The Global Ideas Blog

10 ideas that are changing the world (and 6 that might)

Time Magazine currently has a special feature on the 10 Ideas that are Changing the World. If you want to know what Synthetic Authenticity and Reverse Radicalism are, then this is the place for you: interesting stuff.

At a more micro level, Social Innovation Camp (which unfortunately I'll miss, despite working in the office below) has announced its shortlist of 6 ideas to be given a thorough going over in a couple of weekends' time. So if you want to know what Barcode Wikipedia and Stuffshare might be, go check it out; (could be) interesting stuff.

March 18, 2008 in Ideas, Inventions, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Spring wisely and go Camp

A couple of things that might be of interest to readers from the tail end of last year (happy new year, btw: it was a very busy 2007 at the day job, but hopefully more GIB-related activity this year).

First up, the mighty Springwise and their "daily fix of entrepreneurial ideas" bring you the top 10 eco / sustainability ideas of 2007; personal favourites for me include Product Life Story Labels and Incentive-based Recycling, both of which have appeared in different incarnations over the years on GIB (particularly the latter, which could have its own microsite if necessary....).

Secondly, Social Innovation Camp is coming to, well, Bethnal Green in East London. Was chatting to Paul Miller and Anna Maybank about it earlier, and it sounds like it could be a good event, focusing particularly on using new tech to solve social problems. Here's how you can contribute....

More on the latter to come nearer the time. Happy ideating....

January 10, 2008 in Business, Ideas, Inventions | Permalink | Comments (1)

User-led (social) innovation?

A long, long time ago, I remember stumbling across Eric Von Hippel's "Democratizing Innovation" and having a light-bulb moment of connection with what the Global Ideas Bank is all about....user-led social innovation. The book outline is still in the drawer, but good to see others pushing this agenda. Most recently, NESTA, who are increasingly interested in this terrain, invited the erstwhile Mr Von Hippel over to discuss this very topic.

David Wilcox was there, and posted about the event (including a video interview with the man himself): "he confirmed for me that celebrating and encouraging bottom-up ways to improve products is one of the best hopes we have for the future"...and, one might add, non-product social inventions as well. Although that raises a whole different range of issues over IP etc.

NESTA themselves, in the form of Richard Halkett, posted about the event: "How do we build policy to support user-led innovation?", to which one might reasonably say "Surely the question should be 'how can we best support those users to lead innovation?' " Anyway, interesting stuff here as well: "if users are often innovators, it’s good for all of us if the state doesn’t prevent them from doing more of this in the future"...and amen to that.

June 19, 2007 in Creativity, Ideas, Inventions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

TED / Doors of Perception

Couple of big, hairy interesting events on at present, namely:

- TED 2007; you can read all about it via the TED blog of course. They are bringing together "FIFTY REMARKABLE PEOPLE" (in capitals, so they must be remarkable) who are icons, geniuses and mavericks. They include Edward De Bono, Jeff Skoll, Jaime Lerner, Lawrence Lessig, RIchard Branson and...er.... Tracy Chapman.

Day one wrap; day two wrap....which do sound pretty thought-provoking...

- and the lesser-known Doors of Perception in Delhi; this genuinely looks AMAZING (justified capitals!); there is enough in the participants and their projects to blog about for the rest of the year...so check them out; we will be revisiting several of these projects soon, and have no doubt there will be some interesting conversations coming out of the event (on Worldchanging and elsewhere)

March 09, 2007 in Ideas, Inventions, Scenarios, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (1)

Diversity Powers (Social) Innovation

An excellent article by Scott Page on the Centre for American Progress site, entitled Diversity Powers Innovation. The concepts are not new here (we find much of it in Wisdom of Crowds-type stuff....) but well-expressed and interestingly phrased. If you haven't thought of a problem-solving team as a "bundle of perspectives and heuristics", then you will after this. The conclusion is as follows:

"Innovation provides the seeds for economic growth, and for that innovation to happen depends as much on collective difference as on aggregate ability. If people think alike then no matter how smart they are they most likely will get stuck at the same locally optimal solutions. Finding new and better solutions, innovating, requires thinking differently. That’s why diversity powers innovation."

The key bit of this for me is "collective difference" rather than "aggregate ability"....I think that sums it up very well: making the most of the differences each of us is bringing to the table (and understanding how they can complement and collaborate), rather than a simple gathering of "smart" people....

