Digital Economy 'New Economic Models' Network+

Lead Research Organisation: University of Exeter
Department Name: Management

Abstract

The business press is alive with considerations of how the 'Big 4' tech giants, Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon are challenging to become the single biggest provider of digital services. In business services there is intense competition between IBM, SAP and Oracle to provide 'knowledge solutions' and in B2G there are the challenges of 'assisted living', privatisation of education and healthcare and the Big Society' agenda. Looking to the near future the development of the 'internet of things' will increasingly provide information on objects and their location, their physical properties, how long they have been there, what they are being used for etc. This data, increasingly available on global platforms, enables individuals, social enterprises, public and private sector organisations to 'interact, communicate, collaborate and share information' in novel and progressive ways. (RCUK 2012). These platforms also have the potential to disrupt current economic structures radically, threatening established players and providing many opportunities for new entrants and new economic models (RCUK 2012).
This new environment raises a number of questions, eg to what extent will the digital revolution transform the whole economy, or will it be primarily limited to specific sectors for example information services and in what ways does the Internet enable or hinder trust between parties. Other challenges include the development of 'off the shelf' business models that are appropriate for different contexts eg start-ups. Perhaps most important of all given the potential for widespread availability of data on individuals and things, we will consider what is the balance between enabling customised and bespoke services and the issues of privacy and confidentiality, data integrity and security?

The objective of this grant is the development of an internationally leading network of academics and practitioners who will engage with those questions through the production of evidence based research. This knowledge will inform multiple groups including
Private sector organisations. These organisations need to be aware of the opportunities and threats emerging from the digital economy and need to be capable of reconfiguring their organisations to meet the strategic challenges.
Consultancy organisations. These organisations need to engage in the long term challenges to their client base faced by the development of multiple platforms. This includes the development of enhanced analytics.
Public sector and local government. This sector needs to engage in the opportunities offered by new economic models of partnering with private sector organisations, social enterprises and the customisation and personalisation required by customers.

Our vision is that at the end of 3 years we will have established an internationally leading community which has addressed these big research questions and challenges. It will have worked closely with both private and public sectors and engaged with policymakers to help enable an environment where organisations are better placed to take the opportunities offered by the digital economy.

Planned Impact

The emergence of the digital economy has profoundly influenced the way organisations design and deliver products and services. Companies such as Google and Facebook have successfully introduced innovative business models that leverage technology enabled interconnectivity. Our research will identify the next generation of economic models and forms of enterprise made possible by such technologies. The proposed research will also identify opportunities for existing businesses in sectors such as
. Private Sector organisations. The investigator team already have strong links with organisations such as Vodafone, Aviva, RBS, EDF, Virgin Media.
. Consultants. We will focus our efforts on the technology consultancy organisations. .
. Public sector. We will focus on various government agencies and have begun discussions with colleagues from the Rural Payments Agency (RPA).
. Local government. We have held preliminary discussions with Sutton Council, who are a Big Society pilot.
. Policy makers, eg RCUK.
. Industry Bodies. We have begun discussion with the communications management association who act as an industry body for Telcos.

In the commercial organisations in particular, there is a considerable drive to utilize new technology to improve their productivity, reduce risk, access new markets and accelerate their product and service development lifecycles. In an increasingly global market, the identification of new business models and opportunities for effective technology exploitation are essential to the future economic prosperity of the UK.

Identifying the economic implications of the digital economy is also important to public organisations in areas such as health provision, maintaining law and order and education. The research will develop theories and tools in respect of system configurations and dynamics which will help providers to reduce operating costs and enhance the quality of service provision.

National, regional and local policy making and management will benefit from a better understanding of the economic impact of new forms of social and economic interactions. For example, the emergence of virtual communities may impact the relevance and operation of institutions designed to operate in a purely physical environment.

