THE WORKSHOP WILL BE ON THE 5TH – 6TH OF NOVEMBER IN KARLSHAMN, SWEDEN.
WHY ATTEND?
Blekinge Tekniska Högskola in collaboration with Creative Traditional Companies Corporation gives you the opportunity to explore ways to reinvent your idea or start-up or small-medium business to keep your edge in the market.
Top 4 reasons why you should
join the workshop:
- Explore ways to spark innovation
- Identify tools and traits that lead to successful journey from idea to successful implementation
- Experience immersive training and real-time feedback
- Network with design experts and peers from South Baltic region.
The workshop starts on the 5th of November at 09,00 and ends at 15,00 on the 6th of November. For more information check out the agenda.
REGISTRATION
Please visit our registration page (https://elr.cse.bth.se/ctcc-registration/ ). For questions regarding registration do not hesitate to contact Lawrence Henesey (lawrence.henesey@bth.se).
Deadline for registration: November, 4th, 2018
Workshop days: November 5–6, 2018
WORKSHOP OVERVIEW
”INNOVATION BY FINDING NOVEL WAYS OF COMBINING CAPABILITIES AND RESOURCES OF DIFFERENT COMPANIES (C&T)”
Topics covered in the workshop will include the following:
- Kick off – Inspirational keynote on innovation with relevance to Maritime, Tourism and/or Sustainable Energy Production.
- Innovation charrette – Work in small teams with members from both traditional and creative industries on a challenge based on opportunity areas for companies in the fields of Maritime, Tourism and Sustainable Energy Production:
- Explore and frame current opportunities within the Maritime, Tourism and Sustainable Energy ecosystems. Which actors are involved? What are their goals? What prevents them from accomplishing them? How do they attempt to solve the situation? What resources and skills they have?
- Use creative industries’ capabilities and resources as potential patterns for developing new value propositions. How could services in the fields of Maritime, Tourism and Sustainable Energy Production be if we could mix in the experiences, the culture or the production systems of creative industries?
- Develop iteratively ideas into concepts by prototyping the new products, services or strategies. How do the new services work? Are they understandable? Are they perceived as valuable? What is the experience of users and clients? What works and what doesn’t? What additional prototyping activities do we need to perform to further explore and refine each proposal?
- Analyze and operationalize collaboration among two or more involved companies. When are the different capabilities needed? Who hold each skill or resource? How will diverse organizations collaborate?
- Towards joint innovation — Reflect on the previous process. Was collaboration fruitful? Was it easy? What are the potential barriers to translate the experience beyond the workshop and into real joint innovation projects? Which are the challenges, capabilities and resources of the participant companies that pose an opportunity for joint innovation? Is there a need for any kind of support? What would be a realistic roadmap for such collaboration?
WORKSHOP COACH & TRAINER
Ryan Ruvalds
Experience as an engineering solar power production and the maritime industry. His passion for research led towards pursuing research in Innovative Product Development at Blekinge Tekniska Högskola.
Recent experience has been in facilitation of workshops with companies:Volvo, Sony Mobile, Axis Communications and students from BTH and Stanford University enabling a comprehensive grasp of need-finding, fore-airdsighting and prototyping for continuous innovation.
Itziar Pobes
Itziar is a service designer and co-founder of We Question Our Project, a studio based in Barcelona. In the past few years she has been lecturing service design, co-creation and service prototyping at several design schools and universities both in Barcelona and across Europe.
She has worked with organizations in an array of sectors, such as food & wine, health, sport, hospitality, education, waste and water management, social services or transportation. She helps organizations to identify opportunities for improvement and innovation, translate them into operational services and initiate changes that allow for a successful implementation and scaling.
Dr. Lawrence Henesey, CTCC Workshop Facilitator
Since 2000, Dr. Henesey has been researching on the application of Distributed Artificial Intelligence in Container Ports and Terminals, which has culminated into 60+ published articles and two books. In addition to lecturing at several US and European Universities.
Dr. Henesey assists in the development of product and IT solutions for energy and data transmission needs in ports and container terminals globally. Dr. Henesey has worked with clients on employing automation and electrification technologies such as AGVs, ASCs, Automated cranes, RTGs and RMGs.
Mahwish Anwar, Msc., CTCC Workshop Facilitator
With several years experience in industry and academia, Mahwish has developed and led teams in e-learning, cyber security, ERP systems and is currently researching on digitalization in ports and terminals.