January 29, 2007 in Ideas, Inventions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

USB drive recycling + phones for food traceability

Couple of pieces that might tickle the fancy of Global Ideas Bank types:

- a social enterprise called Inveneo takes donations of old USB drives to send to developing countries; according to the article on Daily Cup of Tech, "Inveneo’s Thumb Drive Drive is looking for donations of USB drives so that they can provide the technology to developing countries. They plan to use it for students, aid workers, and entrepreneurs so that they can help others."

- an article on WorldChanging, entitled "Using Cell Phones for Food Traceability", which kind of gives away what its about....details Japan's efforts to put food safety in the 'hands of the consumers', in the shape of their mobile phone. Check out the comments on the article for some good links from other readers too...


December 19, 2006 in Ideas, Inventions, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Beijing Social Innovation Conference

So good they blogged it twice. Here's my post from the SSE blog, which is of obvious resonance and relevance for GIBbers also:

A few blog posts about the Beijing conference on social innovation from others already, but here's my contribution/reaction...chronologically, for want of any better ordering method.

SUNDAY: Arrived after a good flight chatting to Brett Wigdortz (of Teach First fame) and Steve McAdam (from Fluid) amongst others, and having flitted between Mission Impossible Three and China Shakes the World. Given my short amount of time, Brett and I caught the tube into the centre of Beijing that night for a brief glance at Tiananmen Square, and a good roast duck....before the real work began....

MONDAY: I was slightly disconcerted on my way down to the opening ceremony by the fact that the CNN news report I'd been watching in the hotel room had been cut off in the middle (it was concerning Nepal/Tibet border shooting: see this article for both sides of the story), leaving a black screen.

Anyway, we kicked off with intros from the organisers and dignitaries. Couple of quotes I captured include Gerard Lemos (of British Council) saying that social entrepreneurs had "optimism as a social duty, even a moral duty", and that this was driven by "people who understand people", and that "policy should be driven by practice, not the other way round".

Geoff Mulgan (of Young Foundation) said that YF saw this as the "beginning of a global network of shared thinking", and hoped it would "speed up the process of innovation and learning". More interestingly, perhaps he also talked about "tapping into collective intelligence", and the need for "leadership providing the space for innovators to evolve". Finally, he also related it back to Michael Young who had "a clear focus on needs, an empathy to understand how people are experiencing those needs and a willingness to act" to address them.

Other highlights from the various presentations included:

- Ezio Manzini (from EMUDE, amongst others) discussing everyday social innovations at the grassroots, and of the importance of everyone getting the opportunity to be involved

- John Bird (of Big Issue) waking a few up by saying that "it was a crying shame that there aren't more people like me up here saying 'I was part of the problem and am now part of the solution' " amongst other slightly tired, if entertaining ramblings

- Yang Xuedong, from CCPE, discussed the Local Innovations Prize, and how it had helped evaluate government performance in Chinese regions, and help make them more accountable; it was also interesting to hear how it had stimulated the development of local democratic politics in some areas

- Shen Dongshu, from Fu Ping, champions NGOs in China, and has a social entrepreneur school (capacity building focus), an entrepreneurial fund and other initiatives;

- Steve McAdam (see above) talked about their bottom-up, people-centred approach to planning and regeneration, next to which my notes simply say "very interesting; follow up"

- later we got more international perspectives with Peter Spink from Brazil reeling off countless interesting examples (an open access online participative budget, for example) and talking about genuine grassroots-led change, based on pragmatism, diagonal and horizontal relationships and "incremental learning-by-doing"....+ Rhoda Kadelie from South Africa giving some inspiring innovations from there, including dance and opera initiatives amongs the black community, as well as some damning critiques of SA govt; Josephine Green added the corporate design perspective from Philips, adding (intriguingly from a multinational) that "the concept of enough is one we ought to explore"...

- After the break-out sessions (too much to report here) came a banquet, a mask-changing dance and a poem, no less, in our honour....

TUESDAY:

Slightly smaller crowd on Tuesday morning (Monday night drinks anyone?), and an equally packed line-up. Simon Tucker from YF's Launchpad kicked off, outlining some of their current projects, followed by Lv Zhao from the Shanghai NPO Network who gave an interesting overview of the Chinese NGO scene (I love the concept of a government-sponsored non-governmental organisation....but some would argue that many of our third sector organisations are in this situation as well...)

