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产业技术领域的“同行评价”
武夷山
Research-Technology Management杂志2012年第4期发表Michael Idelchik(GE全球科研部负责先进技术的副总裁)和Sam Kogan(战略与技术顾问)合写的文章,GE’s Open Collaboration Model(通用电气的开放协同模型)。文章介绍说:
GE培育了一个由业务开发侦查员(Scouts)所组成的网络,这些产业技术领域的侦查员很注意与世界各地的创新集群进行接触,尤其是以色列、日本、俄罗斯的创新集群。他们的侦查员也关注印度、中国、德国和美国的情况。
博主:可以认为,这些侦查员愿意接触哪些国家,就说明那些国家在特定领域的产业竞争力比较强,从而可以作为判定国家产业竞争力的一个重要指标。
懂行的侦查员关注了哪些国家,就相当于在产业技术领域做出了正面的同行评价。这也许比有关国家产生了多少专利更能说明问题。
原文如下:
Eight years after the creation of General Electric in 1892,
Chief Engineer Charles Steinmetz began lobbying for the
company to open a dedicated research laboratory. One of
Thomas Edison’s GE cofounders, Elihu Thomson, wrote in
support of the idea: “ . . . a company as large as the General
Electric Company, should not fail to continue investing and
developing in new fields: there should, in fact, be a research
laboratory for commercial applications of new principles, and
even for the discovery of those principles.” 1 With Thomson’s
support, Steinmetz opened GE’s first Global Research
Laboratory in the barn behind his house in Schenectady,
New York, hiring MIT chemistry professor Willis Whitney as
its first director. From these humble beginnings, through decades
of innovative breakthroughs, GE Global Research has
evolved into a globe-spanning network of idea factories, with
locations in New York, Silicon Valley, Munich, Bangalore,
Shanghai, and soon, Rio de Janeiro. In addition to expanding
its traditional corporate R&D operation, GE has transformed
its approach to Thomson’s “discovery of [new] principles” in
recent years by adopting a strategy of open collaboration:
reaching out beyond the company and its advanced labs to
collaborate with new and different kinds of external partners
to innovate new technologies and bring the resulting new
products to scaled markets faster.
This article will explore GE’s experience with open collaboration
in markets adjacent to the company’s core businesses.
Adjacencies are one of three key areas of innovation
focus at GE, in addition to core businesses and new businesses.
GE’s approach to growing into adjacent markets has
involved leveraging both external and internal resources, tying
them to clearly defined operating mechanisms to deliver
innovations at the accelerated speed that has become the default
in venture capital–driven adjacencies like clean tech
and health care. The new strategy has been pursued with the
recognition that none of the stakeholders leading the growth
of these adjacencies is going to wait for GE to catch up; indeed,
it was crucial for GE to connect to the venture capital
and entrepreneur communities to understand the dynamics
of these ecosystems. That understanding led to an overarching
strategic premise: GE must be agnostic about the source
of the best and most promising new ideas. Thus, the measure
of success is this formulation: Can GE pick the best ideas for
breakthroughs, regardless of where they come from, manage
the risk associated with them, use workable collaboration
models as needed, and develop the necessary technology and
markets to speed business adoption and ultimately growth?
The answer so far is, resoundingly, yes.
Core and New Business Innovation
For over 60 years, GE has successfully innovated in its core
businesses, such as aircraft engines, turbines, and diagnostic
imaging healthcare equipment. Undergirding this traditional
innovation strength is deep domain expertise in materials
science, manufacturing processes, devices, components,
subsystems, and engineering tools, along with experience
in applications and supply chain. New technologies in
core businesses take, on average, from five to ten years to
develop.
