University Idea Improvement
In my last post I mentioned that idea contest analytics can assist the spread of local university research being conducted in a country like China. Social network graphs that model idea submission amongst distributed teams can actually build “knowledge pathways†that are ripe for the transferring of university research knowledge. The odds of knowledge transfer coming out of China increase with the decision by Chinese researchers to collaborate across borders with their international counterparts.
In this post I’d like to flip the example and describe how university research can assist any global employee in the process of idea generation and improvement.
Earlier this year I wrote a post announcing the kickoff of Innovation Roadmap 2013 (EMC’s yearly idea contest). I mentioned that an “Improve Idea†button had been added to our internal idea submission portal. This button allows idea submitters to correlate their still-forming ideas against thousands of previous ideas submitted by employees. The improve button is shown below.
Consider this process in the context of university research. Does an employee idea overlap with relevant university research? Can they find and locate the global EMC employee that is in contact with that university? Can they discover the names of relevant faculty and students and read their publications? Answering yes to any and all of these
questions can increase the quality of idea submission (which is the goal).
Consider the topic model presented in a previous post. Topic modeling provides the ability to process the entirety of a university research portfolio and “bucketize†it into themes like “Cloud†and “Big Dataâ€. The output of a topic modeling exercise is shown below.
It’s entirely possible for an employee to type in the text of their
idea, and have the Topic Modeling Toolbox analyze the idea and correlate it to the most appropriate bucket.  Within this bucket, the toolbox will also highlight which university research initiatives are likely “most relevantâ€. The diagram below symbolically represents this process.
It is common to envision a university research program in which a specific set of engineers is targeted for knowledge transfer. For example, within EMC it makes perfect sense for the research we conduct with the University of Limerick (Flash technology) gets “pushed†to EMC internal groups that might benefit from the results (e.g. the XtremIO all-Flash disk array team, or XtremSF server flash team).
How does the knowledge transfer turn into a corporate asset? Â How can the research and the result be tied together? Â The approach that EMC is considering is lineage-based. Read my previous blog post on this topic for more detail.
image credit: www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu
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Steve Todd is an EMC Fellow, the Director of EMC’s Innovation Network, and a high-tech inventor and book author Innovate With Global Influence. An EMC Intrapreneur with over 200 patent applications and billions in product revenue, he writes about innovation on his personal blog, the Information Playground. Twitter: @SteveTodd
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Hi Steve,
I’ve been enjoying your recent posts about EMC’s close connection to university research. I’ve been contemplating a new research report that would explore the opportunities for innovation for companies both big AND small based on partnerships or working relationships with universities. Interested in a discussion?
Thank you for your IX contributions over the past several years!
Doug Williams
Head of IX Research