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On January 27, Governor Deval Patrick challenged the region's IT/digital sector to create a collaborative approach to improve its global competitiveness. Read more about the project -- and join the conversation!

Blog Archive

OneWebDay and Inclusiveness

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Every year since 2006, September 22 has been recognized as OneWebDay. Much like Earth Day, which inspired it, http://onewebday.org/ provides an opportunity for communities to celebrate the power of Web for positive change, to take action to protect what is precious about it, and to educate the public and policy-makers on key social, economic, and political Web issues.

OneWebDay was founded by Susan Crawford (who now advises President Obama on science, technology, and innovation policy) challenges a global community to get together to celebrate the power of the Web for positive change, to take action to protect what is precious about it, and to educate the public and policy-makers on key social, economic, and political web issues.

We participated in a group discussion on the day, with the Berkman Center, where we discussed the theme of inclusiveness. We are always looking for ways to be more inclusive in this process and provide a platform for your to share your thoughts.

Currently we are asking for your feedback through the forms provided here and we will also be holding a regular Tweet up (#MAtechin) on Fridays at 1pm EST. Join the discussion!

Brand-building and the Mass Tech Sector: Brand Pillars Feedback

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

Hi. We need your help!

Since early June, the Communications Working Group of the Massachusetts Information Technology Collaborative has been working with EchoDitto and FORGE Worldwide to clarify and unify the Massachusetts tech sector, as well as establish a working brand vocabulary for the sector and the region. A key stage in shaping the brand (how the sector looks, feels, sounds, is perceived) is the seemingly simple exercise is defining the most significant and compelling traits of the sector and the region, which we’re calling the Brand Pillars.

Through interviews, several focus group sessions, and primary and secondary research, the Communications Working Group has identified six brand pillars that we anticipate using to further shape and articulate a brand for the Mass tech sector, all of which communicate the advantages of developing and growing a technology business in Massachusetts:

  • INGENUITY
  • EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
  • FUNDING
  • TALENT
  • SUPPORT
  • LIFESTYLE

What are your thoughts around these Brand Pillars? Do you agree? Disagree? How have you seen the Pillars’ role in shaping the Mass tech sector? We have created the following document to explain, spark further discussion, and collect your feedback. Please review and comment in the areas provided.

Feedback Here
Feedback Here

You can access this document at http://innovate.masstech.org/pillars/pillar/

Join the conversation! Community participation and dialogue is a vital force in shaping the Mass tech sector brand – it’s community input that will help build an authentic brand. Please review and join in the discussion by adding your comments and feedback on the following pages.

Tweet! We also hope that you will take part in the first tweet-up to discuss these key themes kicking off at 1pm – 2pm on Friday 18 September. You can join in the Twitter conversation using #MAtechin. You can follow us on @InnovateMAtech.

Feedback: Your feedback will be incorporated into the branding process. We will schedule the next discussion and feedback event in early October, and will be announcing more events throughout the fall.

Please share this with your friends! And thank you for your thoughts.

Posted by Bonnie for Forge Worldwide

Innovation is Our Future

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Pat Larkin, Director of MTC’s John Adams Innovation Institute writes about innovation in the region for Commonwealth Conversations: Mass Innovations

Thanks to our long tradition of innovation and our vibrant innovation ecosystem, Massachusetts has benefited disproportionately from this country’s innovation infrastructure. Our universities, companies, entrepreneurs, and financiers, on their own, without a grand plan, and through their own drive, have made Massachusetts one of the world’s foremost environments for innovation. Their presence here attracts bright people and billions of dollars of investment every year. Their presence fuels an ongoing reinvention of our economy… Read more here.

Innovation – We have it! Boston ranked #1

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

A study of the most innovative cities in the world was released today ranking Boston as the number one most innovative city in the world

The study, conducted by Melbourne (Aus) based global innovation organization 2thinknow, investigated 162 performance indicators for an Innovation City.

