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Building the Infrastructure for an Innovative Knowledge Economy –European Experience
Professor Ron Johnston Australian Centre for Innovation Faculty of Engineering, University of Sydney Warren Centre Major Projects Committee 14 March 2007
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http://www.aciic.org.au/ M
15 years old; non-profit but very commercial M Mission – to assist organisations to better address the challenges of the future through innovation
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The European Challenge
“Europe must break out of structures and expectations established in the post-WW2 era which leave it today living a moderately comfortable life on slowly declining capital…unsustainable in the face of rising competition from other parts of the world” (Aho Report, p.1)
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AND “In the context of the Lisbon Strategy and the shift to a knowledge-based economy, Europe needs to ensure an attractive business environment for the development of key technology areas and markets where it should aim at achieving world-leading competitive advantage.” (DG-RTD)
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The Response Building the NEW Infrastructure
Strategic Intelligence Demand-side policies to create opportunities for innovation User-led manufacturing
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Strategic Intelligence – a capacity to address the future
Through Databases of foresight and forecasting Futurewatch/ over-the-horizon scanning Analyses of emerging technologies Capacity building Focussed R&D – FP7 €52 billion Multiple applications
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Demand-side policies – the rationale
The primary target should be new and emerging markets for knowledge-intensive goods and services with a high growth potential, which require intensification of R&D efforts and where public authorities can play a critical role on the demand side.” (DG-RTD)
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Examples Past Future Internet
Key platform technologies underpinning Nokia and Philips products Aerospace and high-speed trains Future E-health Pharmaceuticals Energy Environment Transport/logistics Security Digital content (Aho Report)
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Public Procurement Innovation in procurement processes
Procurement from the market of innovative goods/ services Procurement of ‘prospective’ goods/services Innovation in identification of procurement needs
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Characteristics of Lead Markets
High per capita income Quality and quantity of demand Good framework conditions for learning and innovation Pioneering, demanding regulations Competence in entire value chain Image Clear major problems/challenges (Meyer-Kramer, 2004)
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Opportunities? A better strategic intelligence capability will assist in identifying new business opportunities Demand-side policies will create a landscape for new business ventures User-centred innovation has application in all industries, and challenges lowest-cost models
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