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Strategic Objective: Collaboration@Work SO 2.5.9 Collaborative Working Environments Background and objectives. bror.salmelin@cec.eu.int European Commission, New Working Environments. Kok Report.
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Strategic Objective: Collaboration@Work SO 2.5.9 Collaborative Working Environments Background and objectives bror.salmelin@cec.eu.int European Commission, New Working Environments
Kok Report “The EU needs a comprehensive and holistic strategy to spur on the growth of the ICT sector and the diffusion of ICTs in all parts of the economy” “Facing the Challenge : The Lisbon Strategy for Growth and Employment” Report from the High Level Group Chaired by Wim Kok, November 2004
IST in FP6 • Bring the user, “people”, to the foreground, to the “centre of our attention” ... • … and build trustful, embedded, intuitive technologies working in the background (almost invisible)
Value Creation in Knowledge Economy • intangible economy • extended products including embedded services, covering entire life cycles • knowledge based economy • digital content and services • networking • simultaneous, complex and multidisciplinary
Workplace innovations and productivity Workplace Innovations account for 89 % of Multifactor Productivity gains* *Black and Lynch. San francisco federal reserve. 2004
From excellence at the point of production towards excellence in collaborative networks XX century • A. Smith: Chain production • D. Ricardo: Specialization XXI century • Working in Groups • Collaboration: Seamless work to achieve common goals: cooperation + competition
Competence nodes networking L L L Competences Connectivity Leadership Customers
Change of Paradigms • Networking characteristics: • complexity • dynamics • synthesis, and “best guesses” • connectivityrather than competence • Global issues binding technology, business and legal innovation • “e- space” for “all” • privacy, IPR, ADR etc…. • public-private partnership • Digitalization of goods and services • from cost to value
Full Impact Needs Systemic Innovation Component innovation Systemic innovation
Interplay needed at all levels Legal & Self-regulatory Economy & Society Infrastructure & Technology
Two main complementary financial instruments • FP7 :ICT theme, ICT based research infrastructure,… • Master and shape the development of ICT • CIP :ICT Policy Support programme • Ensure the uptake and best use of ICT • In addition, regional and structural funds,…
i2010 initiative • Self-standing initiative with strong link with the renewed Lisbon agenda • But also anchored in the Commission’s policies for cohesion and sustainable development • Comprehensive and holistic approach: • Umbrella initiative for EU information society policies (regulation, research and deployment) • Three priorities: • Completing the Single European Information Space • Strengthening innovation and investment in research • Achieving an Inclusive European Information society
ICT for collaboration fostering competitivenessPolicy directions • Knowledge Organizations : • Human brains • Procedures • Business processes New Working Environments ICT for collaborative working environments Collaboration : Seamless interaction in complex virtualized world New concepts and methods Effectiveness : Do tasks anytime, anywhere, with anyone Efficiency : Efficient allocation of resources Creativity : New ideas Policies : P1 Production / Growth P2 Innovation Innovation Production P2 P1 Productivity / Growth / Competitivity
Workplace innovations and productivity Workplace Innovations account for 89 % of Multifactor Productivity gains* *Black and Lynch. San francisco federal reserve. 2004
ICT for collaboration fostering competitivenessTechnology research ICT for collaborative working environments New Working Environments • Knowledge Organizations : • Human brains • Procedures • Business processes Collaboration : Seamless interaction in complex virtualized world New concepts and methods Creativity : New ideas Effectiveness : Do tasks anytime, anywhere, with anyone Efficiency : Efficient allocation of resources Technologies : T1 mobile T2 Collaboration T3 Computing T4 Knowledge T5 Virtualisation T6 Robotics T2 T5 T6 T2 T3 T4 T1 T2 Innovation : New products and services Productivity / Growth / Competitivity
Executing the Research Agenda of New Working Environments • Mobility to allow work anywhere at anytime, thereby productivity. Seamless connectivity(CALL 2) • Collaboration* to ensure the work with whoever owns the needed knowledge, thereby productivity and creativity. Management of complexity(CALL 5) • Virtualization of the work environment to allow contextualized services, thereby creativity. Virtualization (CALL 6, tbc) • Augmentation of human capabilities with artefacts, thereby productivity. (JOINT CALL) *. around a 50% of all companies’ activities are related to interaction between individuals and between them with the environment.
Vision of New Working Environments Individual (work & private roles) And Group • Our goals : • Integration of technology pillars • Filling in the « gaps » in technology pillars specific for collaborative work e-design e-business e-commerce e-application e-application human-centricUSABILITY collaborative platforms living labs technologyplatforms grid / utility / … technology drive IPv6 wireless TV fixed satellite etc. Missing links, open zones for research
Trend visible in the press, or is it actually? • “Collaborative solutions will be the next billion-dollar category”. BusinessWeek (2003) • “Almost everything is group-oriented. Everything has to do with the inefficiencies that exist with people working together” Bill Gates (Oct. 2003) • “Collaboration with colleagues, partners and customers will allow to find optimal, innovative solutions”. Japan’s Future office Scenario (April 2004) • “Global collaboration, customer feedback and personal knowledge management are transforming the workplace today”. IWPC (2004)
SO Collaborative Working Environments. Objectives • To develop next generation collaborative working environments, thereby increasing creativity and boosting innovation and productivity. • These environments should provide collaboration services to make possible the development of worker centric, flexible, scalable and adaptable tools and applications. • They will enable seamless and natural collaboration amongst a diversity of agents (humans, machines, etc) within distributed, knowledge-rich and virtualized working environments. • Professional virtual communities and nomadic personal access to knowledge should be supported.
SO Collaborative Working Environments Characteristics • Collaborative Working Environments that are: • Distributed, • Knowledge-rich, • Virtualized, • Mobility components, • Dynamics, ad-hoc creation and dissolution. • Complementarity to call 2 (before focus on mobility, now focus on collaboration). • Lucent technologies (2004): “High Speed data for enterprises" (HSDe) for 'Early Adopters' , i.e. mobile employees, offers a good chance for UMTS success if operators focus on mobile workforce. In addition, Lucent proposition focuses on mobile employees and not on 'fun' services.
SO Collaborative Working Environments Our Approach • Co-workers might belong to organizations but our focus is not on the organizations but in the co-worker himself. • It is NOT about “Virtual organizations” • But it’s about virtual communities created and dissolved on the fly. • It is NOT about Networks of SMEs • But it’s about “ad-hoc networks of people working together”
SO Collaborative Working Environment Focused • It is NOT about KM • But it’s about ‘co-work in knowledge-rich environments • It is NOT about ‘mobile applications’ • But mobility aspects are to be considered in any project in the context of seamless context sensitivity • It is NOT about ‘information workers’ neither on ‘IT professionals’ • But it’s about ‘Knowledge workers’ collaborating with knowledge and information workers.
SO CWE. Where we are positioned? FROM “Upper” layer middleware UP Collaborative Work Platform
Conclusions • Human Centered Knowledge Society means • Increased responsibility for the individual • Increased productivity through innovation and creativity • Time gain by collaborative structures and shared environments • Increased possibilities for wealth creation by atypical job relations • New paradigms for participation • New environments for quality of life
Contact websites • http://europa.eu.int/eeurope • http://www.cordis.lu/ist • http://www.amiatwork.com • and e-mail: bror.salmelin@cec.eu.int