CityDrivers is a project funded by the European Social Fund (ESF) to improve the ability of creative professionals to provide services based on service design and co-development. At an event held in Helsinki on the 13th February, Tuija Hirvokisko (ENoLL president and Laurea Director) gave a presentation and spoke about City Drivers project as well as ENoLL as an ecosystem.
1. CITYDRIVERS-FORUM
LAUREA TIKKURILA
13.2.2018
ENoLL Living Labs, a
transnational co-creation
environment
President Tuija Hirvikoski
PhD (Industrial Management) | MSc (Public Administration) | MSc (Physical Education)
Laurea University of Applied Sciences, Finland | GMS +358 400 940 804 | Ratatie 22, 01300 Vantaa, Finland | www.laurea.fi| https://www.laurea.fi/en/research-development-and-
innovations/laurea-living-labs
European Network of Living Labs President | http://www.openlivinglabs.eu/ |
http://ec.europa.eu/newsroom/dae/newsletter-specific-archive-issue.cfm?newsletter_service_id=126&lang=default
Open Innovation Luminary Award 2016 , Living Labs for Open Innovation Infrastructure Creation |
https://ec.europa.eu/digital-single-market/en/news/innovation-luminary-awards-ceremony-2016-open-innovation-20-conference
Member of the Open Science Policy Platform (OSPP) |
http://ec.europa.eu/research/openscience/index.cfm?pg=open-science-policy-platform
Member of Horizon interim evaluation expert group (SwafS/RRI)
https://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/en/h2020-section/science-and-society
Bridging the investment gap: How to tackle the challenges? Committee of Region Opinion
http://cor.europa.eu/en/events/Pages/investment-gap.aspx
Member of Uusimaa Regional Coordination Committee & Chairing task force | http://www.uudenmaanliitto.fi/en | RIS3 https://www.helsinkismart.fi/
2. Living Labs innovate
and Co-create added
value with, for and BY
European citizens,
Europe and its Regions,
Cities, and public , private and third sector organisations
3. ENoLL’s Mission: ColLaboratory
• Europe needs a Pan European Large-scale Open Innovation
Ecosystem
• Participative RDI work of experimenting for innovations and
their diffusion through various scalable RDI activities and
stages
• By using the bottom up methods across Europe, we can listen
what the citizens and users want to solve and we know their
real problems, values and solutions while noting a different
social, legal, and cultural settings in variable environments.
• Besides Living Labs, there is a need to incorporate also other
“labs”, as well as the traditional actors of the innovation system
(universities, corporations, public bodies, SMEs..) and other
hidden actors (industrial living labs, etc.)
initiated by Artur Serra ENoLL / i2CAT Foundation
4. Macro
Meso
Micro
Idea - Concept - Prototype - Validation - Launch - Post-launch
ENoLL offers you 170 Living Labs’ network,
expertise and services developed since 2006
An innovation protocol
- From idea phase and customer understanding to
prototyping, validation and post- launch
development
- From micro to the most macro level innovation
- To scale up from one city and country to another
- For citizen driven societal development
…providing access to reviewed
open innovation ecosystems
with cities, regions, firms, third
sector and research organisations
and citizens for
joint value co-creation, rapid
prototyping or validation
to scale up and speed up
internationally
Tuija.Hirvikoski@Laurea.fi
ENoLL president
https://ec.europa.eu/digital-agenda/en/news/introducing-enoll-and-its-living-lab-community
European Network of Living Labs
is
your intermediary..
www.openlivinglabs.eu
6. Labification – Witnessed a
mushrooming of “Labs”
• Living Lab
• Urban Lab
• Change Lab
• City Lab
• Design Lab / Design
studio
• Gov Lab
• Impact Lab
• Innovation Lab
• DESIS Lab (Design for
Social Innovation and
Sustainability)
• Lab-like Initiatives
• Maker space
• Policy Lab
• Reality Lab
• Social Innovation Lab
• Fab lab
• Science shop
• Experience lab
• Citizen science
Modified from Guidelines for
Urban Labs (2017)
7. Benefits to multiple stakeholders
Enhancing innovation by new means
Benefiting contexts; real-life environments
Opening new business opportunities
• Benefits to companies
– Cost efficient access to end user data/experience
– Earlier product change/modification will be cheaper for the company
– Tie customers and users to a company and its activities
• Benefits to users
– Possibility to influence
– Solve problems of everyday life, which is otherwise unsolvable
– More functionable product or new user driven products
• Benefits to developers
– Supports core activities, brings resources and possibilities
• Benefits public financiers
– Support objectives of financiers
8
Leminen, S. (2015). Q&A. What Are Living
Labs? Technology Innovation Management
Review, Vol. 5, No. 9, pp. 32-38.
