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Open innovation: a company perspective:

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Open innovation: a company perspective: OECD NESTI-TIP Workshop Innovation Indicators for Policy Making and Impact Assessment Paris June 13th – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Open innovation: a company perspective:


1
Open innovation a company perspective
  • OECD NESTI-TIP Workshop
  • Innovation Indicators for Policy Making and
    Impact AssessmentParis June 13th

2
It is not about.The Dutch Private RD
flatline 1970-2005
3
Agenda
  • Introduction of NXP
  • The need for open Innovation
  • Open innovation at NXP and how NXP measures open
    innovation
  • Suggestions for indicators

4
NXP Semiconductors Reborn and Renewed
  • Spin-out of Royal Philips Electronics
    Semiconductor Division
  • 2 in Europe, Top-10 global supplier
  • Sales of 4,960 Bln. in 2006
  • Investing 1 Bln. in RD annually
  • 38000 employees
  • 83 of our engineers are in Europe
  • 25,000 patents
  • Innovation Centers in Austria, France, Germany,
    Netherlands, UK
  • We have the ambition to become a top 5
    semiconductor company

5
Resulting in top positions in key marketsA few
compelling examples
  • Automotive
  • Every major car maker in the world carries a NXP
    chip
  • 1 in car radios
  • Identification
  • 1 in NFC technology
  • 1 in RFID solutions, with more than 1.5 billion
    ICs shipped
  • More than 80 of the worlds e-passports use our
    Chips
  • 80 of all electronic tickets in public transport
    carry NXP solution (London, Sao Paolo, and 80
    cities in China)
  • Mobile
  • 1 in complete system solutions for mobile
    handsets
  • More than 200 million Nexperia cellular system
    solutions shipped
  • All speakers worldwide in all mobile phones are
    from NXP
  • Home
  • 1 out of in 2 TVs worldwide carries an NXP Chip
  • 4 in 10 PC TVs uses our silicon tuners
  • MMS
  • 1 in 2 laptops uses our GreenChippower supply
    controller
  • 1 in interface products

6
  • The Need for Open Innovation

7
RD costs rise exponentially
20 of rev
12 of rev
8
More than Moore Diversification
Technological roadmap
Sensors Actuators
HV Power
Analog/RF
Passives
Biochips
Interacting with people and environment Non-dig
ital content System-in-package (SiP)
Miniaturization more Moore
Baseline CMOS CPU, Memory, Logic
Information Processing Digital
content System-on-chip (SoC)
Combining SoC and SiP High Value Systems
Beyond CMOS
9
Innovation is about people
  • Talent is key for innovation
  • Talent is attracted by an inspiring and
    stimulating environment, both in terms of
    research and business topics as in the physical
    environment
  • Open innovation is a very important magnet.

10
The High Tech Campus Eindhoven
  • Technical facilities, such as
  • Cleanrooms, chemistry and physics laboratories
    rooms in shell form
  • Specialised equipment rental
  • Non-technical facilities, Restaurants and cafés,
    Shops Campus Wellness Center, Child Care Center,
    Outdoor sport facilities (tennis, soccer,
    basketball, petanque etc)

11
To sum up why open innovation?
  • Hardware factors
  • RD costs
  • Fragmented industry
  • Time to market
  • Software factors
  • multiple application domains
  • Multi-complex innovation environment
  • Mindware factors
  • Innovation is about people, open innovation
    inspires and challenges

12
Open Innovation at NXP
13
NXP general open innovation principles
  • Overall principle create a win-win situation for
    partners involved
  • Objectives are to
  • Leverage scale and investments
  • Leverage expertise and know how of partners
  • Reduce time to obtain knowledge and support NXP
    own competence buildup in selected area's
  • Gain early insight/Scouting/pathfinder
    function/first screening
  • Open innovation is a hybrid phenomenon
  • The model differs depending on the type of
    research and the partner
  • It is easier to co-operate on developing new
    methodologies and technologies than on developing
    new differentiating IP.
  • Open innovation with partners in the value chain
    is easier than co-operation with competitors
  • Dont be to open or your brains may fall
    out A good IP agreement is essential to let
    open innovation work

14
Working with institutes the Holst center
  • International open RD centre, founded by IMEC
    and TNO
  • Creating generic technologies for wireless
    autonomous transducer solutions and for
    systems-in-foil
  • In program partnership with industry and
    universities, clear business model

Company Y entrance fee participation fee
  • Precompetitive programme
  • shared IP

Company X participation fee
Holst background research
Access to relevant Holst background IP
15
How does NXP measure open innovation?
  • Typical indicators involve
  • Invention Disclosures
  • Patent Applications
  • Confirmed transfers to business and product lines
  • Papers at selected conferences
  • Papers at selected peer reviewed journals
  • People leverage
  • For open innovation similar success indicators
    are used as for proprietary innovation
  • Only the expected effects are often a factor 5
    times higher!

16
Routes for Indicators
17
Open Innovation program Point One
  • Vision
  • Create a world class ecosystem (like Silicon
    Valley) on nano-electronics and embedded
    systems, based on unique position of the
    Netherlands (ASML, NXP, Philips)
  • Mission
  • Create outstanding academic, industrial and
    institutional RD infrastructure (ecosystem)
  • Actions
  • RD programs
  • Open institutes
  • Human Capital
  • SMES

18
Zero base measurementApproach
  • Defined a set of 14 indicators (some clear cut
    economic, some about mobility, some about
    reputation)
  • Than use different research methods and data to
    fill in the picture. We have used
  • Standard statistics
  • Analysis public funding databases (RD
    cooperation)
  • Survey among companies (RD, expectations,
    knowledge workers)
  • Interviews companies and research institutes
    (context, expectations, RD)
  • Simple patent analysis
  • Market analysis (public sources, Gartner)
  • Expert opinion
  • International benchmark with other regional
    hot-spots in same technology domain
  • Overall this combination of existing data
    (collected for other purposes) and own data
    provides a reliable snap-shot

19
And on the indicator level
  • Some indicators are basically impossible to
    measure
  • Mobility of knowledge workers
  • Reduction time to market
  • Attractiveness/trust
  • Current statistics on turn-over, export, RD etc
    are not relevant for global operating companies,
    it doesnt tell you much about there decisions
  • More info available at www.technopolisgroup.com

20
Suggestion size down
  • Hardware
  • Data on RD activities of multinationals cross
    border DTI and EU scoreboard are good starting
    points
  • Softwarenetworks
  • How do we measure trust?
  • Interregional networks
  • Mindware data on people
  • Brain circulation mobility of RD personal
    across borders
  • Industry PhDs
  • Why do people want to work somewhere (location
    factors of knowledge workers)?

21
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