Workshop on Decision Engineering Using AHP
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Workshop on Decision Engineering Using AHP
You can also follow the event on LinkedIn at http://events.linkedin.com/Workshop-Decision-Engineering-using-AHP/pub/341657
This workshop is being organized by the NSRCEL as part of MHRD IPR Chair activities at IIM Bangalore.
Dates: Sep 25 and 26, 2009
Venue: IIM Bangalore
Knowledge intensive enterprises today cover a wide range of sectors spanning from the
traditional to modern enterprises. Entrepreneurs in knowledge intensive sectors stand on a different pedestal when it comes to conceiving and executing their enterprise plans. They have to combine traditional entrepreneurial skills with the ability to valorize their intellectual capital by nourishing and protecting their innovations and inventions. This is a specially designed programme targeted at such entrepreneurs.
Participants are given an overview of topics in Managing Intellectual Property and the sessions have been designed to give a practical view of how to manage IP assets to entrepreneurs including hands on half a day class work session. The resource persons drawn into the programme are academics and successful entrepreneurs who have added value to their innovations through novel systems of IP enhancement. The outcome of the workshop will be to create awareness and business sense about IP management in new enterprises.
Download the event brochure and registration form.
Intangible assets and intellectual property are becoming increasingly important in today’s knowledge driven economy. “How does Intellectual Property impact business strategy?” is a question of critical interest to entrepreneurs and business managers.
After spending an hour on getting cobwebs cleared on IP fundamentals, Business Design students at WeSchool spent a focused couple of hours deliberating on the implications of IP on technology and business strategy. Embedded in the following slide deck are excerpts from the session.
Greek origins of the word strategy point to “putting the troops in the right places”. As opposed to purely imaginative future-gazing, strategy requires one to start with both feet on the ground, climb up a tree to get to a higher vantage point, look around, generate new potential directions and then come back to the ground to work out ways and means to move along those directions.
We, at Crafitti Consulting, have had the opportunity to work as troops, generals and advisors in various innovation contexts in different organizations. We have, over the years, researched, experimented with and built several frameworks, methodologies and tools to facilitate innovation in these contexts.
Crafitti’s Design Of Strategy (DoS) framework stitches together powerful elements of innovative thinking specifically suited to strategy creation. The macro-elements of DoS are as follows:
1. Understanding the context
Elements of value engineering and systems thinking are used to capture the current needs, functions, structure and behavior of the entity or system in question (organization, team, product etc.). Past and current aspirations are understood, indicators of recent momentum or change are noted (where have we reached, how have we reached and what’s the current mood) and perceived opportunities and challenges are listed.
2. Expanding the context
As the first real step towards strategic thinking, the context defined and described in the previous step is expanded along multiple directions. Value Engineering (Value Net, Value Stream) and Systems Thinking (TRIZ, Dependency Structure Matrices (DSM), Mind Maps, Vedic Principles) elements are extensively used. Interesting new directions are marked.
3. Scenario building
This section flows from the previous section into the next. Scenarios are are identified and created from the expanded context. The scenarios start with “known” data and quickly meander into the “unknown” – multiple new futures are explored. While the exploration further expands the context, new directions also start to simultaneously emerge.
4. Creating new directions
Elements of inventive thinking (TRIZ principles, Use of resources, constraints and contradictions, laws of evolution, Vedic principles) are used to generate new thought directions and to build on the scenarios from the previous section. New needs, functions, structure and behavior are articulated.
5. Selecting key directions
Relevant criteria are identified from the expanded context – the criteria reflect expected changes in momentum identified during the course of the exercise. Strategic directions from the previous step are evaluated with respect to the criteria and relatively prioritized using multi-criteria decision making techniques like the Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP).
6. Charting road maps
The most promising and relevant directions are articulated in time and space. Elements of Lean Thinking (Takt Time, Set-based Concurrent Engineering (SBCE)) are used to chart road maps to implement the devised strategy.