By M. Isi Eromosele
Your company has the potential to be a world leader in
innovation. The strength of your company and its wider knowledge base are
strategic assets. Your untapped knowledge base could be the most productive in
your industry, with a depth and breadth of expertise across over multiple areas
of distinctive research strength.
To grow within your industry, your company has to be
committed to invest in maintaining and strengthening its knowledge base, and to
continue to fund a balance of blue skies and applied innovative projects.
To succeed in the global innovation economy, your company
must strengthen its ability to leverage the commercialization of emerging
technologies, and to capture the value chains linked to these. The private sector is always going
to be central to innovation.
Innovation and research are now increasingly international endeavors.
Most innovations originate from multiple countries, drawing in components or technologies
developed in multiple locations with the high-growth economies playing an
increasingly important part.
Global Collaboration
Open innovation means harnessing new knowledge wherever it
comes from. Your business should already have strong partnerships with other companies
in the United States
and overseas, which will reinforce its strengths and bolster its weaknesses.
The geography of innovation is changing. Fast growing
economies like China
and India offer
new opportunities for both business, technology and new product development cooperation.
Global Innovation And Research
Other countries understand that innovation is fundamental to
economic success. Despite marked differences between national innovation
systems, some countries, like the U.S. ,
Japan and Germany
innovate more effectively than others.
Scale confers advantage, yet much smaller countries like Sweden
also perform strongly.
Fast growing economies like China ,
Brazil or India
are rapidly raising their game. China ,
for instance, is set to become the second largest recipient of foreign direct investment in the world and is already the second largest
investor in R&D after the United States .
In the major emerging economies, high-technology manufacturing trade now
represents 30 percent of their total manufacturing trade, compared to 25
percent for the OECD (Eurozone) area.
New scientific hubs have been created over the last decade, for
instance in Seoul , Shanghai
and Sao Paulo . Some universities in
Asia , such as the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology,
are emerging as leading research institutions.
Many factors influence the effectiveness of any innovation
system in many countries: governance regime; taxation and regulation of
enterprise, and their access to finance; size of manufacturing base; organization
of the university sector; levels and orientation of
government-funded research; and the role and weight of
different public institutions.
The most successful national systems, however, share common
characteristics. They exhibit an ability to generate long-term and risky
investment at scale for new ideas, both public and private. These new ideas are the
result of relationships among people producing, sharing, applying and developing various
kinds of knowledge through cohesive networks.
These networks also allow them to engage with international
collaborators and adopt innovations that emerge elsewhere in the world. Their governments,
delivery bodies and agencies take a leadership role.
They develop technological capabilities through funding
research and R&D. They actively support strong collaborations between
companies and take investment decisions on research and technological
priorities, institutional frameworks as well as education, regulation and
infrastructure provision.
Challenge-Led Innovation
Innovation is increasingly driven by the challenges that all
nations face in the 21st Century. Current patterns of natural resource use are
unsustainable and put global prosperity and growth at risk. Demographic change
is affecting all developed economies. By 2050, the proportion of the population
aged over 65 will increase from one in six to one in four.
The world needs solutions to these emerging societal needs, and
to develop more challenges can only be resolved through interdisciplinary
collaboration, across technological and sector expertise, involving both
fundamental and applied research.
These challenges will transform sectors such as automotive, healthcare,
agri-food, construction and digital systems, requiring the development
of new business models, technologies and manufacturing techniques.
Design For Innovation
Design can be transformative for your company, through
leading or supporting product
and process innovation for managing the innovation process
itself, for the
commercialization of discoveries and the delivery of
products and services.
Research has consistently shown a link between the use of
design and improved business performance across key measures including turnover,
profit and market share. Most successful high-tech businesses are design and
technology-driven.
- Increase the scale and reach of your innovation infrastructure through expanding their capability
- Support
innovative collaborations between your business and knowledge base, through
innovation vouchers and increased numbers of Knowledge Transfer Partnerships
- Improve
the competitiveness of your business and its products and services through
design
- Accelerate your international collaboration with other global companies, including your competitors
Intellectual Property
Intellectual Property (IP) is a significant factor for
growth for many companies; innovative companies that use intellectual property
rights are associated with significantly better chances of firm survival and company
growth.
Evidence shows that use of patents is associated with
greater knowledge creation, better use of knowledge within firms and higher
transfer rates of knowledge between firms.Trade mark use is similarly associated with higher firm
productivity and innovation.,
However, in protecting their innovation, SMEs lag behind
large firms. While 13 percent of large firms seek to protect their intellectual
property through patents, only 6 percent of SMEs do so and therefore miss
opportunities to seize the full value of their ideas. This is often because
smaller firms do not always understand the value of their IP.
M. Isi Eromosele is
the President | Chief Executive Officer | Executive Creative Director of Oseme
Group - Oseme Creative | Oseme Consulting | Oseme Finance
Copyright Control ©
2012 Oseme Group
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