Finally, the research will benefit academic groups particularly in technology departments eg computing and engineering and business schools. We will adopt an interdisciplinary approach to knowledge creation and dissemination in this field and ensuring rapid dissemination of knowledge through the use of innovative communication processes eg twitter, podcasts, briefing notes and white papers. This will be in addition to the formal academic publications in leading international journals. The participation of managers from public and commercial organisations in network events and workshops will also facilitate the rapid adoption of new knowledge.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Title Designing Privacy In: Setting the Research Agenda 
Description Workshop summary 
Type Of Art Film/Video/Animation 
Year Produced 2015 
Impact Findings disseminated to NEMODE community and more widely through social media 
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RCzIDrlXWBo
 
Title Online Digital Market Place for Music Video Report 
Description The online digital marketplace for music has proven to be extremely significant with regards to the wider creative economy in two key respects. First, the online sharing of music in digital formats has been at the leading edge of debates around intellectual property rights issues. The way in which the music industry has responded to the threats of digital piracy has set a precedent for the wider creative economy. Second, the technologies with which music is being distributed and consumed online are dynamic and changing rapidly, as, perhaps even more significantly, are consumer preferences. Again, this places the digital marketplace for music at the forefront of developments in the creative economy. 
Type Of Art Artefact (including digital) 
Year Produced 2015 
Impact The overall aim of the report is to undertake a survey of the contemporary online digital marketplace for music. This is a necessary and important task given that a) the very recent consumer preference for streaming content has rendered many recent academic and industry studies of online music already outdated; and b) business strategies and models in the music industry have had to adapt accordingly 
URL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F8FWiW7rQ8Q&feature=youtu.be
 
Title Service Co-creation in Living Labs: innovating with the user, for the user . Greve, K. , Neely, A. , & Martinez, V. 
Description Poster will be presented at the fourth LMH Research Symposium at the University of Oxford on Thursday 25th February 
Type Of Art Artwork 
Year Produced 2016 
Impact This poster puts the NEMODE project in a wider perspective on co-creation in living labs 
 
Description (1) Business models in the digital economy are subject to strong network effects, IP rights management issues and double-sidedness. These phenomena requires further research on market dynamics and models of governance in multi-innovation contexts.

(2) Digital technologies (e.g. Big Data, Open Data) present huge potential for the creation of new companies or the transformation of existing business models.

(3) There is a need for developing taxonomies of business models for digital companies.

(4) The pathway from innovation to commercialisation of new technologies developed in UK Universities is underdeveloped. More research is needed to improve the market success rate of new innovations as well as entrepreneurial spirit among technical graduates. There is a mistaken linear conceptualisation of TRLs when research suggests that the business model needs to work simultaneously with technology development.
Exploitation Route 1. Development of ecosystems of firms and public bodies in multi-innovation contexts (mobile communications, open data, micro-payments, IoT).

2. Identification of feasible business models in the digital economy.

3. Understanding the impact of digital technologies in traditional business models and markets (retail, banking, tourism)

4. Implementation of crowdfunding schemes to facilitate start-up funding and social entrepreneurship

5. Policy advice on the management of IP rights and standards development.

6. Policy advice on fiscal incentives and technology development and technology adoption.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Creative Economy,Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Financial Services, and Management Consultancy,Healthcare,Government, Democracy and Justice,Manufacturing, including Industrial Biotechology,Retail

URL http://www.nemode.ac.uk
 
Description One of the major impacts of NEMODE was to engage with the complex issues around the use of personal data. Various research groups were funded as part of that initiative and some of these have led to spin outs. For example, one of the NEMODE investigators, Prof Irene Ng now leads a start-up (dataswift.io) that has raised considerable venture capital funding and plays a leading role in the debate around how users can maintain control of their own personal data. NEMODE also provided placement funding for Dr David Plans to work with companies in Silicon Valley in developing his wearables technology. This led to the development of a patent. The company was recently acquired by HUMA and played a significant role in remote patient monitoring during the COVID pandemic. Other successes include the early support for the work of Professor Annabelle Gawer at the University of Surrey who is now firmly established as a world leading scholar on digital platforms. Development of a research community actively researching and publishing in Digital Economy. .Development of two new centres of the digital economy, University of Surrey and University of Exeter both now 'next stage centres'. . Contribution to the development of RCUK research calls related to the digital economy (NEMINDE calls, £8m) and DLT call. . Involvement with Speaker's Commission on digital democracy . Contribution to 3 new start-ups related to mobile and internet of things. . New patents related to mobile apps and healthcare.
First Year Of Impact 2016
Sector Aerospace, Defence and Marine,Communities and Social Services/Policy,Creative Economy,Digital/Communication/Information Technologies (including Software),Education,Financial Services, and Management Consultancy,Healthcare,Leisure Activities, including Sports, Recreation and Tourism,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections,Retail
Impact Types Societal,Economic,Policy & public services