These innovation indicators represent a broad view of innovation in the economy, socially, sustainably and culturally and address these within trends over the next 2-15 years. They include:

  • Food & Wine Industries
  • Property Prices & wealth
  • Mobility - through mass transit & individual options
  • Cultural Exchange through students, business & tourism
  • Media, Journalism & Censorship
  • Arts & Cultural Museums & Galleries
  • Music, Dance & Cultural Theatre
  • Design & Media
  • Scientists & Engineers
  • Financial Services
  • Start-up Facilities
  • Shipping, Rail & Ports
  • Internet & digital technologies
  • Local Manufacturing
  • Economic Health, Size & Trade Opportunities
  • Domestic & Neighboring Markets
  • Global Connectivity
  • Risk factors such as conflicts & public safety
  • Strategic Influence

Christopher Hire, Executive Director of Innovation at 2thinknow says that “Cities such as Boston, Paris, Hamburg, Tokyo, New York, London, Berlin, Barcelona, Copenhagen, Melbourne, Zurich, Singapore, Hong Kong, Stockholm, Minneapolis, Toronto, Abu Dhabi… all place in the top 50 in this ranking of future innovation. Innovation Cities are where we will find the political, economic, regulatory, engineering & cultural responses to environmental & economic challenges cities face now.”

Hire concluded, “Innovation now, will create the economic & social powerhouse cities of the future. All cities have the chance, but each city must address the challenges of innovation differently based on their relative strengths,”

Help us continue to learn about the strengths of our innovation industry by joining in the conversation and tell us why you think Boston is number one!

Add to the moderator session here.

Lets Get The Conversation Started

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Leading local tech and innovation blogger Scott Kirsner raised some great questions this morning in his post over on boston.com.

Here at Innovate.Masstech.org we have posted a couple of videos in the last two weeks (with more to come) with the aim of seeding conversation around key areas including Entrepreneurship and Talent.

Today Scott asks who are these videos for?

Well… these videos are for You, and everyone invested in the future of the New England Innovation and Technology sectors. We hope they will be used to start people thinking and talking about what defines this sector now, and what we want it to become.  To highlight our strengths, to get the great minds of Massachusetts and beyond to start thinking and talking about ways to consolidate and grow these creative and innovative industries.

These videos, and the posts associated with them, are here to seed conversation with You. And like Scott, we want you to be vocal and share your thoughts with us.

He asks: “Are we trying to convince ourselves that we still matter, that we’re still cool? Are we trying to convince people outside the state that they should relocate here? People in Europe that they should set up their U.S. outposts here?”

It’s up to you to answer these questions. And to ask more.

Nobody knows this space better than You: The people that build it, that work in it every day, that are defining its future. Share your knowledge with us and let’s get the conversation started!

We have set up a moderator session here for you to add your thoughts and questions.

Why don’t you start by telling us who You are? Why did You choose this region to work in? What is it about the New England technology and innovation sector that excites You? We’re looking forward to hearing from You!

Search For a New Metaphor

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

The Talent video for Innovate.Masstech.org can be watched here.

Listening to Joyce Plotkin, Rodney Brooks, Paul Sagan, Jamie Tedford, and Brian Shin in the video posted on this site, reminds us that talent is the heart of Boston’s competitive economic advantage in the innovation economy.  It matters.  It matters a whole lot and we all got a little scared about the “brain drain” when net-migration became increasingly negative after the tech bubble popped. New England has the largest population of young professionals of any of region relative to population and young adult population (See Brome) .  This is one of the region’s key competitive advantages and it is diminishing steadily over time as other regions improve faster. Importantly though, people have been asking hard questions and hatching new initiatives to mentor and connect with emerging professionals that flow through the region.

It seems there are a number of different dimensions to the talent retention issue:

Being a hub of talent is an excellent position. The literature on the innovation economy is unequivocal on the point that dynamism and churn are good. Massachusetts isn’t just watching its population slip silently down the “drain.”  The 2008 Index of the Massachusetts Innovation Economy ranks Massachusetts second among the Leading Technology States for its ability to attract college-educated adults from other states and abroad (see p.48).  This inflow of talent is an opportunity. We may have gone net negative for several years, but in the context of enviable volumes of flow in both directions.

Maybe we need a new metaphor. The phrase, “brain drain” conjures up an image of people flowing out of the region, but in reality most of those beloved Massachusetts twenty-somethings just put on weight and got a few grey hairs.  In the most extensive recent analysis of the subject, Alicia Sasser of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston concludes that the majority of the sharp drop and slower growth in the number of recent college graduates is due to having fewer native young adults to educate, not due to changes in migration patterns of young college educated adults.  “Changes in the migration decisions of individuals after graduation have not been very large and have had limited impact on the region’s stock of recent college graduates.” New England is again experiencing slow growth in the population age 22-27 with a bachelor’s degree – roughly half the national increase. If a picture is worth a thousand words, maybe the graph below is worth 500 to illustrate how cohort size can change the young adult population by aging.

