Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category



14
Jun

Scenarios for Technology and Development

The story of technology and development has many bright spots: the  mobile banking revolution, the treadle pump and so on. The importance of technology in the developing world has grown significantly over the years.

However, the continued growth and adoption of technology is not always certain. For philanthropists, investors alike, it is important to understand how the adoption of technology might develop in the future. This will enable them to adopt the right strategy for supporting the adoption and diffusion of not just technology, but the right kind of technology.

The Rockefeller Foundation remains committed to this goal. To this end, they have detailed several scenarios for the development of technology, and strategies to work under each scenario. The findings are presented in their report, “Scenarios for the Future of Technology and International Development.”

In this report, they present the following global scenarios:

  • Lock Step: A world-wide form of tight, top-down government and control and more authoritarian relationships, with limited innovation and citizen resistance.
  • Hack Attack: Where an economically unstable and shock-prone world in which governments weaken, criminals thrive, and dangerous innovations emerge.
  • Smart Scramble: Where economies are depressed, and where individuals and communities develop localized, makeshift solutions to a growing set of problems.
  • Clever together: A world where highly co-ordinated strategies emerge for addressing both urgent and entrenched world issues.

For each scenario, the report details timelines, technologies that might emerge, the role of philanthropy — the opportunities and challenges that they may face, and a “day in the life of” sketch.

The scenarios are both interesting and provocative — and are meant to be so. Read more about them here.

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9
Jun

How Innovation Really Works (and 10 ways to recognize an innovative enterprise)

Think for a minute of the following: the jet plane, the television, the Internet, and the cell phone. What do each of these have in common?

Now, think about this.  The jet plane effectively shrunk the world, making travel between Singapore and New York only 22 hours. The Internet allows a passenger wishing to travel between Singapore and New York to book his ticket from the comfort of his home. The cell phone allows him to check-in for his flight while driving to the airport, or to simply use his cell phone to access the airline-generated bar code that acts as a boarding pass. And the television (or an adapted version of it) entertains him while he travels the 16,000 km to his destination.

In short, each of these are or have been path-breaking. They, among countless other technology, have changed the course of the everyday life in several ways. Would we consider them innovative? Almost certainly so, I would think.

The term ‘innovation’ however is often used loosely. Often, it refers to simply anything new. The Monitor Group in India recently released a study it jointly conducted with leading business publication, Business Today titled, “How Innovation Really Works.” The report takes on the notion of innovation as simply “launching new products.” Through examples based on an Indian context, the report frames innovation against a proprietary framework — the Montior Group’s Ten Types of Innovation.

The frameworks defines (business) innovation as being “path-breaking, disruptive, and sustainable.” It divides the ten types of innovation into four broad categories: Finance, Process, Offering and Delivery.

Further, it lists out particular types of innovation under each of the category. Let’s take a look at what these types of innovation are, and the enterprises used to illustrate them.

Finance innovation involves Re-inventing Business Models and Creating Extended Networks. An example of the former can be found in Gyan Shala, a no-frills schooling project in Gujarat and Bihar. An example of the later can be found in FabIndia, which created an extended network of 17 community-owned companies that supply its products.

Process innovation involves two kinds of innovation — an Enabling Process and Core Process. An enabling process is one which supports an enterprise’s primary work, while a core process are capabilities that others can’t duplicate. An example of an enabling process is the Gujarati newspaper Dainik Bhaskar, which uses an external network to get news input through potential consumers. Thus indirectly building its own subscriber base. Core processing innovation can be seen in the working of Moser Baer, a CD/DVD manufacturing firm which diversified its operationg to the home-movie market.

Offering innovation can be found in three ways — Product Performance, Product System and Service. The report refers to TCS’s software product BaNCS as an example of a product performance innovation. Recognizing the benefits of using technology to make banking services more accessible to rural markets, TCS developed the “cloud computing” based software to provide branchless banking services to the State Bank of India. A product system innovation creates ways in which individual products can connect with each other to create a larger system. Case in point, ITC’s e-choupal. The system developed by ITC enables farmers to connect via village kiosks, creating a agri-commodity procurement platform. And lastly, a product service innovation is where companies create value in engaging with the customer once the core product has been purchased. An example of product service innovation mentioned in the report is TCS.

The last category of innovation accroding to the framework is Delivery Innovation. Delivery innovation can be in three ways — through an innovative channel, a distinct brand, and creating value through a unique customer experience. Moser Baer rapidly expanded through the Indian market by creating a distribution channel that banked on widespread, targeted outreach. Being able to release a home movie within a window period of 10 days to six months created a unique customer experience, which has contributed significantly to its growth. ITC’s e-choupal, beyond creating an innovative system has also been able to innovate further via leveraging the e-choupal brand to build its network.