- Mike Gibbons gave a clear and focused presentation on his challenges and approaches at the DfES' Innovation Unit, particularly interesting around leadership learning, and enabling others to take risks

- John Thackara discussed his Designs of the Time project in the North-East of England, and made the important point that technological innovation should be driven by social innovation/social needs, not the other way round....an interesting project to track

- another breakout session (which helped give me more of an insight into the Chinese third sector scene, if I can even categorise it like that) took place before the round-ups; the one key thing I wrote down here was from He Fan (I think) who said:

"in China everyone is born an entrepreneur" and "small progress in China is multiplied by one billion", followed by the payoff, "real social entrepreneurs should come to prove themselves in China"; that's the sound of a gauntlet being thrown down, I believe....

I also found the Mondragon perspective very interesting (thanks Carlos), as scaling but keeping true to principles and values is a real problem in this sector. Mondragon have much to share on this, i think.

Final round-ups followed before dinner, and then a Wednesday morning meeting about the prospects for a social innovation network; watch this space, I guess..... but I'll post up this mindmap to give an indication of the tentative beginnings of a mapping exercise....(click to expand, I think).

Yf_china_soc_inn_network_of_networks




Overall - lots of material, lots of speakers, lots of thoughts, lots of good networking: a really good beginning to providing some momentum and focus in this area, widening out to encompass multitudes, as it were, rather than becoming stuck in the same areas and silos. As ever, hearing from other fields (design, architecture) and other locations (China, Brazil, South Africa) is inspiring and fires off other ideas...

October 24, 2006 in Ideas, Inventions, Scenarios, Travel | Permalink | Comments (2)

Camp Invention and World-Changing Trends

Couple of things caught the Global Ideas Bank eye recently:

- Camp Invention which is not about new products for the gay market, but about helping introduce (US) kids to innovation and problem-solving, in an effort to create the next generation of entrepreneurs and inventors of all kinds. See the Invent Now site for more. Employers are increasingly demanding those types of skills and traits (problem-solving, innovation, creativity, flexilibility etc) which are associated with being an inventor or entrepreneurs, so this is an area which will only increase as the years pass...

- Wired magazine has had a number of interesting pieces (looking forward to Chris Anderson's The Long Tail book with breath that is nothing short of bated), including the top 15 ways to live longer...but most interesting was this piece on six world-changing trends, which is of interest to all futurists. Even if it seems obvious whilst reading it, the grouping of these together helps solidify and clarify some disparate thoughts about the way business and the economy (and therefore our lives...) are changing. The six, for reference, are:

People Power
Video Unlimited
Personalise It
Carbon Killers
Buy It Now
All-Access Economy

- And to pick up the first of those, People Power, my old friend Ming the Mechanic has blogged about crowdsourcing which kind of combines a lot of other stuff being bandied around (Pro-Ams work by Demos, wisdom of crowds/open source stuff, virtual volunteering etc.). Worth a read, even if the term is yet to make the OED.

- Also pleased to see that a GIB idea by John Tunney from way back when (see Lottery entry slips: 10% tick box for charity) has kind of made it into reality in the form of Your Pound, Your Choice. Different type of people power...

If only some of the other lottery ideas we've had over the years could make it too. Look forward to the day when the House of Lords is picked by lottery (topical...) and to the Fame Lottery, Pension Lottery and, by no means least, the Rubbish Lottery. Which are all far from being as silly as they may sound....

July 14, 2006 in Education, Ideas, Inventions, Scenarios | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

International Conference on Social Innovation, Beijing

Delighted this morning to be invited to the International Conference on Social Innovation in Beijing (October 15th-17th). Not sure whether I will be able to go, but delighted to be invited all the same.

"The British Council China, the Young Foundation and the China Centre for Comparative Politics and Economics wish to invite you to the first ever International Social Innovation Conference scheduled for Beijing in October 2006.  China’s impressive record of economic growth has brought with it urgent social challenges requiring the urgent attention of government, business and the not-for-profit sector.

  Attention to social development has emerged as a central theme of China’s 11th five year plan and attention to social innovation cases and processes will capture the attention and imagination of key government, business and social leaders."

All exciting stuff; for more, go to Discover Social Innovation or the British Council's website

June 12, 2006 in Inventions, Scenarios, Travel | Permalink | Comments (0)

NESTA inventors handbook

GIB often gets asked by people how to protect/register their invention....which isn't really our remit or expertise (we explicitly say that all ideas posted on GIB are about sharing / openness + not ownership....we don't go in for intellectual property, patenting and the like....). It more applies to technological inventions than social ones.

A useful guide for those in the UK, though, is this Inventors Handbook  by NESTA (the National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts) which goes through the process step-by-step. I particularly liked "20 great ways to blow your chances"......

May 08, 2006 in Inventions | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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Recent Posts

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