 
Description Exploring Future Cityscape Models through Urban Logistics Prototyping, NEMODE/SSN+ PLACEMENT REPORT 
Organisation Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution In addition to developing an understanding of the scholarly philosophy and working practices of academics at MIT, a research investigation (based on urban logistics prototyping) was also undertaken in Cambridge and downtown Boston. This report presents the key findings of my work into future cities, technologies, products and new economic models. These prototypes blended together logistics theory and qualitative research (in depth interviews, focus groups, workshops) with fictional imaginative constructs. In addition, several interviews explored executive perspectives on new economic models, the digital divide and user-driven modes of engagement. The underlying aim of my research project was not to provide definitive plans for cities, products or technologies. Rather the placement sought to develop some strategic insight into the visions, hopes and fears that everyday citizens (as well as executives and leading scholars) have towards the human and social impact of digital transformation.
Collaborator Contribution My placement provided the opportunity to meet a variety of Bostonians working across the Digital Economy landscape, from small creative companies such as: Recovers.org; university anchored innovation labs; knowledge exchange programmes; the SENSEable Cities initiatives; and the Media Lab at MIT. There was a feeling that the convergence of imagination and digital technologies was critical for the future of the ?Mass Ave? innovation eco-system experiment. This and the continuation of America's ?hedonistic? and ruthless venture capital system (where thousands of models and ideas failed but for the few which did succeed the financial rewards were usually astronomical). It was evident that the biotechnology industries are having a central role in driving business and service innovation in the Cambridge area of Boston. The tech/creative collaborations are reflected in the emergence of dynamic clusters of small companies and organizations, using a combination of content, design and technology as the basis for creating viable business models. Not only in the domain of bio-technology, but also in providing a range of services and solutions for other sectors.
Impact On my departure from Boston, Daniel Desai of Northern Eastern University was commissioned to expand the investigation to explore future transport mobility in Boston. The findings of which are attached to my report. As the work progressed I began sharing ideas and making collaborations with the Media Lab (where I organized a public forum with Prof. Guanguan Liang in July 2013 on the key findings (at the time) of my investigation), the SENSEable city lab, in particular with its director Prof. Carlo Raati and his associate Prof. Rex Britter, and Melvin King of the Community Lab. Also discussions with Ethan Zuckerman at the Centre for Civic Participation (on the role of civic participation in future cities and economic models for the news media) have given me many ideas to expand this research investigation over the next few months. The key finding from the public symposium on my work on the 8th July was clear, that we as researchers must be careful not to widen the digital divide by further excluding certain demographic/social groups from the technology-oriented society of tomorrow. For the majority of those attending this was the first time they had visited MIT. However, a majority of people participating in my workshops had positive views towards future technology; mymaterial also revealed quite interesting set of visions combining organic images (derived from nature) with technology. The vignettes demonstrated the use of fiction can be a powerful tool in visioning the potential human consequences of so-called 3D printing and localized craft-based production. A popular premise, being that 3D printing could permit many final objects to be made near to or even by consumers on just-in-time printing' machines. This revolution in making would have many implications for the economy-and-society in the future by seriously augmenting or indeed replacing, current systems of manufactured production and consumption all occurring at a distance. The 2037 contexts were well received by the participants and the extracts used in the workshop seemed to blend well into the personal narratives. They also gave the workshop organizer a shape for projected future worlds enabling my participants to focus in on the specificities exclusive to each scenario. There can be no doubt that the fictional accounts enabled people to think beyond the technology. Logistics prototyping could be a powerful tool in the social science repertoire for dealing with the human complexity of issues surrounding future cities and new economic model planning. In the final week of my placement at MIT, some inroads were made to share my work and build its impact at a policy level. Three interviews were completed and a conversation was initiated to look at future UK and U.S. collaborations. The focus would be on developing impact cases related to the influences of urban logistics on city and business planning. Cliff Cook of Cambridge Community Development Department was very positive towards the findings of the project and wished to use some of the findings, ideas and ideology to develop his own funding proposals and further his plans to help regenerate parts of the Cambridge area. George Mokroy is a civic activist pursuing agendas of positive change and he was a strong advocate of using this work to engage and inspire sustainable economic activity especially amongst the young of Boston. He also foresaw the potential of my work for enabling the young to engage with future city planning initiatives. Finally, Mel King also saw projects such as this as providing a refreshing catalyst of change, that moved beyond dry and arid academic experiments in data collection and information supply. It's my intention to keep in touch with these three and all the other people who participated in this investigation.
Start Year 2013
 
