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Canada 3.0 speaker suggests re-branding Canada

Canada 3.0 speaker suggests re-branding Canada

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 07 May 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Government, academia and industry gear up for a two-day forum on how Canada can be a leader in the digital economy. Keynote speaker Tony Chapman says Canada has the potential for becoming the go-to nation for innovation.

Lofty ideas from high-profile speakers are just around the corner as government, academia and industry gears up for Canada 3.0. The two-day forum, dedicated to discussions on how Canada can position itself as a leader in the digital economy, kicks off on May 10 in Stratford, Ont.

Canada has the potential to re-brand itself as the go-to nation for innovation around the globe, according to Tony Chapman, CEO of Toronto-based branding and advertising agency Capital C.

Scheduled to deliver the first keynote speech, Chapman will present his concept of the Launch Lab – an idea that can turn ideas into reality. The biggest obstacle to getting good ideas off the ground is that there are too many ideas out there, he said. 

The world today is awash in ideas and concepts, said Chapman. “We are so digitally enabled and globally connected that it is no longer the United States or Japan or a handful of corporations that are innovating – we are seeing innovation everywhere,” he said.

The focus is no longer about getting capital to validate ideas for 12 to 18 months, he said. You need to get your idea to market quickly and get your intellectual protocol in place to protect it -- it's now about getting the first-mover advantage, he said. 

“You might have the best idea in the world, but if it can’t rise about the clutter and stand and be validated, not only are you going to have difficulty getting your capital, you are going to have difficulty even putting together the complexity of the launch,” he said.

The world is producing so many ideas and so much innovation that a lot of these great ideas are now starving for the attention and intellectual capital they need in order to determine if the idea is simply a concept or something that could have tremendous traction, he said.

And this is where the Launch Lab, a bricks-and-mortar establishment that takes conceptual ideas and turns them into ideas that can be launched in the market, comes in.

Chapman envisions the Launch Lab as a centralized hub combining technology and intellectual capital to serve as a place where innovators – such as inventors, multi-national corporations and nations – bring their ideas to.

The Launch Lab fast-tracks the process of validating the proof of concept and determines where the idea would be viable in markets around the world as well as the best way to go after that demand, he said. It’s a one-stop place to determine what you need to put an idea in place and achieve your goals in less time and at a lower cost than if you did it on your own, he said.

The idea starts with one Launch Lab, but Chapman envisions multiple lab locations built across Canada that would focus on particular industry sectors, such as environment, water, pharmaceuticals or sustainable farming.


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Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

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