Leminen, S. (2015). Living Labs as Open
Innovation Networks- Networks, Roles and
Innovation Outcomes. Aalto University. Helsinki,
Finland. Doctoral dissertation.
8. Digital era speeds up new
forms of co-creation
9
Creative
methods
Technology
enhanced
development
9. Open Science
OI.2
Living Labs 2.0
More Science based Start Ups
Faster market Access
Renewing Industries
Market creating innovation
FAIR (findable, accessible,
interpretable, re-usable)
A protocol and methods for large-scale
and cross-border co-creation
and experimentation
Citizen Science and
new Business Models
10. Innovation as the outcome of a complex co-creation
process involving knowledge flows across the entire
economic and social environment.
The concept of Open Innovation is constantly evolving and is
moving from linear, bilateral transactions and collaborations
towards dynamic, networked, multi-collaborative innovation
ecosystems
11
11. “The year is 2030. Open Science has become a reality and is
offering a whole range of new, unlimited opportunities for research
and discovery worldwide.
Scientists, citizens, publishers, research institutions,
public and private research funders, students and
education professionals as well as companies from
around the globe are sharing
an open, virtual environment called The Lab
Carlos Moedas (2016)
Open Innovation, Open Science and Open to the World.
Open Science Policy Platform
Commissioner Moedas’
Vision for 2030
12. How to scale up from
micro to macro with the
help of international
networks and the
European Comission
EXAMPLES
13. Scalingup
Living Labs as a viable
business model
scalability
Espoo city
schools as a
Living Lab
ecosystem
City of Espoo
Living Lab
6 Cities Living Lab
ecosystem
Finland as a Living lab
Schools as Living
Lab handbook
The City of Espoo
as Living Lab
6 Cities strategy
New investments
New Start Ups
Attracting foreign
investments, experts and
companies
Tax income
Espoo schools as an International level
reference platform
Edu Export
Companies growing and
creating new jobs
Schools Teaching Everyone to Innovate!
Katja Hagman
21. Digitising European industry
Anne-Marie Sassen – deputy Head of Unit anne-marie.sassen@ec.europa.eu
Technologies & Systems for Digitising Industry, DG CNECT/A2, European Commission
#DigitiseEU
– encouraging the global network of Living Labs
to get involved
22. What is a Digital Innovation Hub?
one-stop-shop Services to help
companies with digital
transformation
multi-partner
cooperation
specialist
expertise infrastructure
brokering/
matchmaking
awareness
creation
innovation
scouting
digital maturity
assessment
visioning and strategy
development
mentoring training
Access to
Finance
investor readiness
services
Digital Innovation Hub
Competence Centre
Digital Skills
Digital
Transformation
Experiments
Working Group report on DIHs:
https://ec.europa.eu/futurium/en/content/report-wg1-digital-innovation-
hubs-mainstreaming-digital-innovation-across-all-sectors-final
Provide support to existing industry to manage their
digital transformation, mainly through testing and
experimentation
Competence Centres are at the core of DIHs
(ecosystem approach)
Variable geometries: technology applications, sector,
SME focus etc.
Provides opportunities for both ICT users and ICT
suppliers
experimentation
and testing
pilot factories
Fab-labs
coaching
fabrication of
new products
€£$
incubators
investors
SMEs
governments
research
organisations
other
Orchestrator
large
companies
CC
start-ups
training providers
23. DIH Possible role of co-creators
• When new digital products are developed, provide a
possibility for co-creation/validation by users
How to get involved?
• Contact your local digital innovation hub (see catalogue)
and see if there is a possibility of collaboration
• Liaise with national initiatives on digitisation
• Engage with European actors and convince them of your
added value, so you can be included in the consortium for
a proposal. Now proposals are open for robotics DIHs.
• Working group on Digital Innovation Hubs Report: https://ec.europa.eu/futurium/en/content/report-wg1-digital-
innovation-hubs-mainstreaming-digital-innovation-across-all-sectors-final
• Brochure on Digitising European Industry https://ec.europa.eu/futurium/en/implementing-digitising-european-industry-
actions/digitising-european-industry-taking-stock-18
• Catalogue of Digital Innovation Hubs http://s3platform.jrc.ec.europa.eu/digital-innovation-hubs-tool
• I4MS: ICT Innovation for Manufacturing SMEs www.i4ms.eu
• Smart Anything Everywhere www.smartanythingeverywhere.eu
24
24. Never hear “NO”, hear
“NOT YET!”
Tuija.hirvikoski@laurea.fi
www.enoll.org
In many countries the public sector already utilizes
co-creators. Next we’ll bring the message to the
industrial sector for more competitive market and
user driven products