Since our major contribution concerns an innovation climate, I propose that we have three subsections discussion initiatives to create innovation climates in three countries.
- In Finland we can discuss (1) DF, citing SEOS and Powerkiss success stories. (2) For MIDE we have a background and a list of projects but we don't know how successful any of them are. Olli, could you please comment on some of them: what has been accomplished? We still need to get a clear idea of how, as an innovation climate, MIDE is different from a typical academic granting agency. Yrjo said they have been very risk-taking with the MIDE funds and have weighted vision and ideas more than credentials. But that's what every granting agency says such as EU's FP7 :) So, the idea of ambitious/visionary alone makes me a bit skeptical ;)
Also, I feel we could leave out EIT. It's a hot topic on one hand but on the other it's too early to tell. - I have an excellent example for US. I found this independent non-profit called Business Innovation Factory which is in the Boston area. Their philosophy ties in with 2 important issues we are discussing (1) open innovation concepts/ living labs and (2) a systems theoretic approach. They have two interesting 'customer centric' living labs which they call experience labs. One is an elder care experience project, for old-age homes, assisted living etc. The second is a student experience project. Do see their website! If you have time, you could also see a nice TED talk by their excutive director Mellisa Withers.
- For India, I have a very good example as well. I thought of writing about grassroot innovations. One of the great post-colonial examples of 'user-driven innovation' is in the form of innovation taking place at the grassroots. These innovations are largely need-based and developed by people with no formal education. (A famous example from the TED era is a secondary school student William Kamkwamba who built a windmill from cycle parts to power his entire household). In the late 1980's, Anil Gupta, a professor working with sustainable energy resources in India got an idea to tap into these innovations, scale them up to reach the formal world of technology (grassroots -> global), and reward the innovators fairly. The result is the Honeybee Network which has identified and rewarded more than 10,000 grassroots innovations since 1989! Here's a 2006 BBC piece on this network.
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