Description Fotopoulou, A. (2014e). Tracking biodata: sharing and ownership. 
Organisation University of California, Santa Cruz
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution During the NEMODE research Placement , Dr Fotopoulou liaised with faculty. postgraduate students and research fellows based at the Center for Science and Justice, and attended research events and seminars organised by the Center. On January 22, 2014, she attended the meeting of biomedical privacy and genomic openness , a conversation about the unresolved issues raised by the recent push to expand efforts to collect and aggregate biological samples and data. Jenny Reardon (Science & Justice Research Center Director and Associate Professor of Sociology) facilitated a conversation between Peter Yu (incoming President of the American Society of Clinical Oncology and Director of Cancer Research (ASCO) at the Palo Alto Medical Foundation) and David Haussler (Director of the UCSC Center for Biomolecular Sciences and Engineering). On February 5, 2014, the Center for Cultural Studies invited Dr Fotopoulou to give a talk about her NEMODE funded research in progress. The working paper entitled 'All these emotions , all these yearning, all these data: Platform openess, data sharing and visions democracy." is the basis for a forthcoming peer-reviewed journal article which observes the emerging mediascape of wearable sensors and mobile technologies through utopian and dystopian narratives, and makes special mention to the Quantified Self culture. Moving beyond the Panopticon model and questioning the notion of empowerment, the paper suggests that analysing user practices in specific locations can help us understand how the changing role of data in everyday life is symptomatic of shifts in the relationship between citizens and the state. On February 19, , 2014 the Art Department Chair Jennifer Parker and UCSC OpenLab invited Dr Fotopoulou to give a talk about her work on the current landscape of wearable sensors and digital culture. The presentation was mainly addressed to postgraduate and PhD students of the DI G I T A L ARTS programme, who are currently developing a collaborative art installation in which they plan to employ wearable sensors. For this session, Dr Fotopoulou discussed her current fieldwork in Silicon Valley and San Francisco, and presented part of a media analysis of Fitbit, a cloud-based fitness tracking device, and discussed emerging self management behaviours - this work is part of collaborative research undertaken for the EUfunded EPINET project, and will be presented in detail in a jointly authored forthcoming peer-reviewed publication. A Q&A followed, where students and researchers had the opportunity to ask detailed questions about wearable devices, and the critical issues around their use. The experience opened up the material for discussion to artists. It also enabled Dr Fotopoulou to develop a connection with the Digital Arts Department in UCSC, whereas plans for further collaborations (joint publication) were also discussed. On February 28, 2014, Dr Fotopoulou was invited to participate in a panel discussion with bioartist Oron Catts (synthetica) and philosopher Jake Metcalf. The event was hosted by Andy Murray and Sophia Magnone and was part of 'Justice in a more than human world - collaboration or exploitation ? Working with living systems across the arts and sciences' by Science and Justice Workgroup Human / Non-Human Collaboration across the Arts & Sciences. She presented collaborative research on the invitro meat case of the EPINET project. The paper is an analysis of the live television launch of the first in-vitro meat burger in August 2013, which frames the launch as a "media event" (Couldry & Hepp); and an examination of the main discourses circulating in digital culture round this time, which together work towards a critical discussion about the publics of synthetic meat.
Collaborator Contribution THE PROJECT TRACKING BIODATA FITS THE RESEARCH COUNCILS UK DIGITAL ECONOMY THEME AS IT PRODUCED RESEARCH FINDINGS WHICH CAN INFORM THE DEVELOPMENT OF POLICY AND BE USED BY SCHOLARS AND COMPANIES INTERESTED IN NEW ECONOMIC MODELS AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO THE DIGITAL ECONOMY. DURING THE PLACEMENT, THE PI DR FOTOPOULOU LINKED WITH SCHOLARS AND COMPANIES, WHOSE RESEARCH INTEREST IS TRANSFORMATIONS BROUGHT BY DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES IN THE AREA OF HEALTH/FITNESS RESEARCH. THIS PROJECT WILL FURTHER PRODUCE EXCELLENT RESEARCH OUTPUTS, WHICH IMPACT ON THE GROWTH, PROSPERITY AND WELLBEING OF THE UK, TARGETED TO THE WIDER PUBLIC, DIGITAL START-UPS (BUSINESS) AND ACADEMIC FIELDS
Impact Dr Fotopoulou is an early-career researcher, with expertise in digital media and culture, and with an interest in the sociology of emerging technologies. Currently based at the Department of Media and Film, University of Sussex, she works as postdoc research fellow in the European Commission funded project EPINET (FP7-SCIENCEIN-SOCIETY-2012), on a media analysis of three emerging technologies - smart grids, wearable sensors and in-vitro meat. In March 2013, acting as CI for the CCN+ network Sustaining Network Knowledge, she visited the US with funding from the British Consulate, as member of a team which sought to undertake knowledge exchange, make new contacts and explore possibilities for collaboration via research projects. She then made contacts with leading actors in the field of digital & biotechnological innovation, including GigaGen Inc. and Genomera, and initiated a basic network with Silicon Valley companies and UCSC. As the list of activities demonstrates, the 2014 placement helped Dr Fotopoulou create and further cultivate partnerships with business partners, academic partners, non-governmental organisations and individuals, and enabled the researcher to begin building an independent research profile and scholarship in the sociology of self-tracking and wearables for health and wellbeing. She was also able to develop an extensive network of connections in the San Francisco Bay Area, Silicon Valley and Santa Cruz, California. These connections will be instrumental for Dr Fotopoulou's further career, as they enable access to a nascent research field. During the placement Dr Eleftherios Zenerian was employed as Research Assistant in this project and contributed an up-to-date bibliography on self-tracking and on selfquantification, and to setting up the website. Employing as RA helped the PI gain basic supervision and project management skills, which are important for career advancement purposes. It helped Dr Zenerian to gain experience and develop research and admin skills, and move in a Research Fellow position.
Start Year 2014
 