While the “brain drain” might draw the wrong picture in our minds, connections matter. There are multiple pathways to boosting the growth of young professionals in Massachusetts including education policies (to increase attainment) and programs aimed at retaining talent such as connecting students with employers and mentors. First-hand experiences by students with regional employers through internships and other interaction can increase the capture and retention of students after graduation (Sasser 2009).  Mentors and contextualized learning also increase student persistence and motivation. Connecting beyond campus is an strength of many of the region’s universities which has yielded a disproportionately large economic impact on the region.

If we sweep away the notion that something endemically bad about Boston is causing brains to drain, we will be better able to share our enthusiasm for the region with the many young adults who come to study and work in the region.

Sources: U.S. Census Bureau, 1990 and 2000 decennial censuses and 2007 estimates from the Mass Department of Workforce Development.  Some 2007 calculations by the John Adams Innovation Institute.

What’s on this week in MA innovation, technology and entrepreneurship

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Here’s a quick run-down on some of the events happening this week in MA that might be of interest to you. Please let us know by commenting on the page, emailing or tweeting about other events the Innovate MA Tech community should know about. We will post a summary each week.

SIGIR (Special Interest Group on Information Retrieval) 32nd Annual ACM Conference - 19-23 July

The 2009 SIGIR conference is underway in Boston, MA at the Sheraton Hotel and Northeastern University. The conference is chock full of exciting events and registrations are strong and still growing. We are enjoying an exciting week.

http://sigir2009.org/

Boston iPhone Developers Drinks and Demos 2.0 – 21 July

“Want to meet other Boston area iPhone developers? Please join us on Tuesday evening, July 21st, in a private room at the Asgard, a pub restaurant in Cambridge from 6:00-10:00 PM for our second drinks and demo night. This will be an informal meetup for local iPhone developers. Come have a beer, demo your projects and meet other locals doing the same.”

http://www.xconomy.com/boston/2009/07/06/boston-iphone-developers-drinks-and-demos-20/

The current digital market – 22 July

Join MITX, in its first-ever Digital Trends event, in which a panel of analysts, practitioners and investors will share their insights and research into the reality of 2009 and how marketers can adapt now to leverage the key opportunities for success.

http://www.microsoftcambridge.com/Events/CurrentDigitalMarket/tabid/155/Default.aspx

Emerging opportunities in healthcare IT – 22 July

Come learn about the key business drivers and IT needs of this “recession proof” industry as we engage in an exciting discussion with a panel of experts who are leveraging the power of information and communication technologies to improve quality of life.

http://www.microsoftcambridge.com/Events/EmergingOpportunities/tabid/156/Default.aspx

Freedom to compete? A symposium on Bills affecting employee non-compete agreements – 22 July

The Boston Bar Associaton’s Intellectual Property Section, Labor & Employment Law Section, and Litigation Section sponsors a free symposium, open to the public, on the pros and cons of non-compete agreements in employment contracts in Massachusetts.

http://www.xconomy.com/boston/2009/07/10/freedom-to-compete-a-symposium-on-bills-affecting-employee-non-compete-agreements/

Finding your inner geek: social media and twitter basics – 23 July

From the website of Media Awaken, a social media consulting company founded by Maria Thurrell: ‘Where do I get started?’ Alexa Scordato and I invite you to participate in a two-hour beginner workshop that will give you a clearer sense of how to use social media for both personal and professional uses.”

http://www.xconomy.com/boston/2009/07/06/finding-your-inner-geek-social-media-and-twitter-basics/

Sales end for Boston Cloud Camp – 29 July

CloudCamp is an unconference where early adapters of Cloud Computing technologies exchange ideas. With the rapid change occurring in the industry, we need a place we can meet to share our experiences, challenges and solutions. At CloudCamp, you are encouraged you to share your thoughts in several open discussions, as we strive for the advancement of Cloud Computing. End users, IT professionals and vendors are all encouraged to participate.

http://www.cloudcamp.com/

Let’s Celebrate the Unknown

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Massachusetts is a great place for entrepreneurs. Just take a look at this impressive list of “top things you might not know about the MA technology and innovation sector” assembled by Brian Shin (Founder and CEO, Visible Measures).

