Post on 13-Aug-2020
transcript
Innovate Europe:
Competing for Global Innovation LeadershipJune 20th 2019
2
Digital Europe
overview
Innovate
Europe
Pan-European
Declaration
Start-up/Corp.
Collaboration
Corporate-startup collaboration21 Pan-European approach
Enabling government and public institutions43 Innovation funding
Entrepreneurial talent65 Data access and protection
Gender diversity87Digital education, reskilling and
upskilling
Harmonized legislation and standards109Digital infrastructure and
interoperability
The European Way of Innovation (detailed next)
4
Adoption DemandSupply
Talented, educated,
diverse and mobile
workforce
Engages in life-long learning
and is ready to adapt to new
technologies and
opportunities
Entrepreneurs &
foundersBring complementary skills
and innovative ideas that
multiply as connections are
improved across Europe’s
local ecosystems
Resource owners
and providersProvide capital and data to
fuel growth and scale up
across borders
Global tech giantsProvide platforms for
scale and train talent
Academic
institutions
Create, disseminate and share
knowledge on technologies who
ideally help to train entrepreneurs
Infrastructure providers
Provide the physical links between all
stakeholders, help overcome distances and
increase speed of scale
Ecosystem builder
Public or private actors that help
link stakeholders with each other
and foster collaboration beyond
the local context
Innovation adopting corporates
Adapt to and grow in the Fourth Industrial Revolution and
help scale innovation across Europe and to international
markets
Create enabling and
stable environment, unify
European markets and
set impulses for cross-
border scaling
Public figures and
legislators
Role model innovation and
adopt innovative services in
order to ease cross-border
collaboration
Public institutions
Private
consumersDemand and use
innovation
Innovate
Europe
5
SOURCES: Global Competitiveness Report, World Economic Forum (September 2017); Fostering Innovation-Driven Entrepreneurship Report, World Economic Forum (June 2014);
MGI: "How artificial intelligence can deliver real value to companies" (June 2017); The Economist: "Chinese and US tech giants go at it in emerging markets" (July 2018); Silicon
Valley Competitiveness and Innovation Project (2016 Update); Small Business: "The Secrets of Successful Silicon Valley Startups"; Martin Moore: "Tech giants and Civic Power",
King's College London (April 2016)
• Abundance of STEM talent and highly innovative
regions
• Proven track record of cross-border collaboration
and standardization
• Leading industrial clusters with strong SMEs and
multinationals, e.g. automotive, health care
• Ambitious government action
• Fragmented markets
• Persistent competitiveness and innovation gaps
among European member states
• Europe being outperformed in R&D investment in
key technologies; difficulty to commercialize R&D
• Lack of “own” internet giants and fewer unicorns
than in comparator economies
While Europe faces some challenges
in catching up to other regions ...
... it has clear strengths it can build on
to develop its own innovation model
Pan-European Innovation
Change Data
Dynamics
Public-
sector
leadership
Leverage
Industrial
assets
Boost
Talent
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7
Annual Meeting of the New Champions
Dalian, China
Innovate Europe