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This month...

With the Beijing Olympics rarely out of the news and London 2012 occupying its fair share of column inches, this month we focus on innovation in sport, with a guest contribution from David Curtis, Director of Sports Pulse, and a keynote from Gary Topp, Chief Executive of Yorkshire Culture.

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Innovation Matters

Issue 12 - Birth of the New Salesman

Published: 19/03/2008

You can’t delve far into the literature on selling without bumping into Henry Ford. Although normally hailed as the designer of the Model T car and father of the assembly line, Ford’s greatest achievements actually came in the marketing and sales arena.

Issue 11 - Market Research for Innovators

Published: 25/02/2008

David Ogilvy, founder of the advertising agency Ogilvy & Mather, once said of market research, “I notice increasing reluctance on the part of marketing executives to use judgment; they are coming to rely too much on research, and they use it as a drunkard

Issue 10 - How Green is Your Innovation

Published: 24/01/2008

2007 was the year ‘the environment’ finally made it to the top of the world’s agenda. The UN Climate Change Conference in Bali saw 187 countries agreeing a two-year process of negotiations to decide on measures to fight global warming.

Issue 9: Your New Years Resolution - Fund Innovation

Published: 20/12/2007

In the world of innovation, 2007 was a good one for UK enterprise. The 2007 R&D Scoreboard showed a 9% increase in R&D investment by the UK’s top companies, up to £21 billion.

Issue 8 - License to Kill: Making Money from Innovation

Published: 12/11/2007

Who would have thought that writing children’s books was such a legal minefield? Author Robert Ronsson recently found himself in the news for all the wrong reasons when his latest book, Olympic Mind Games, was threatened with legal action.

Issue 7 - Stars of the big screen

Published: 03/10/2007

In July this year, Anglo-French relations were strained yet again when an Australian historian revealed that the metric system was first invented, not by a Frenchman, but by the English scientist John Wilkins in 1668.

Issue 6 - The Artful Science of Creativity

Published: 11/09/2007

The history of the world shows that artists and scientists have a lot in common. Leonardo da Vinci’s achievements in the arts and the sciences are universally regarded as staggering. Einstein himself was a superb violinist.

Issue 5 - Playing to Win

Published: 07/08/2007

In an age of unremitting digitalisation, it’s refreshing to see that the world’s oldest toy manufacturer, Lego, is still educating and entertaining the world’s children after 70 years.

Issue 4: Designers - The Missing Link?

Published: 17/07/2007

Scientists and theologians are locked in debate in the US about ‘intelligent design’. Is life on earth the result of conscious design by an intelligent ‘entity’, or the product of evolution, fuelled by millions of years of random biological mutations?

Issue 3: To Patent or not to Patent - A Perpetual Dilemma

Published: 19/06/2007

26 April 2007 was World IP Day. You might have missed it, but the UK Intellectual Property Office (formerly the Patent Office) chose that day to publish their 2006 Intellectual Property (IP) Awareness Survey.

Issue 2: R&D Tax Relief - Managing Uncertainty

Published: 04/06/2007

Changes to the R&D Tax Relief regime announced in the Budget will increase the number of eligible companies and the amounts they can claim, but will reduce the timeframe within which claims can be made.

Issue 1: Open your business to innovation

Published: 03/05/2007

Gambling and politics – both risky businesses. Not even ‘dead certs’ are guaranteed to win, as the Government discovered to its embarrassment when the House of Lords defeated its plans for a new generation of casinos.

Keynote Interviews

Gary Topp, Chief Executive of Yorkshire Culture

Gary Topp, Chief Executive of Yorkshire Culture

Many southerners are traditionally said to regard anything north of Watford Gap as a foreign country – but that old-fashioned notion of a north/south divide is something Gary Topp is anxious to dispel.

Alastair Wilson

Alastair Wilson

According to those in the know in the US, photonics – the technology of generating and harnessing light – will be a trillion dollar industry within the next decade.

David Williams Director General of BNSC

David Williams Director General of BNSC

Outside of wartime, nothing is more likely to stimulate technical innovation than space science and with developments as diverse as velcro and satellite navigation to its name, it is helping to reshape the world in which we live.

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