BRINGING THE JOY | WORLD OPEN INNOVATION CONFERENCE
Dr Claire Brophy
Design Robotics Research Fellow
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Dr Brophy presented a research paper on how design methods were employed to
map the ARM Hub ecosystem at the World Open Innovation Congress (WOIC) in Rome in December 2019. Open Innovation is a way of thinking about and
managing innovation where firms purposely manage their approach to innovation by bringing in innovations
from outside their business and also allowing innovations from inside their business to be developed
further by others.
Tell us about what WOIC is about. What were you doing out there?
Claire: This was the 6th annual World Open Innovation Conference. It’s an
annual event that brings together representatives from industry and academia to focus on the emerging
field of open innovation. The attendees were predominantly from Business and Management backgrounds. My
presentation was about the ARM Hub – (the Advanced Robotics for Manufacturing Hub) and a design workshop
we conducted to visualise what the ARM Hub could be, and who it would represent. The workshop used
participatory design approaches, so really tangible, creative ways to explore the abstract concept of open
innovation. At the conference, it was perhaps the only one that took this kind of approach to the concept
of open innovation.
Given that you presented design approaches, how do you think it was received in this
business-academic setting?
Claire: I was nervous about presenting to an entirely new field, but it was
actually really well received. One of the conference chairs thanked me later for “bringing the joy” to our
session. It felt great to bring design in approaches and invigorate the conversation around open
innovation. After the session, a lot of the attendees agreed that taking this tangible approach levelled
the playing field and was a creative, engaging way to approach unfamiliar concepts. Educators in
particular, shared their own experiences about how they are trying to incorporate engaging methods like
this into their teaching.
Do you have any favourite sessions?
Claire: Yes, so many good ones. The one by Francesco Starace, CEO of Enel, the Italian utilities provider He spoke at length about the way he introduced
open innovation approaches in this massive, traditional Italian company and the challenges that he had
around that. They tried out different creative approaches such as encouraging staff to share their
failures in order to change the culture around “don’t come to me with problems only come to me with
solutions”. And he also talked about the way they are finding transformative and innovative ways to adapt
and retrofit advanced technologies to old machines. He talked about “listening to the machines” which
struck a chord with me within regards to my work in Design Robotics. He explained how traditionally
technicians would be able to “hear” that the machines are having problems; that there is a
language in the
sounds of the machines. His story was really interesting around that kind of successful approach to
innovation.
Another one was from notable Professor Anita McGahan of University of
Toronto. The broader theme around the conference was around how to address the United Nations Sustainable
Development Goals. She gave this impassioned call-to-action at the end of her keynote. That we cannot
possibly carry on the way that we are carrying on and we need widespread dramatic changes of perspective.
Her talk resonated with me for quite some time after the conference.
Professor Henry
Chesbrough (he coined “open innovation”) had an interesting
wrap-up. He spoke wanting to open up the conversation between industry and academia to better facilitate
this flow of knowledge from academia into industry. He shared that the main feedback that had received
over the conference was that this relationship between academia and industry is underdeveloped. It is
important to bridge this gap. I feel that design – and the work the Design Robotics team is doing in our
partnership between academia (QUT/RMIT) and industry (UAP) is a great example of this.
Do you plan to head to WOIC in 2020? What do you think you would do?
Claire: Yes, it would be great to go back. It was a really nice opportunity
to present our work to a global audience and introduce the creative open innovation approach we are
taking. I think for next time, it would be good to run our work as a workshop at the conference. I’ll be
bringing joy back!
Conference Name: World Open Innovation Conference 2019
Date: 12-13 December 2019
Location: Luiss University, Rome, Italy
Program: Link
Related work
Advanced Robotics Manufacturing: Arm Hub Announced