Description Graham, G. 2013a. Is anyone asking people what they want from the smart cities of the future? The Conversation 
Organisation Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution To investigate some of these visions, I went to MIT in Boston for three months last year. The aim was to find out how people would get their goods and services in the city of the future and how we we get everyone to engage with city plans. We decided to test out some ideas with the inner city communities of Boston in a series of workshops. We essentially combined science fact and science fiction by presenting them with a Boston set in 2037 based on current technological trends projected forward through several imagined scenarios. We combined the traditional science fiction ideas of utopia and dystopia with realistic technological trends such as artificial intelligence, 3D printing and big data and asked Bostonians to come up with fictional stories about their life in these environments.
Collaborator Contribution To investigate some of these visions, I went to MIT in Boston for three months last year. The aim was to find out how people would get their goods and services in the city of the future and how we we get everyone to engage with city plans. We decided to test out some ideas with the inner city communities of Boston in a series of workshops. We essentially combined science fact and science fiction by presenting them with a Boston set in 2037 based on current technological trends projected forward through several imagined scenarios. We combined the traditional science fiction ideas of utopia and dystopia with realistic technological trends such as artificial intelligence, 3D printing and big data and asked Bostonians to come up with fictional stories about their life in these environments.
Impact Although participants felt positive about future technology, the scenarios they imagined involved using it as an accessory to city living. They were more pessimistic about the ability of technology to make major changes to their lives either socially and economically or for it to regenerate the infrastructure and economy of inner-city areas of Boston. Many cited Bowdoin-Geneva as an example. The Boston Globe had recently run a well publicised 68 Blocks social experiment designed to investigate the reasons for this neighbourhood's long history of high crime and shootings. It opened up nothing more than a conversation.
Start Year 2014
 
Company Name BioBeats 
Description In 2012 David Plans (VP Product) and Davide Morelli (VP Engineering) pitched their programme to sonify and visualize brain waves using just a custom-built headset and an iPhone to me and I immediately saw the opportunity to use heart data to create and influence experiential music. David Plans also saw that he could now fulfill a long time vision of his, elegantly merging healthcare and entertainment. They set out to test our concepts and partnered with retro funk hip hop group, The Far East Movement and created an event powered by over 1.5 million heart beats. The team went on to win the Spotify hackathon Echonest Prize at SXSW for their experiment 'Pulse'. And then BioBeats wrote history again... they built a tool that would allow the audience at a venue to stream their heartbeats to the DJ booth and for the DJ to use that information to influence his set 
Year Established 2012 
Impact .Successful rounds of venture capital. . Strategic partnership with Samsung.
Website http://biobeats.com/
 
