American Chamber of Commerce Lunch

Excellent Speech by the New President of the American Chamber of Commerce in Ireland.

Lionel Alexander urged politicians and business leaders to ensure that opportunities are taken. He encouraged whole Ireland thinking and not regional sub division, after all Ireland is a small place and duplication has a cost. Lionel spoke about the creation of an “Enterprise Foundry” and of having universities “lift the bar”

“…I have great confidence in the future of Ireland and its people. With the strong base of foreign direct investment we have a significant competitive advantage and we have a large pool of very talented people with the grit and determination to lead Ireland back to prosperity.

“If we stop looking over our shoulders at the Celtic Tiger but focus firmly on how our present advantages and current opportunities can deliver a better future we cannot but succeed.”

Venture Capitalist & Wikipedia founder lectures

Some interesting lectures in Trinity next week.



Tim Draper one of the best venture capitalist in Silicon Valley – he’s famous for his investments in Skype,  Hotmail and Overture to name a few!! also Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, will deliver a public lecture in Dublin on Friday November 27th in association with Silicon Republic, the Dublin City Enterprise Board and the Digital Hub.. Both lectures are on in Trinity on Friday 20th& 27th November,  7.30pm at the Edmund Burke theatre ( in through Nassau st. entrance). For any-one intested you can buy tickets at http://www.lecturesireland.com/

Dilbert is dead – Long live Creativity

Interesting essay from Michael Lund over on the Salon blog that is very relevant for anyone in the “knowledge economy”. Is Ireland ready for the next wave of employment and innovation?

Dilbert, the popular comic strip written and drawn by Scott Adams, is a satirical take on life in a modern office environment. Dilbert the main character is an engineer in a corporate culture that is bureaucratic, where office politics take precedence over productivity and where employees skills are not as important as the insane directives that govern their work lives.

It is also very funny and very true.
Everyone should probably own a copy of The Dilbert Principle

Cube farm workers (like Dilbert) are, the essay argues, a result of the industrial revolution. Technology allows one person to do the work of dozens moving labour from the fields to the factories, from the factories to the cubes.

Computerization is now replacing a lot of office workers with automated systems. Whole businesses get replaced by self service websites.
Dilberts are going to be an endangered species

So where will labour move to now?

The most numerous and stable jobs of tomorrow will be those that cannot be offshored, because they must be performed on U.S. soil, and also cannot be automated, either because they require a high degree of creativity or because they rely on the human touch in face-to-face interactions. The latter are sometimes called “proximity services” and they include the fastest-growing occupations, healthcare and education.


Interestingly, Scott Adams used Google Alerts to find a treatment for a speech defect he suffered from. Google notified him of an “obscure medical publication” that wrote about Spasmodic Dysphonia. He took the information to his own doctor, was referred from there to other doctors, and eventually had successful surgery to fix the voice defect.

I never would have found that path without Google Alerts


So what does this mean for Ireland?

Healthcare is already a huge employer but the opportunity is not in the “front end” services. It is in using creativity and innovation to solve major problems in this area and pull through the other industries. It may be in Life Sciences and Bio Sciences that the future lies.

There are already some fantastic Irish examples. The Artistent work from Trinity College Dublin in the area of flexible stents. The biomedical diagnostics pioneered in Dublin City University. The Light-activated anti bacterial powders from the Dublin Institute of Technology is likely to be a huge success in these days of medical resistant disease.

This is where employment will be after the cube farm. There are some really promising developments. Lets keep them going.

Daily Dilbert

Open Innovation Lecture by Henry Chesbrough in Belfast

Heads up for all those interested in Open Innovation in Ireland. Henry Chesbrough is in Belfast next month giving a lecture called “Open Innovation – a New paradigm for R&D” 

The guys at the Research & Regional Services group have kindly agreed to share the invitation with readers of InnovationChef.com

Here are the details:


You are invited to an

 

 INNOVATION LECTURE

as part of the InterTradeIreland All-Island Innovation Programme

 

 

 

Open Innovation

- a New Paradigm for R&D

 

presented by

Professor Henry Chesbrough

Director of the Centre for Open Innovation

University of California, Berkeley

 

Tuesday 10 November 2009 (6.00pm)

The Great Hall, Queen’s University Belfast

 

The concept of Open Innovation advocates that companies can no longer keep their own innovations secret. The key to success is creating an open platform around your innovations so your customers, your employees and even your competitors can build upon them. Only then will you create an ongoing, evolving community of users, doers and creators.

 

Today, in many industries, the logic that supports an internal and centralised approach to R&D has become obsolete. This change creates a new logic of open innovation that embraces external ideas and knowledge in conjunction with internal R&D. However, companies must still perform the difficult and arduous work necessary to convert promising research results into products and services that satisfy customers’ needs. Innovators must integrate their ideas, expertise and skills with those of others outside the organisation to deliver the result to the marketplace, using the most effective means possible. In short, firms that can harness outside ideas to advance their own businesses, while leveraging their internal ideas outside their current operations, are likely to thrive in this new era of open innovation.

 

Henry Chesbrough is Executive Director of the Centre for Open Innovation at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley.  He has a unique background as both a practitioner and researcher having spent 10 years in senior product planning and strategic marketing positions in Silicon Valley. His research interests include a focus on innovation; managing R&D; technology-based spin-offs; corporate venture capital; and evolution in high-technology industries in the US, Europe and Japan.  His book, Open Innovation, articulates a new paradigm for organising and managing R&D.  This book was named a “Best Business Book” by Strategy & Business magazine.

CoContact:

regional@qub.ac.uk. to get more details and for your invite.

Irish certificate course in Sustainable Design Innovation

Good sounding course from Carlow IT. Anyone interested in sustainability and design soon check it out soon as it is meant to start in September. Looks like you get credit towards a Masters too.

Programme Content:

  • Introduction to Sustainable Design (SD), case studies, approaches & philosophies
  • Practical sustainable design strategies for designers
  • Social and environmental legislative concerns for designers
  • LCA (Product Life Cycle Analysis), LCA tools, IT(Information Technology) packages, simplified applied LCA
  • Social and Corporate Responsibility
  • Packaging and waste considerations for designers
  • Marketing sustainable design
  • Communication and presentation of sustainable design and business
  • Development of the SD Brief and SD Strategy
  • SD Facilitation and Multidisciplinary collaboration
  • Procurement and specification of materials and processes
  • Sustainable Product Service Systems (SPSS)

Irish Inventor granted patent on shopping recommender system

If you have ever bought something online you are familiar with recommendations for other products being generated for you. You buy the latest Dylan album and are recommended his previous back catalog, that kind of thing. Now conventional  systems generate these suggestions by picking items that are like items that other users have purchased in the past. Professor Barry Smyth, a University College Dublin (UCD) scientist, has made a major breakthrough in online “recommender” systems and has been granted US and China patents on his system to improve online shopping and information.

Professor Smyth says his new technique will help existing recommender systems to produce recommendations that are both relevant to users and different from each other.

“One limitation is a tendency to produce sets of recommendations that are similar to each other”

The new system avoids very similar products being recommended together and allows more choices to be displayed.

This is a major research area in computer science and Irish universities are at the leading edge of the field. Netflix, the US online movie rental company, is using open innovation with a  $1 million competition to develop the next generation of recommender systems.

Check out research by Professor Smyth and the team at Clarity – the Centre for Sensor Web Technologies

Bob’s New Album is pretty good though too..