Michael Greeley (Founder and General Partner, Flybridge Capital Partners) and Andy Ory (Co-founder, President and CEO, Acme Packet), co-chairs of the Entrepreneurship Working Group of the IT Collaborative, seem to agree. Watch what they and others had to say on June 10th. Massachusetts is a great place to do business.

But that does not mean we have it made. Perhaps we need to do a better job at embracing our entrepreneurs.

Look at the list below and comment. What are other success stories do we need to tell the world? What can we do to make these and upcoming stories well known and celebrated? Do YOU have a story to tell?

Top Things You Might Not Know About the MA Technology & Innovation Sector

  • Much of the internet is powered in MA with key foundational technologies developed at BBN, and companies like EMC, Akamai, and Sycamore Networks headquartered here.
  • MA is home to over 200 mobile startups, one of the largest mobile technology acquisitions (mQube by Verisign), the leading open mobile platform (Android, now Google), and the largest mobile social network (Mocospace).
  • Many leading online travel companies including Tripadvisor, ITA Software, and Kayak (started in Cambridge, MA and acquired by Side Step) are based in MA.
  • MA has a developing video nexus with Boston-based Sea Change, Brightcove, Permission TV, Gotuit, Visible Measures, Scanscout, Everyzing, Extend Media, Extreme Reach, and others.
  • Industry-defining, thriving, and publicly traded companies Monster.com, Avid, Pegasystems, Netscout, and Nuance are all based in MA.
  • MIT graduates have contributed $2 trillion in economic value by starting companies like Sohu.com and Analog Devices, with a current market capitalization over $7 bn.
  • In the past few years, the MA tech sector has spawned such IPO’s as Acme Packet, Constant Contact, and Vistaprint.
  • MA-based Meditech and Mathworks are two industry leaders who are among the world’s largest privately held independent software technology companies.
  • Some of the largest media technology acquisitions to occur in the past years, including Navic Networks (by Microsoft), Maven Networks (by Yahoo), and Broadbus (now Motorola) have been in MA.
  • Equalogic was acquired by Dell for almost the same amount ($1.4 bn) as YouTube by Google ($1.65 bn) but with 100 times less buzz (as measured by deal web page search results).

What else do we need to know? Add your stories here.

Talent Working Group Roundup

Monday, June 29th, 2009

(Edited on 07/07/09)

It was exciting to get such a high energy group of people in the room to talk about talent development for the digital sector.  There is a lot of deep thinking going on that combines observations about opportunities in information technology careers, 21st century skills, and current knowledge of learning.  We undertake this in the context of the exciting STEM Leadership movement called Tapping Massachusetts’ Potential which has brought 15 heavy-hitting organizations together to call for action to improve STEM education in schools.  (STEM is short for Science, Technology, Engineering and Math.)

The simple truth is that the wizards of the digital sector were students who engaged with the wonder, awe, creativity and playfulness of science, technology, engineering or math, often through interaction with knowledgeable mentors.  The lack of diversity in the workforce is perpetuated by the fact that a high percentage of the students who complete degrees in STEM fields had family members in STEM careers.  In other words, schools alone are not providing the inspiration and experiences that draw children into technology careers.  In fact, Gary DiCamillo of Radia Interactive noted that your average middle school math class is so proscriptive and boring that kids would rather clean their room.  Joyce Plotkin, President Emerita of the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council tells us that middle school is where the game is won or lost.

Wonder and Playfulness
Our challenge for the digital sector is not to put more “rigorous” science content into the K-12 curriculum nor figure out how to insert computer science into younger grades, but rather to transform the way STEM subjects are taught and provide students exposure to mentors who love science and technology.   The sector should organize to open access to the wonder and playfulness of science, technology, engineering and math. Educational research shows that how we teach shapes the cognitive circuitry of the brain.  Innovation in the Digital Sector is driven by brains built through hands-on and interactive learning of inquiry-based thinking, design-based thinking, systems-based thinking, quantitative reasoning, and collaborative leadership not by the mastery of pre-selected information.