Company Name Aida Technologies 
Description Our vision is centred on four core premises: personal engagement, combining health and wellbeing, collective responsibility, and intelligent person-centred data services. Personally-controlled medical record platforms will contribute to restore our personal responsibility towards healthy living, reduce healthcare costs and improve transparency and accountability, whilst helping to break information and knowledge silos. Given that citizens are becoming active co-producers of healthcare information, open, inter-operable and scalable information platforms linking citizens, carers, and professional, can provide a new channel for enabling self-care. With a growing wellbeing market and the emergence of on-line personal health records, healthcare information is starting to accumulate at much earlier stages. This creates an opportunity to reach up stream in health promotion and preventive activities. Relying on intelligent data services and open data standards, and enabled by opening the garden-wall approach of current personally-controlled medical record platforms, independent software application developers would be able to envision new health data services linked to emergent demands from proactive consumers of pre-primary care (health + wellbeing) services. A federated approach to data management, enabled by mobile technologies, would allow proactive personal engagement and collective responsibility, and help improve cost-effectiveness of healthcare services. In addition, gamification of medical applications have the potential to improve compliance and the formation of healthy habits. Intelligent data repositories and services will help not only integrate electronic health information, but also enable evidence-based 'collective' decision making amongst carers and clinical providers and unleash new knowledge and discoveries. 
Year Established 2013 
Impact . Successful funding rounds from Manchester City Council
Website http://www.aidatechnology.com
 
Description Adding Service to the Mix, CGMA Magazine, September 2013. (A. Neely) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact • Adding Service to the Mix, CGMA Magazine, September 2013. (A. Neely)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013
URL http://www.servitization.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/Views_on_Servitization.pdf
 
Description Being a Solutions Provider Doesn't Make You Special 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Being a Solutions Provider Doesn't Make You Special, The Manufacturer, September 2013. (A. Neely)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013
URL http://www.themanufacturer.com/articles/212380/
 
Description Business Models in data-intensive economies? BAM 2014. Professional development workshop (Maureen Meadows (Open University) Professor Yi Ke Guo (Imperial College) David Lopez (University of Exeter, I.E Business School) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact This workshop addresses two main questions, (1) the question of how big data influences business and economic models and (2) what kind of business and economic models are required to articulate data ecosystems. To provide some insights into these matters four research teams, funded by RCUK, will present their results concerning the impact of big data in the UK economy: from obstacles to the realisation of benefits from big data, to the impact of big data in finance and services as well as how big data might contribute to economic growth and generate opportunities for innovation for UK companies.
First Topic. Key obstacles to the realisation of benefits from big data in the UK economy and pathways to their solution
Speakers: Greg Tailor, Ralph Schroeder (Oxford Internet Institute)
Second Topic. How is big data transforming the financial services sector?
Speakers: Carla Bonina, Jonathan Liebenau (London School of Economics
Third Topic. The impact of big data on economic models within Complex Service Networks
Speakers: Mohamed Zaki, Andy Neely (University of Cambridge)
Fourth Topic. Catalysing economic growth: releasing the value of big data
Speakers: Thomas Llewellyn, Aija Leiponen (Imperial College).
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description Competitive Advantage in the Digital Economy (CADE 2017) Zena Wood presentation - 'Measuring servitization in the digital economy' (Award for Unique Methodological Approach) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact Zena Wood presentation at CADE 2017 'Using computational methods '. Opportunity to be involved in CADE events in the future. CADE brings together academics and practitioners to discuss the challenges of the digital economy and present the latest cutting edge research.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
URL https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/sci/wmg/research/business_transformation/ssg/ssgabout/sswmgactivities/cade...
 
Description Crowdfunding is a boost for science but it cannot replace core state investment. Warren , L. (2014) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact At a recent Dragon's Den-style competition in Southampton, the winner, Benjamin Mawson, gave an eloquent account of his 3DBare project, describing how users could walk inside music. The runners-up, BluPoint, a system for storing digital content like music and making it available on phones via wifi, and WaterWell, a digital water management system, gave equally powerful accounts of the social value of their projects.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
URL http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDjkgUcPIbY%5D(http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KDjkgUcPIbY
 
