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Spencer Thompson

Beyond IP: In discussion with the Creative Industries Council

Posted By Spencer Thompson

15 December 2011

Yesterday some of the leading lights of Britain’s creative industries gathered at the Big Innovation Centre for what a lively and energetic meeting of an extended group whose membership centred on members of the UK Creative Industries Council (CIC) and representatives of the Big Innovation Centre sponsor group.

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Will Hutton

Will Hutton's speech at the European Innovation Convention 2011

Posted By Big Innovation Centre

15 December 2011

Watch Will Hutton's speech at the European Innovation Convention 2011.

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Spencer Thompson

Do solar panel subsidies hurt innovation?

Posted By Spencer Thompson

14 December 2011

This week saw the halving of the government’s ‘feed-in tariff’ subsidy for solar panels come into effect. This move was controversial on a number of counts. It is argued there was no proper consultation on the decision to bring the date of the tariff change forward from April, and that, combined with promises of ‘special help’ for the UK’s carbon-intensive industries in the Autumn statement, it has compromised the coalition’s promise to be the ‘greenest government ever’. The rationale for the decision by the Department of Energy and Climate Change was that consumers, hit hard by the cost of utilities in recent years, could no longer afford to foot the bill through a levy on their bills.

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Prateek Sureka

Open Data Institute – What doors will it open?

Posted By Prateek Sureka

13 December 2011

The recent launch of the Government’s Innovation and Research Strategy for Growth at the Big Innovation Centre by the Minister for Universities and Science, David Willetts, was, in their own words, a “multi-million pound package setting out the Government’s plans to boost economic growth through investment in research and innovation”. One of the highlights of the strategy is the establishment of an ‘Open Data Institute’ (ODI).

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Charlotte  Holloway

Never let a good disaster go to waste

Posted By Charlotte Holloway

09 December 2011

In the week that the European Union moved closer to a fiscal union, with negotiations and summits on the ongoing debt crisis continuing to dominate the news reel, the Big Innovation Centre descended on Brussels for the first European Commission Innovation Convention.

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Dr Jackie  Parkin

Life Sciences: A plan for growth?

Posted By Jackie Parkin

09 December 2011

Innovation in healthcare delivers wellbeing on many fronts; not only the societal and financial benefits of a healthier population, but also growth unleashed from a flourishing Life Science industry. In principal the UK should be highly successful, with research in Biomedical Sciences amongst the best in the world and a strong pharmaceutical history. But the reality is that UK has punched well below its weight in transforming breakthrough ideas into medicines and health care. The opportunity loss cannot be overstated. The Government’s Strategy for UK Life Sciences announced this week was therefore eagerly awaited and did not disappoint.

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Andrew Sissons

This Innovation Strategy can make Britain special again

Posted By Andrew Sissons

08 December 2011

Today’s Innovation and Research Strategy is a very good document. It is the first time that the government has set out a broadly coherent account of what makes our economy grow, and what government’s role in this might be. Of course, there is room for improvement, but this strategy could be a first step to developing a growth strategy that is fit for the 21st Century.

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Elizabeth Crowley

Streets Ahead: What makes a city innovative?

Posted By Lizzie Crowley

07 December 2011

Innovative cities can drive the economic recovery. Innovation – the successful commercialisation of new ideas – is the key driver of economic growth. Cities are where this happens; they support the development of new products and services by bringing businesses, people and institutions (such as universities) together. Despite this, and at odds with the localism agenda, recent government policy has sought to centralise some the key levers needed to support innovation and growth.

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Professor Teresa da Silva  LopesProfessor Paul Duguid

The Penguin in Chains - Brands and Trademarks in an Open Innovation World

Posted By Teresa da Silva Lopes and Paul Duguid

05 December 2011

Living in a world characterized by fierce competition and saturated markets is leading twenty-first century multinationals to look for new ways for growth and survival. Both large leading multinationals and small and medium entrepreneurial enterprises collaborate through the creation of open innovation and intellectual property (IP) landscapes, and share their resources, know-how, compounds and technology. The BIG Innovation centre recently launched in September 2011, is evidence of such collaboration. Having already attracted leading multinationals as partners, it aims to facilitate the collaboration between businesses, universities and other institutions, and the government, and act as a key contributor to policy making and to the development of the UK as a global innovation hub.

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Today Osborne was able to stand up the House of Commons and rely on the latest forecasts from the Office for Budgetary Responsibility. Things are bad, but with reliable numbers behind him we can have confidence that he is honestly telling us just how bad things are. No longer does a Chancellor have to risk his credibility on the dark art of economic forecasting. He can leave that to the technocrats and we can get on with discussing the relatively minor tweaks to his spending plans.

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The ‘vital 6%’ of high growth firms in the UK, it has been said, are responsible for up to half of new job growth. That 6% are, almost exclusively, Small or Medium Enterprises (SMEs) – at least when they start their growth spurt. So how is the pool of ‘potential’ high growth SME firms in the UK likely to be feeling following George Osborne’s 2011 Autumn Statement, and what are the implications of its prescriptions for their opportunities to innovate and create jobs?

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The Coalition has always towed a pretty consistent line on geographic re-balancing in the UK: we need to become less dependent on the South East, and spread growth more evenly around the country. The message from today’s Autumn Statement was no different – the Chancellor announced a series of measures that aim to boost prosperity around the UK.

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Regulate to Innovate? Well, just a little…

Posted By Mark Lloyd

25 November 2011

It is a central tenet of economics that competition helps to drive innovation. So when the government announces that it wants to make it easier for firms to compete for public contracts, as it did this week, it is generally a welcome development. Public procurement can help to drive innovation through creating large-scale markets for new products and processes that might otherwise take longer to take off, and by demonstrating that these new ideas can work.

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Competitiveness and economic performance of firms, regions and nations has to be understood in a local context. This is not despite, but because of the globalisation of production, trade and labour mobility - the growth of trans-national corporations, information and communication advances and the emergence of the e-business. Far from wiping out the role of local business networks or the regions, these forces of globalisation reinforce their importance. Directors of leading companies, for example, look closely at the innovation and investment ecosystems of different cities and regions when they make decisions about where to invest and create jobs.

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Dr Lucy Montgomery

China: A Land of Opportunities - and Lessons?

Posted By Lucy Montgomery

16 November 2011

Creative entrepreneurs need access to the raw materials of innovation when they are exploring the possibilities of new markets, new technologies and new business models. When copyright locks up these resources, it acts as an impediment to innovation.

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