The examples used in the study are not necessarily a reflection of the kinds of companies that might fit the bill. However breakthrough innovation almost always include multiple types of innovation, atleast 3-4 of the 10 within the Monitor Framework (the study selected eight organizations that fulfilled this criteria).

Clearly the framework might not lend itself to all models that exist. Still it is a useful way to recognize where greatest value lies, and to help build a business with lasting impact. Investors, incubators and other enablers interested in creating lasting social value too can use this framework as guideline towards assessing which enterprises to back.

Read more about the BT-Monitor study here, and tell us what you think about it. Also, have you come across a social enterprise that fits into this framework?

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26
Mar

Technology Enabled Entrepreneurship under Poverty Alleviation Programme

Technology plays a big role in the development of a society. India’s own economic growth has largely been possible because of the advancement in telecommunication technology made in the early 1990s.

The poor too, it has been demonstrated, can benefit greatly from technology. Simple technology such as the cell phone has enabled women in Bangladesh to increase household income, or has provided an easy way for a construction contractor to pay salaries to his migrant employees in northern India.

Several social enterprises today are making use of technology to impact lives. Villgro itself has worked with several such enterprises in the past.

Technology also has a significant role to play in the agriculture sector. Very often farmers are not able to maximize their profits because they are unaware of the optimum price for their produce, and sell it to middle men at much lower rates. Access to information, is therefore vital. And technology plays a role in filling this gap.

Sanjay Mohapatra, in his article ‘Technology Enabled Entrepreneurship under Poverty Alleviation Programme’, takes a closer look at one technology-based solution developed for farmers. Not only does the article show how technology can help maximize profits, but it also demonstrates that the investment in technology actually results in surplus which helps in improving the living conditions and helps in poverty alleviation.

Read the entire article here.

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15
Mar

Agri-biotechnology in India

Biotechnology has been in the news recently for not the best reasons. The proposed introduction on Bt Brinjal raked up much controversy across the country. Agri biotechnology is not new, however. In 2002, the Government of India approved the commerical cultivation of Bt cotton.  This lead to the growth of agri biotech among biotechnology firms.

Recent increase in government support – through dedicated R&D laboratories, regulatory framework and policies – has contributed to this growth. Private participation is also on the increase.

The potential is however met with its own share of challenges. India has perhaps gained notoriety for stemming several international patents filed for agricultural produce that has been indeginous to this part of the world for years – basmati rice and turmeric powder to name a few. The need for stonger laws is one such challenge.

A 2007 study by Rabobank delves into these future of agri-biotechnology and addresses some key issues and challenges. For more on the report, visit www.rabobank.com/far

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17
Feb

Telecentre Sustainability: Lessons from India and Africa on Implementing a Social Enterprise Approach

Telecentres have been playing a growing role in empowering those without access to technology or information. Their users are found among school children in Zambia to farmers in India.

Increasingly governments have been spending money on establishing telecentre systems. In 2005, the Ghanian government began launching hundreds of telecentres across the country. Not only do telecentres extend access to ICT, they also foster the exchange of ideas, civil and government participation in development and so on.

Can telecentres be commercially-viable social enterprises? This is the question that Mayanja Meddie looks at in her paper, Rethinking Telecentre Sustainability: How to Implement A Social Enterprise Approach – Lessons from India and Africa. In this paper, the author explores different approaches — from Drishtee in India to Centre Songhai in Benin – to telecentre sustainability and analyzes the strengths and weakness of each approach.

Read the full paper here.

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10
Jan

Science and Technology in Civil Society

The following article has been contributed by Professor C. Shambu Prasad, Associate Professor at Xavier Institute of Management, Bhubaneswar.

The role of civil society in influencing public opinion towards more democratic and developmental approaches is now well-recognised in diverse fields such as health, education, livelihoods, issues relating to disadvantaged social groups and the environment. Yet, science and technology in India is predominantly seen as the preserve of the state, and more recently the market. In the linear model of innovation, civil society is seen at best as having a role in extension or the delivery of technology produced elsewhere. This paper, a study of science in civil society, questions this assumption through the case study of the work of a
civil society-led initiative in spirulina algal technology. It highlights the need for an institutional transformation of the scientific establishment into learning organisations if they are to focus on development with a pro-poor or human face.

Read the entire article here.

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25
Sep

Strategic Partnership in Promoting Technology Incubation in India

India is fast becoming a leading Research and Development center for many of the world’s large multi-nationals. The R&D focus is leading to a growing “knowledge economy,” one that has been receiving a lot of recent government support.

In this paper, author Dr. P.K.B. Menon discusses the role of the Government of India’s Science and Technology policy, and the individual roles played by associated entities in the development of technology for the country’s small and medium enterprise sector.

Read the full article here.

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