Description Designing Privacy In: Setting the Research Agenda: Kirstie Ball, Open University. workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact This report presents an overview of the development of an emerging research agenda, facilitated by the Centre for Research into Information, Surveillance and Privacy (CRISP) and funded by NEMODE +. The agenda explores the theme of how privacy can be designed into organizational processes and technologies. The report is titled 'Designing Privacy In: Setting the Research Agenda'. It captures the activities initiated by CRISP in order to identify key research issues and sets out a future research agenda. The report is therefore both a record of activity and a statement of research potential.
The report provides a brief summary of two main research activities: (1) a research workshop held in London in November 2014 and including participants from academia, practice and civil society, and (2) an expert panel session of the Computers, Privacy and Data Protection (CPDP) Conference, Europe's leading conference for data protection experts, held in Brussels in January 2015. Both activities were facilitated and delivered by CRISP. These activities have produced a number of direct outputs, including a series of presentations, engagement and discussion with practitioners, experts and civil society, and two short films. The overall outcome is a recognition and definition of an emergent research agenda around the commercial feasibility of privacy by design, relevant to both academia and practice.
From the outset, it is important to acknowledge the support given to CRISP to help facilitate the activities discussed in this report. The workshop hosted by CRISP Open University in London on 19 November 2014 was supported financially by the RCUK/EPSRC funded NEMODE (New Economic Models in the Digital economy) 'network plus' research programme1, and the expert panel session at the 2015 CPDP conference in Brussels was supported financially by CPDP2. The CRISP Directors would also like to thank all the experts who gave up their time to participate in this intellectual endeavour.
The report has three main sections. Following the introduction, Section 2 sets out the research objectives. Section 3 presents the research activity associated with the London workshop and Section 4 that associated with the expert CPDP panel in Brussels. Section 5 sets out a series of research outcomes, including the emergent research agenda. Following this are a number of annexes capturing information relevant to the research activities, and in particular copies of slides used during the workshop and expert panel.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.nemode.ac.uk
 
Description Interactive Theatre: Reconfiguring the value space. 10th Annual TaPRA Conference (2014) hosted by Royal Holloway, University of London 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The work will recognize notions of materiality in the light of
the latest technological developments used within theatre as 'from the point
of view of organizational phenomena, technology seems to be everywhere
in the world of practice' (Orlikowski and Scott, 2008). The work will answer
'How, and to what extent, does digital technology affect value of interactive
theatre today?' Rich qualitative responses from 'sensemaking' narratives
(Brown et al., 2008; Czarniawska-Joerges, 2004) of interactive theatre makers
lead the scope for impact at both scholarly and practice levels.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
URL https://www.royalholloway.ac.uk/dramaandtheatre/documents/pdf/tapraprogrammeandinformation.pdf
 
Description Open media innovation. Exploring media innovation, media ecosystems and media environments to benefit the digital economy. Cooke, C.E. 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact The Medialab Session and Media Innovation Studio brought coders, business minds, entrepreneurs, students, journalism and media professionals from across Europe and America together for 48 hours. Using innovative brain storming and facilitation methods, and a series of workshops, we set out to build five media startups across one weekend. The teams pitched to a panel of expert Dragons to find a winning startup. The process was outputted live through multimedia and social media in order to make the ecosystem collaborative and open. What we found went deeper than the creation of a startup. The process shed new light on the process of media innovation, probing what open innovation means and what needs to happen to benefit the UK digital economy.
Workshop aims:1. To bring together a European community of media innovators
2. To better understand media innovation and media ecosystems
3. To explore open source processes in media innovation, as a test case for the wider business sector
4. To create an environment that makes innovation possible
42 PEOPLE PARTICIPATED IN THE WEEKEND EVENT
The key roles were: Participants, Fab Lab, Mentors, Organisers, Dragons
Participants were central to the event. Their role was to work in five teams to build a media startup in 48 hours.
Fab Lab was made up of coders from Makers Academy and a professional mobile game coder from Hull. They were paid a fee to offer coding and build support to the teams aiming to create a working prototype by the end of the weekend.
Organisers and Mentors were roles which overlapped (n = 9). This included members of Medialab Session: Neila Romdane, Romain Saillet, Yann Herteaux. Gayane Adourian acted as the newsroom, capturing the event and boosting network activity. Clare Cook, Paul Egglestone, John Mills and Andy Dickinson represented Media Innovation Studio (MIS) and offered organisational, technical and mentoring support. Charlie Craven from MIS focussed on data capture and video outputs.
Dragons were personally invited for their knowledge of the media startup scene, or for their expertise as investors. They were asked to take part in several activities: to participate in a Remerge capture around qualitative questions relating to the core themes of the event; to record talking head videos around media innovation and their experiences; to act as a judging panel for the five team startups that were created including deliberations; to offer feedback to the teams; to network and discuss ideas with the Participants. It was the intention of the event to launch a winning startup so the input from Dragons was key.
A NUMBER OF METHODS WERE USED ACROSS THE WEEKEND TO EXPLORE AND CREATE A MEDIA STARTUP; Remerge;Remerge free draw tool;Remerge set response questions; Facilitation and pitch games; Keynote talk;Unconference style sessions ; Masterclasses; Build time; Pitching;
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
URL https://readymag.com/u61590527/32443/4/
 
