Tag Archives: innovation

The next, next thing…

Yesterday, I spent a wonderful morning with the super-smart Sonny Masero learning about Cleanweb.  This is – the overlap between big data and clean tech.  Or – how to use the power of information to change the world.

It reminded me of the Scandinavian strategic response to EV’s – “we will invest in regulation and infrastructure around electric vehicles – however, our national strategy is to own the expertise, globally, in the technology underpinning their operation”.

And it seems to touch on exploding innovation spaces:

  • it powers the sharing economy space by providing platforms to share e.g. Zipcar, AirBnB
  • it provides the way to collect and transfer mobile information between phone holders and providers e.g. between bankers, weather forecasters, education providers and almost every Kenyan
  • it will be the real revenue earner behind innovative new energy management products e.g. Nest

The case is made stronger by the recent acquisition of the Climate Corporation by Monsanto for $1bn.

What data could help you/us/them develop solutions for positive social and environmental change?

Ideas?  Please send them through…

Interested?  Keep watching this space… 

Transformative education: Teaching for tomorrow Part 1

If education is the foundation for how our society evolves into the future – then how do we align this important system to our emergent needs?

Leigh Meinert, co-founder and executive director of the innovative education institution, Tsiba in South Africa, reflects here on “What is transformative education?”.  This is one of three guest blogs that explores Tsiba as a model for changing education.   www.tsiba.org.za

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What is transformative education? How do we teach, and learn, so that individuals are renewed and inspired and societies, ultimately, are changed?

Firstly, it is important to acknowledge that our “modern “day education system was designed to serve an industrialising society. We needed factory workers and so our schools were essentially designed like sausage machines. In the industrial world you gained a head start in life by knowing a great deal of content knowledge – facts and theories. Indeed, the more knowledge you had the more power you had and you would probably end up being the boss of the factory.  Today all of that knowledge is available online and the challenges that we are facing are more complex. The knowledge that we teach will be obsolete in a few years but our outdated education system still lines people up in rows and tells young people what we think they need to know.

What we need today – more than ever before – are leaders and entrepreneurs. People who are creative and visionary. People who make jobs and don’t just take them. In order to navigate through a rapidly changing world, young people don’t only need facts and theories, what they really need to know is themselves, their values, their passion and their purpose. This is what gives them a head start and transformative helps them to find this.

Secondly, we need to recognise that knowledge about ourselves and what is important to us cannot be found in books or even online. Knowledge about ourselves comes through engagement with the world and reflection upon this. As educators and parents, we cannot give our children these answers. We cannot teach them that which they now most need to know, we can only ask them good questions that promote good thinking.

Today we need to equip young people for a world where there are no longer any easy answers, but as educators we are not comfortable with open ended questions. To teach in this way requires a radical change in our understanding of what it means to be a teacher.

And so, thirdly, transformative education requires teachers to be mentors and coaches. Instead of being the people at the front of the classroom with all the answers we need to sit alongside our students and help them find their own answers.  When we think back on our own formative years, what really engaged us about the teachers and adults who inspired us was not what they taught us but who they were. They made a difference in our lives because they cared about us, because they listened to us and often, because they were leading purposeful lives themselves.

To summarise then, transformative education has three significantly different elements to it:

  • It is education that helps people to find their purpose.
  • It is education that asks more questions and gives fewer answers and,
  • It is education that requires teachers to become mentors and coaches.

In my following blog post, I will provide an example of an undergraduate business school called TSiBA where these elements are applied with transformative effect.

 TSiBA’s CEO and fellow co-founder, Adri Marais, talk at the ‘Transformative Education’ event held at London Business School on 29 October 2013. There is limited availability. For more information and to book your place, please visit http://transformativeeducation.eventbrite.co.uk/

Defying definition – Innovation expanded

“Innovation, as part of the core brand value, is something that really does set us apart” said a Volkswagen Director.  He may have missed how many other companies have innovation as a core value – including competitors, Cadillac who state “Innovation is a core value for Cadillac”.  Yet, despite the rhetoric, there have been no major changes to the internal combustion engine since the time of Henry Ford.

Barak Obama, follows a long line of politicians appealing for innovation with his speech: “If we want to win the future, America has to out-build, out-educate, out-innovate and out-hustle the rest of the world.” (Barack Obama, Feb. 2011). Yet, to date, there are no stand-out ideas delivered from Obamas time in office.

If innovation is expounded on by heads of companies and heads of state, one might well ask what this all important term actually means.  And I did – to varied responses : “Something that’s better then what came before”, “Turning new ideas into action”, ‘Fresh thinking”, “Seeing gaps and filling them”, “Thinking outside the box”, “Finding new solutions to problems”, “Engaging the right side of the brain”, and “Taking ideas to the market place”.

Applying the definitions above mean we stretch the word across multiple types of change.  We use it for a new flavour of soft-drink, a fresh idea and stretch it out to apply to large-scale systems intervention.

But can we really use the same word for a hamster powered vacuum cleaner that we use for the technology that powered rockets to the moon or the invention of communism? And can we nod blithely as yet another executive or politician uses the term as a panacea to different issues?

Academics differentiate between different types of innovation (including: incremental, step-change, radical and systemic). But I’m certain that none of the executives or politicians using the word would be comfortable replacing ‘innovation’ in their speeches with anything that implied less than large-scale (and inspirational) change.

Innovation is often used to explain how we will address the challenges facing the planet.  If we are serious about innovating our way out of problems of resource scarcity, climate change and social inequity,  we need to reclaim the word ‘innovation’ and apply it against achieving real change.

To be aligned to their stated values, Cadillac and Ford would need to radically change transportation systems.   They may be able to learn from River Simple. Its networked governance structure, open-source design approach and hydrogen based engine is a far cry from traditional personal transport solutions. Perhaps, if these executives applied innovation in its truest sense, transport could move beyond  being a source of carbon and contributor to dangerous climate change and  become a source of clean water and social equity.

America does need to “out-innovate”.  The US is one of the biggest contributors to resource concerns – including carbon, water and precious metals. Yet it is lagging the progressive policies of countries as diverse as Denmark and Korea in investing in green infrastructure.

If innovation is a core value and the recipe for winning – lets win big. Lets redefine the word to drive valuable change.

Links –

Hamster Powered Vacuum Cleaner – http://sciencelawyer.com/blog/?p=10)

River Simple – http://www.riversimple.com/