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Knowledge-intensive services as a business support instrument Elżbieta Książek, Poznan Science and Technology Park TAFTIE Expert session “Innovation-oriented ecosystems” September 10, 2014, Gdynia, Poland

Knowledge-intensive services as a business support instrument Elżbieta Książek, Poznan Science and Technology Park TAFTIE Expert session “Innovation-oriented

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Knowledge-intensive services as a business support instrument

Elżbieta Książek, Poznan Science and Technology Park

TAFTIE Expert session “Innovation-oriented ecosystems” September 10, 2014, Gdynia, Poland

Plan of the presentation Scoping the issue Examples of services Challenges for service providers and innovation agencies

Any other information

Scoping the issue

„Knowledge intensive business services - services that rely heavily upon professional knowledge….”

„generate original knowledge, or fuse, "package" or translate knowledge resources from other sources” (I. Miles)

in-depth interaction between supplier and user – mutual learning Make important sector of economy Influence innovation of the client

KIS as a business support instrument: Services that support innovation in a company Provided with a public mission – aim to change the economy in a desired way

(e.g. companies’ behaviour, structure of the economy) May be financed (part-financed) from public sources

High added value innovation support services

High added value innovation support services – what are they?

IP advice – IPR strategies, patent landscape, commercialisation path Technology and market intelligence (e.g. technology watch) Technology transfer Innovative ideas generation Market strategies for innovative products, incl. internationalisation Innovation management techniques introduction: innovation strategies,

knowledge management in companies, design management, project management, benchmarking etc.

Investment readiness

Source: Christian Saublens, EURADA

High added value innovation support services in „RIS3 SUPPORT SERVICE ECO-SYSTEM”

Experiences of Poznan Science and Technology Park

Market opportunity analysis Patent landscape analysis IPR strategy preparation Commercialisation path development Innovation management audit Innovation strategy preparation Generation of innovative ideas

Key issues:-Skilled team-Service model and tools development-Poor demand of companies – yes, if there is some part-financing

Challenges for service providers

Skilled, knowledgeble HR Access to expertise Development and retaining know-how Development of tools and methods - costly Difficulties to sell the service - companies are not keen to ask for the service,

but they are happy once they receive it How to keep the service if public funding ends

Innovation support

Knowledge

People

Tools

Processes

Networks

Clients

Challenges to innovation agencies What companies really need? Is it enough that companies use the support? Who is the target group? What result is expected? At what cost? How to follow it? Supply is taken for granted – is it enough that access for SMEs is provided? Too many providers? When to stop support?

Innovation support pyramid Source: Christian Saublens, EURADA

Company perspective (?) Why do I need it? What do I get from it? How much I need to invest? Where do I go (it all looks the same)?

Thank you for your attention

Elżbieta KsiążekPoznan Science and Technology Parkul. Rubież 4661-612 Poznań, Polandtel. +48 61 8279 740fax. + 48 61 8279 741e-mail: [email protected]://www.ppnt.poznan.pl