1 / 12

Presentation to the EEESTA Seminar 10 November 2004

Competing in the Global Economy: The Innovation Challenge. Presentation to the EEESTA Seminar 10 November 2004. Patrick Robinson Director Innovation Strategy Team, DTI. Demand fluctuation. Higher peak. Volume. Fast ramp-up. Maturity. Ramp-up. Intro- duction. End of life. 1 year.

sara-kent
Download Presentation

Presentation to the EEESTA Seminar 10 November 2004

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Competing in the Global Economy:The Innovation Challenge Presentation to the EEESTA Seminar10 November 2004 Patrick Robinson Director Innovation Strategy Team, DTI

  2. Demand fluctuation Higherpeak Volume Fast ramp-up Maturity Ramp-up Intro-duction End of life 1 year 3-5 years Shorter time to market Development Dramaticend of life Conventional New Digital Consumer Source: Dr Tsugio Makimoto - Hitachi/Sony Dramatic Change in Life Cycle

  3. The innovation challenge - create value in a knowledge economy …

  4. Hourly compensation costs, 2001, for production workers in manufacturing in US dollars 20 15 10 5 0 UK Hong Kong SAR Taiwan Increasing intensity of global competition Source: US Department of Labor

  5. Increase Business Demand for New & Emerging Technologies Science & Innovation Investment Framework 2004-2014, July 2004 The Technology Strategy & Programme The Government’s Response Competing in the Global Economy – the Innovation Challenge, Dec 2003

  6. Technological Innovation Strategy International and EU National assets Management & skills Regulation Regional Innovation Public Procurement Innovation Report – Key Proposals

  7. Technology Strategy & Programme TECHNOLOGY STRATEGY IDENTIFICATION AND JUSTIFICATION OF TECHNOLOGY PRIORITIES NETWORKSfeed into decision making TECHNOLOGY PROGRAMME Collaborative R&D Knowledge Transfer Networks CUSTOMERS BI-ANNUAL CALLS FOR PROPOSALS

  8. Intellectual Property: Awareness • Business Advice Open Days http://www.patent.gov.uk/about/marketing/thinkkit/index.htm

  9. New approaches to Procurement • £109bn pa goods/services purchased by Government in 2001/2002 • Strong Ministerial interest in joined up work across government • Capturing Innovation guidance for policymakers • Reinvigoration of Small Business Research Initiative underway • Joint DoH/DTI seminar on Innovation in the NHS for suppliers and buyers

  10. Research Councils dti Research Priorities Technology Strategy RDAs Science and Industry Councils Higher level SET skills Business support HEIs/ SET Base Culture change needed for better exploitation Business Regional Innovation

  11. Measuring our success • Businesses see more value added from goods and services • Economy sees more productivity (e.g. output per hour). • Better public services - - Improved quality of life

  12. Competing in the Global Economy:The Innovation Challenge Presentation to the EEESTA Seminar10 November 2004 Patrick Robinson Director Innovation Strategy Team, DTI

More Related