Education Beyond Class Time
Thought leaders in education for the digital sector are enthusiastic about the many programs that encourage exploration and social interaction around technology.   Jeffrey Sanchez of Raytheon IDS shared with us at the STEM Leadership Breakfast on June 19th that that program interventions with the biggest impact on increasing completion of STEM degrees are “bridge and cohort programs” that build stronger social networks among students through mentoring, activities, or affinity dorms.  At the college level, these programs lead to higher social cohesion, higher GPA and higher retention.  In the K-12 arena, Irina Simmons of EMC expressed her excitement about the impact of Citizen Schools that engage technology professionals in interactive activities with students in Worcester.  The FIRST robotics and Lego League engage students in team activities with coaches.  The Museum of Science has created Engineering is Elementary.   MIT created the SEED Academy which has spread to Olin.  All of these high impact activities are outside the core curriculum and increase social interaction with people with technology expertise.

The Thousand Points of Light Problem
Jim Stanton, Director of the Metro South/West REB STEM Initiative drove straight to the heart of the “thousand points of light problem.”  The problem isn’t an absence of excellent science programs.  With so many projects competing for corporate attention and funding, few companies have the time and staff capacity to sift through the plethora of programs and decide which offer a distinctive value added benefit.  The inevitable “mile wide and inch deep” funding associated with this phenomenon results in evaluation being underfunded and thus it is difficult to know what is working. Finally there is virtually no funding available to “scale” proven programs.  Many innovative programs are piloted with 1-3 year grants, but never deployed beyond the pilot school districts.   Conversely, school curricula that is disengaging is not pruned away fast enough.

Teachers are the Point of Leverage to Change Student Experiences.
Reaching the tipping point will require that a critical mass of science and technology teachers become mentors whose love of science and technology inquiry is contagious (to borrow a phrase from an ITIF paper).  Such teachers use real world knowledge to engage students in authentic inquiry.  There are several pieces that we need to put together:

  1. The Tapping Massachusetts’ Potential objective of increasing the number of STEM teachers with Bachelor’s degrees in STEM fields;
  2. Teacher externships that give teachers paid summer work experience in the private sector;
  3. Professional development in creative teaching methods;
  4. Networks that give teachers ongoing connections with professionals employed in IT fields
  • We have a Large Area of Consensus to Build from, but many Questions to Answer Collaboratively:
  • How can we make the STEM education conversation about engaging imagination rather than remedying deficiencies?
  • What is the organizational infrastructure we need to engage industry and to identify, motivate, and deploy IT professionals and expert science and technology teachers as mentors and coaches most productively?
  • Knowing we want to focus on a small set of high impact, sustainable initiatives, what are the best models out there?
  • How can we leverage the web to make existing resources and ideas more accessible and useful?

(Add you suggestions and additional questions here in this Moderator Session: Growing Consensus Growing Talent)


Moving Forward
On June 18, at the STEM Business Leaders Breakfast, Lieutenant Governor Murray announced the creation of a STEM Coordinating Council to provide the alignment of workforce development, economic development, and education efforts.  Industry will be invited to that table.  This is a big step forward.  In the collaborative ethos of the Digital Sector we look forward to pulling our creative minds together to broaden engagement with the wonder of technology.

IT Collaborative Workshop Follow Up

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

I just spent the day at the IT Collaborative Workshop, and it was energizing to discuss the state of the IT sector with more than 100 industry and government leaders. We also had validation that the sector is doing well in Massachusetts. As one of the largest industries in the state — second only to healthcare – the IT sector is well poised to do more great things in the future. But industry leaders must work together to ensure there is a positive climate that will encourage that growth.

As we heard about the size and scope of the IT industry, the availability of venture capital and the entrepreneurial spirit that is alive and well in the Commonwealth, one theme that kept emerging is the importance of workforce development and retention in Massachusetts– the need to nurture the future workforce by engaging young people, who will drive the future knowledge economy.

We are fortunate in Massachusetts to be home to many great universities – both public and private — as well as a leading K-12 education system. However, we must continue to find ways to engage educators and students so that they will want to stay here and help build the next generation of the sector.

There is a strong calling to band together as an industry to reach into schools to ensure children are getting a strong education in STEM (Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics) skills, that teachers are armed and ready to prepare these students for the innovation economy, and that institutions of higher education partner with industry to provide pathways and internships for students. We also must engage college students with opportunities that will keep them here after graduation.

But education doesn’t stop at the university level; we also must continue to mentor and nurture entrepreneurs and business leaders who will lead the next generation of innovation. In addition, it’s equally important to further educate our existing workforce so that our employees have the skills needed to help our companies grow and prosper here.

It’s time for the IT sector to band together and nurture the next generation of leaders and knowledge workers.



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