An example is GE’s strategy in its core aviation business,
to develop lower-weight, higher-temperature materials for
jet engines. GE Global Research formulated and patented a
TiAl alloy material in 1989. GE Aviation first tested an
engine incorporating the alloy in 1993 and then committed
it and its manufacturing technology for use in the GEnx
engine, which has become the best-selling engine for the
new Boeing 747-8 Intercontinental and 787 Dreamliner,
certified by the FAA in 2007. GE became the first engine
maker in the world to introduce a TiAl alloy into production.
From start to finish, the innovation took a long time
but helped GE to achieve leadership in a core business. Similarly,
GE Healthcare’s Gemstone spectral imaging technology,
which led to the first quantitative dual-energy CT
scanner on the market, took five years to iterate from idea
to product. Even when innovating in core businesses occurs
through acquisition instead of organically, the due diligence
process is extensive.
To keep the core business innovation pipeline full of
breakthroughs like the TiAl alloy and Gemstone spectral
imaging, GE’s technologists are constantly benchmarking,
scanning the competitive landscape to assess whether and
how externally developed technology can be adapted or acquired
to provide competitive advantage. GE adopted a
grassroots model for collaboration with universities, national
labs, and institutes and has hundreds of researchers
investigating collaborations globally. For example, in 2011,
GE acquired a unique magnetic resonance imaging technology
from a spinoff from the University of Minnesota. This
technology allows visualization of tendons, ligaments, and
other tissues not visible with conventional imaging
methods.
GE also has clearly delineated, formal business-development
processes for acquiring or building new businesses. Of course, these processes involve significant due diligence and
planning. For example, in recent years, GE has entered the
entirely new businesses of wind turbines, oil and gas subsea
and topside systems; cancer molecular diagnostics; and batteries.
While GE had long maintained a core power-generation
business centered on gas and steam turbines, in 2002 GE
Energy acquired the wind business assets of bankrupt
Enron. Similarly, in 2010, GE Healthcare bought Clarient, a
molecular diagnostic company that enabled the business to
enter a new healthcare market. In 2004, GE determined
that developing a different kind of battery for lower-cost
energy storage was a strategic imperative, and in 2010, the
company was ready to commit to the manufacturing of the
new product.
Towards a Model of Open Collaboration for Growth in
Adjacent Businesses
Some of the fastest-moving and elusive business opportunities
for companies are adjacencies, which arise near to existing
core areas of focus. Expansion into these neighboring
markets doesn’t require the extensive investigation and vetting
that precedes a move into entirely new businesses, but it
also can’t be undertaken with the confidence born of experience
in core businesses. In recent years, adjacencies like clean
tech have become increasingly prominent. GE decided that if
it didn’t establish connections to the venture capital community
and the larger ecosystem of venture capitalists and startups
in this emerging space, the company ran the risk of
missing significant innovations. To stay on pace and work
with dynamic upstarts, GE needed a new collaborative
model.
A logical first step was to partner with some of the venture
capitalists that support new ventures in these markets. Under
CEO and Chairman Jeff Immelt’s leadership, GE Capital set
up two funds—one for clean tech, part of the larger $20 billion
Energy Financial Services, and one for healthcare
technologies seeded with $250 million. Another way to partner
with venture capitalists—and to collaborate with startups
and academic researchers—has been through open
innovation challenges. For example, the ecomagination
Challenge began as an experiment to find and fund the best
new ideas related to powering the grid and the home, the
latter a business “on the other side of the meter” from GE’s
traditional core of power generation and distribution. With a
judging panel of roughly a dozen GE leaders, venture capital
partners, and independent experts in place, GE announced
the challenge, expecting a few hundred submissions
at most. What came next was a deluge: 4,000 ideas from
inventors and entrepreneurs in 160 countries. To accommodate
early-stage start-ups that were not ready for a bigger
investment but had promise and could benefit from continued
incubation, GE created the $20 million ecomagination
Innovation Fund, an accelerator program that
supports commercial pilot programs through which entrepreneurs
can work closely with relevant commercial
leaders at GE to further develop their innovations. GE
selected fi ve startups for $100,000 innovation awards
and invested in 14 companies that entered the ecomagination
Challenge, even acquiring one of them, Irish
smart-grid company FMC Tech. A new healthymagination
Challenge was launched last fall, with the first five
winners selected last month, for promising innovations
in breast cancer detection and diagnostics.
