their members’ incubators by the following five incubator types: academic institutions; non-profit development corporations; for-profit property development ventures; venture capital firms, and combination of the above
Jes Baily (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jesbailey/) održala je webinar u okviru n Starter-a na temu stvaranja zajednice u doba pandemije koju možemo kasnije da aktiviramo i konvertujemo u kupce.
Jes Baily (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jesbailey/) was a speaker at the new nStarter Webinar where she spoke about how to create a community in times of a pandemic that will later be activated and converted into customers.
Signe Viimsalu, pravnai i finansijski ekspert i savetnik iz Estonije, održala je zanimljivo predavanje na prvom nStarter online meetup-u. Ona se dotakla teme startapa u generalno tržišnih aspekata u momentu krize sa virusom COVID-19
Erasmus za mlade preduzetnike je projekat koji finansira Evropska komisija i koja omogućava mladim preduzetnicima da odu na šestomesečni rad/praksu kod iskusnijeg preduzetnika bilo gde u Evropi.
Novi zakon o paušalnom poslovanju stupa na snagu 01. marta 2020. godine. Ova prezentacija opisuje te promene do detalja i bila je uvod u panel diskusiju koju možete da pogledate ovde: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ibwWxYjFmQw
U okviru novog nStarter meetup-a u Poslovnom inkubatoru Novi Sad, Kristina Forster održala je sjajno predavanje na temu content mix-a! Evo prezentacije sa tog predavanja. :)
Robert C. Bush Jr veliko je ime iz sveta investicija i prava. On je održao predavanje u Poslovnom inkubatoru Novi Sad i mi vam donosimo prezentaciju sa tog predavanja.
Sonja Jovović održala je veoma zanimljivo i korisno predavanje na temu ,,Važnost dobro organizovanog veb sajta za oglašavanje na Google AdWords-u" u Poslovnom inkubatoru Novi Sad. Pogledajte prezentaciju koja ima mnogo korisnih podataka.
Wiley Larsen is a startup founder from Arizona, and he loves talking about startups as well. Recently he had a lecture at the Business incubator Novi Sad.
Acorn Recovery: Restore IT infra within minutesIP ServerOne
Introducing Acorn Recovery as a Service, a simple, fast, and secure managed disaster recovery (DRaaS) by IP ServerOne. A DR solution that helps restore your IT infra within minutes.
This presentation by Morris Kleiner (University of Minnesota), was made during the discussion “Competition and Regulation in Professions and Occupations” held at the Working Party No. 2 on Competition and Regulation on 10 June 2024. More papers and presentations on the topic can be found out at oe.cd/crps.
This presentation was uploaded with the author’s consent.
Have you ever wondered how search works while visiting an e-commerce site, internal website, or searching through other types of online resources? Look no further than this informative session on the ways that taxonomies help end-users navigate the internet! Hear from taxonomists and other information professionals who have first-hand experience creating and working with taxonomies that aid in navigation, search, and discovery across a range of disciplines.
This presentation, created by Syed Faiz ul Hassan, explores the profound influence of media on public perception and behavior. It delves into the evolution of media from oral traditions to modern digital and social media platforms. Key topics include the role of media in information propagation, socialization, crisis awareness, globalization, and education. The presentation also examines media influence through agenda setting, propaganda, and manipulative techniques used by advertisers and marketers. Furthermore, it highlights the impact of surveillance enabled by media technologies on personal behavior and preferences. Through this comprehensive overview, the presentation aims to shed light on how media shapes collective consciousness and public opinion.
Sharpen existing tools or get a new toolbox? Contemporary cluster initiatives...Orkestra
UIIN Conference, Madrid, 27-29 May 2024
James Wilson, Orkestra and Deusto Business School
Emily Wise, Lund University
Madeline Smith, The Glasgow School of Art
0x01 - Newton's Third Law: Static vs. Dynamic AbusersOWASP Beja
f you offer a service on the web, odds are that someone will abuse it. Be it an API, a SaaS, a PaaS, or even a static website, someone somewhere will try to figure out a way to use it to their own needs. In this talk we'll compare measures that are effective against static attackers and how to battle a dynamic attacker who adapts to your counter-measures.
About the Speaker
===============
Diogo Sousa, Engineering Manager @ Canonical
An opinionated individual with an interest in cryptography and its intersection with secure software development.
2. 2
What is STARTUP3?
The STARTUP3 project builds and facilitates an open and collaborative ecosystem for high impact
deep-tech innovators and corporates and acts as a cross-border/sectoral market-maker.
BUILDS AND FACILITATES
an open and collaborative
ecosystem
CORPORATES
DEEP-TECH
innovators
CROSS-BORDER/SECTORIAL
market-makers
2
4. 4
What STARTUP3 brings?
The project aims to generate, take up, ensure
market penetration and further capitalise on
the growth and impact potential of profound
research by providing access to dynamic and
3-phase across the board growth support
framework UPTAKE-UPGRADE-UPSCALE.
UPTAKE
UPGRADE UPSCALE
5. 5
STARTUP3 Business and growth programme gives you an opportunity to bring your idea into industry!
Are you an innovator?
network with
corporate representatives
develop a business plan
with corporate community
be guided by
experts from industry
attend different business
seminars
access to
targeted investors
6. 6
Are you a corporation?
STARTUP3 Accelerator gives an opportunity for corporations to connect with startups,
SMEs, researchers and innovators!
network of
deep-tech
innovators
involve
innovation into
business
cooperate with
innovative
companies
8. 8
STARTUP3 Timeline
DISCLAIMER: Please, follow the detailed rules provided in the Open Call Guideline.
February 20th
Open Call Launch
April 20th
Open Call Deadline
3 months
Best Potentials
6 months
Ideation2Product
3 months
Product2Market
10. 10
STARTUP3 Acceleration Programme
BEST POTENTIALS IDEATION2PRODUCT PRODUCT2MARKET
25
Support innovators to
challenge concepts and ideas,
identify market problems,
estimate the MVP and overall
product effort, and to identify
their competitors from the
deep-tech sphere.
An MVP (Minimum Viable
Product) needs to be built and
tested; this MVP will be
launched together with a
digital marketing plan aimed
at measuring traction.
Building solid partnerships
and detecting real investment
opportunities for the top
projects in the STARTUP3
business and growth
programme.
10 5
12. 12
Mapping STARTUP3 Cross-Innovation System
STARTUP3 Ecosystem Discovery Missions
– a systematic approach towards
cross-ecosystem innovation to bridge the
gap between deep-tech startups/ SMEs
and technopreneurial talent with market
makers (VCs, CVCs, etc.)
Year 1
Year 2
14. This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020
research and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 871709.
startup3.eu
@startup3_eu
@STARTUP3
@startup3_eu
startup3.accelerator
t.me/startup3_eu
@startup3_eu