Ed Morrison’s Garage

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The regional transformation toward open innovation

Yesterday, I went on a whirlwind visit to the Penn State and the wonderful people at the Office of Economic and Workforce Development: http://oewd.psu.edu/

During my presentation, I introduced a framework for thinking about how regions evolve toward open innovation. The first horizon involves changing the prevailing narrative to emphasize the importance of collaboration and finding new pathways. The second horizon involves establishing one or more civic spaces and practicing civility. During this phase, regions start uncovering their networks.
In the third phase, a region starts moving toward more strategic habits of thinking and doing. They abandon old models of strategic planning and begin to learn faster, more agile disciplines of strategic doing. At the fourth horizon, regions establish a regular process of conducting strategic conversations and translating ideas into action. They continuously update their strategic action plan.
In the region around Purdue, we have gone through these four phases, and we are now continuing this work. Other regons around the country are at different points in their transformation.
In my talk yesterday, I focused on what universities can do to move regions ahead.

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Comments (2)

Feb 05, 2010
David Passmore said...
Enjoyed your talk, Ed. Associated with OEWD at Penn State is the Penn State Workforce Education & Development Initiative, the home of analysis of many of the "old" and "new" numbers to which you referred in your talk. We are at http://wedi.psu.edu.
--David Passmore
Feb 05, 2010
Ed Morrison said...
David: I'll be heading back to Penn State Feb 18-19 to focus on next steps in the Purdue-Penn State collaboration. Hope to see you then.

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