In addition, GE has developed a network of business development
scouts to engage with innovation clusters around
the world, including in Israel, Japan, and Russia. These scouts
join GE Global Research scouts in India, China, Germany,
and the United States in tapping into local entrepreneur and
innovation networks.
Finally, GE has also introduced new TRIZ-based tools developed
by innovation services firm GEN3 Partners. GEN3
and GE trainers have been training GE’s internal innovators
to help them effectively identify and assess new, functionally
related tech opportunities in analogous industries. Training
also includes guidance about how to understand how technology
evolves so that researchers can better gauge the potential
of new innovations.
GE has begun to build a platform for growth in adjacencies
from these new groupings of external and internal innovators,
one that has durable operating mechanisms and
promotes a supportive incubation culture, in no small part
from working closely with smaller companies, researchers,
and venture capitalists and learning about the challenges
they face.
Open Collaboration: Lessons Learned and Looking
Ahead
In collaborating with external partners, from VCs to startups,
GE has faced challenges that naturally arise from opening
up a formerly closed system and incorporating outside
perspectives. Take IP protection. For decades, GE has boasted
a high-integrity culture imbued with deep respect for protecting
intellectual property. That reputation has helped reassure
understandably cautious inventors and entrepreneurs
that GE is not partnering with them to steal or otherwise appropriate
their technology, but to provide support and to
learn. Still, setting up transparent nondisclosure processes
and guidelines to govern every step of the relationship has
been important in reinforcing mutual trust, which is the key
to any collaboration, but especially one involving entities of
vastly different sizes and often with different interests and
perspectives.
Navigating the issues of trust and IP endemic to open collaboration
projects has also helped transform the way GE
innovates internally. After the experience of asking startups
to trust GE on IP, company researchers realized that in
some internal projects, GE hadn’t been showing the same
trust to some of the collaborators who might become customers
of the technology being developed. A good example
is the development of hypopolarized C13, a carbon 13 isotope,
for in vivo metabolic imaging technology for GE
Healthcare. Researchers hoped the new technology would
lead to a new imaging modality combining the best parts of
PET and MRI to scan for metabolic-related diseases, but the
project’s novelty and unknown risks meant it had to undergo
at least five years of preclinical research involving
animal testing. While the project generated positive results
that were published in numerous scientific journals, the
feedback from collaborators was that GE was “too controlling”
of IP and had been limiting external opportunities that
some of the collaborators wanted to pursue. With the positive
lessons provided by recent open collaboration projects
fresh in their minds, GE researchers responded to these
concerns by creating the Research Circle, which offered
much more flexible IP and terms and conditions to allow
collaborators to share and debate concepts, results, and new
opportunities, strengthening relationships and opening the
door to new ideas.
Overall, working with external partners on due diligence,
collaborating with start-ups, and creating new models
like the Research Circle have dispelled reservations some
had going in about an unknown process. Doubts that GE
researchers would be motivated to work on the ideas of
outsiders were quickly allayed, as the new perspectives
brought by external partners energized and inspired internal
innovators.
Open collaboration is a new R&D model for GE, one
spurred by a motivation to contribute to and learn from the
innovation ecosystem surrounding venture capitalists and
entrepreneurs in markets adjacent to GE’s traditional businesses.
Tearing down the lab walls, so to speak, and collaborating
with these new partners has allowed GE to see
around the corner, spot new technology and business
trends, and make informed strategic decisions in growing
adjacencies. In time, the differences between open collaboration
and open innovation will blur further. Today’s model
for open collaboration at GE is a flexible model that will
continue to evolve and adapt as GE continues to search for
the best innovations, moderate their risk, and accelerate
business adoption and growth.
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