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2. Bangalore. .. Chennai. .. Hyderabad. . . Mumbai. .. . Pune. . Kolkata. Delhi. . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . IBM India
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1. 1 Innovation Tools, Systems and StructuresResearch: The Core of Innovation C. Mohan, Ph.D.
IBM Fellow & IBM India Chief Scientist
mohan@almaden.ibm.com
http://www.almaden.ibm.com/u/mohan/
2. 2 IBM India – Extensive Operations Across India
3. 3 IBM India
4. 4 IBM: The Innovators’ Innovator! 2006 India IT Innovation Award (with Bharti)
~ $6B R&D investment annually, > $90B revenue
> 225,000 techies (~60 Fellows, ~500 DEs)
Major transformation of company
“Near death” experience in early 90s
Business model change: services area, …
Move from captive markets for IBM technology units to outside customers
Collaborative innovation: Sony, Motorola, …
Globally Integrated Enterprise (GIE)
Getting out of low margin businesses
Joint innovation with clients (e.g., ABN Amro)
Innovation culture via diversity
5. 5 Encouraging Innovation at IBM: The Ecosystem Well-defined and highly appreciated technical career path
Technical Execs: Fellows, Distinguished Engineers (DEs)
Senior Technical Staff Member (STSM), Architects, …
Invention disclosures, patent plateaus, Master Inventors: money and peer recognition, factors in technical promotions; Extra incentives for “new” areas
Rewards: Corporate Innovation / Patent Portfolio awards, Outstanding Innovation / Technical Achievement Awards (OIAs, OTAAs)
Internal and external conferences
IBM Academy of technology, Architecture Boards
Measurement criteria, even in Research division
Patents
CEO milestones
Internal and external awards
Product impact
Publications
6. 6 Encouraging Innovation at IBM: The Ecosystem Extreme Blue
Fast Forward
Speed Teams
Sharenets
IBM Academy Affiliates
Innovation Days
Thinkplace
Briefing Centers
Industry Solution Labs
Patent Cafes
IBM Institute for Business Value
7. 7 IBM Research Worldwide
8. 8 IBM Research Ecosystem
9. 9 Evolution of Research’s Role
10. 10 History of Innovations
11. 11 Research’s Strategic Thrusts
12. 12 Diversity of Disciplines at IBM Research
13. 13 Culture of Innovation External Recognition
14. 14 14 Years of IBM Patent Leadership - 2006
15. 15 IBM Patent Leadership – 2006
16. 16 Global Technology & Global Innovation Outlook
17. 17 The Global Technology Outlook (GTO) Early identification of significant trends:
Forward Looking (2 – 10 years out)
Disruptive to existing businesses
Potential to create new businesses
Exponential changes to a business / Threshold crossings
How technology can impact both:
Customers
Businesses
Understand Customer Challenges
Diversity of Industries
The GTO has a direct influence on IBM’s business and technical strategies
18. 18 Global Innovation Outlook (GIO) Overview In 2004, IBM opened its business and technology forecasting processes for the first time
Series of dynamic, free-form brainstorm sessions around key issues and opportunities related to innovation
Examines opportunities for business and societal innovation from policy, thought leadership and market development perspectives
Brings together broad ecosystem of experts from business, academia, government, citizens’ groups, partners, etc.
Shares insights openly and pursues new opportunities collaboratively
GIO 1.0 focus areas: Healthcare, Government, Work/Life
Resulting initiatives: integrated healthcare records; IP reform; global skills forecasting; BCS innovation offerings
Greatly expanded in 2005-06
Increased participation by 50% to almost 180 external partners
Brazil and India added as Deep Dive locations
Increased focus on developing new markets and capitalizing on business opportunities
GIO 2.0 focus areas: Future of the Enterprise, Environment, Transportation
19. 19 GIO 3.0 Strategy Build on strong foundation of existing GIO structure
Mix of thought leadership and commercial investigation
Involvement of entire range of IBM ecosystem
Multifaceted global outreach (deep dives, salons, report, etc.)
Working initiatives that address surfaced opportunities
Increase focus on opportunity identification and development
Provide mechanisms for earlier surfacing and aggressive advancement of ideas
Couple more closely the surfacing of key insights with direct involvement of outcome owners
20. 20 GIO Deep Dive Cycle (10-12 weeks each) Preparation prior to each cycle
Market research
Hypotheses development and refinement
Participants identified and secured
Weeks 1-6: Local deep dives
Six deep dives across all geos
Weeks 6-10: Data refinement with IBMers and Key Partners
Project charter development begins
Week 10: Global wrap-up dive
Top participants gather to prioritize, refine input from local deep dives
Project charters reviewed and refined
Weeks 11-12: Follow-up and next steps
21. 21 GIO 3.0 Focus Areas Media & Content: Rethinking content creation, distribution and ownership in the digital realm
Fighting piracy
Alternate distribution strategies
Capitalizing on the “Experience Economy”
Africa: Enabling economic growth to accelerate positive change
Alternative energy
Microcommerce
Disease prevention & management
Education
Security & Society: Minimizing risk in a global economy
Personal identity and security
National borders
Property and goods
22. 22 India Innovation Ecosystem Problems/Issues More focus needed on innovation rather than maintenance, infrastructure, support kind of work in bulk of Indian IT industry
Very poor CS PhD production rate by Indian Universities (2004: 36 in India, 3300 in China!)
Most good undergraduates from IITs go abroad for studies or go for domestic jobs/MBAs
Not enough Indian researchers or product technologists from US returning to India, unlike in the case of China, Taiwan, Korea, …
Difficulty of recruiting good faculty with deep research focus
Many 2nd tier universities have large # of non-PhDs as faculty
Whole innovation ecosystem needs to be upgraded – industry should collaborate more with academics
IBMers in India being encouraged to go for PhDs/Masters