Description The second Service Systems Forum (SSF 2016, Venice) Prersentation by Zena Wood - 'The Uber Disruption' 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Presentation regarding NEMODE funded project 'Uber disruption'. Opportunity to promote the research to a wider community of academics.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016
 
Description Thynne, M. (2014a). Interactive Theatre Making: An interdisciplinary lens on Maker Narratives Digital Research in the Humanities and the Arts (2014) hosted by University of Greenwich. 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact little is known about the overall subjective value of digital technology from the perspective of the theatre creator. Arts Council England (2014)
upholds 'the general value of arts and culture to society has long been assumed, while the specifics have just as long been debated'. This cross-disciplinary work combines elements of organizational studies and theatre studies in a single case study (Yin, 2003) to identify how we
might represent and account for societal as well as monetised values (Potts, 2011). More specifically, the work will explore the effects on makers using the latest digital technologies within theatre as 'from the point of view of organizational phenomena, technology seems to be everywhere in the world of practice' (Orlikowski and Scott, 2008). The work will answer ''To what extent does digital technology affect interactive theatre today?' Rich qualitative responses from 'sensemaking' narratives (Brown et al., 2008; Czarniawska-Joerges, 2004) of interactive theatre makers lead the scope for impact to both scholarly and practice levels.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
URL http://www.drha2014.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Pages-from-Book-of-abstracts-edited_interactive...
 
Description Thynne, M. (2014b). Interactive Theatre: Reconfiguring the value space. 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact An Interactive Workshop to explore values of theatre from both academic and theatre maker perspective - funded by NEMODE (New Economic Models for the Digital Economy), the Research Council UK and Lancaster University.
Creative Industries are key to both cultural and economic progress in an increasingly competitive world. Divisions of the arts and culture industries, including theatre, are the largest contributors to the industry's collective turnover estimated £5.9 billion. Yet, little is known about the overall value of digital technology in theatre. There is a growing body of research into audience perceptions and value on both sides of the Atlantic. However, there are few inquiries into theatre makers and their perceptions on the value of digital technologies in theatre.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2014
URL https://highwire.lancaster.ac.uk/events/Preview/7053
 
Description Velu, C., Smart, A. & Phillips, M. (2015). The Imperative for Business Model Innovation: A Research and Practice Perspective. Business Model Innovation Workshop held at the Institute for Manufacturing (IfM), University of Cambridge, 1-2 June 2015 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The workshop was co-hosted by IfM and
the Centre for Innovation and Service Research (ISR) at the University of Exeter Business School and forms
part of the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Seminar Series on Business Models involving the
following: University of the West of England, University of Exeter, Aston University, Lancaster University,
Warwick University, Strathclyde University, and Reading University (Henley). The series has also received
support from the British Academy of Management, The British Library and NEMODE.
While the antecedents of the business model concept originated in established academic disciplines, its
rise to prominence took place relatively recently. This prominence as a concept was fuelled by digital
innovation and the Internet, and its potential as a unifying mechanism presents significant opportunities
for competitive development in both research and practice. To realise the innovation potential from a focus
on business models and business modelling, significant challenges, such as entrenched organisational and
behavioural norms, need to be addressed. This White Paper surfaces these opportunities and challenges
and provides a point of departure for intellectual debate. Specifically, it identifies these opportunities and
challenges from multiple perspectives and offers a set of recommendations for academia, business, funding
councils, and government.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk/uploads/Resources/Reports/The-Imperative-Business-model-innovation.pdf
 
Description What's digital about fashion design? Fashion Technology and the Digital Economy, Black, S., Edwards, M.J. & Miller, G. (2015). London UK 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact We've identified you as someone with an interest in this area and we'd welcome your expert input to explore this agenda and discuss:
How robust is the designer fashion community's understanding of the opportunities presented by digital technology?
How might micro, cash-starved and time-poor fashion businesses create the space to engage digitally, understanding its economic value and embedding it into their processes?
To what extent can digital engagement be integrated into the entire product development life cycle?
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
URL http://www.slideshare.net/AAM_Associates/whats-digital-about-fashion-design
 
Description • Steering Committee DE2013 University of Salford 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Other audiences
Results and Impact • Steering Committee DE2013 University of Salford
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2013