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CIOs aim for one million acts of innovation

CIOs aim for one million acts of innovation

By:  Shane Schick  On: 13 Sep 2010 For: CIO Canada Creator

Canadian chief information officers are quietly getting together to discuss how they can address critical issues around education, new immigrants and national productivity. Birth of a movement

It is not a new IT industry association. It is not a series of high-tech conferences. It is not a strategic alliance of vendors and technology executives. You won’t see much about it on Twitter and Facebook. In fact, at press time, there was still no Web site to speak of.

So what on Earth are Ted Maulucci and his colleagues up to?

Earlier this summer, a select group of chief information officers were given invitations from Tridel, where Maulucci is CIO, the Canadian Advanced Technology Alliance (CATA) and the Access Group, a management consulting firm based in Toronto. The invitations offered a series of roundtable discussions which would focus on improving Canadian productivity, exchanging knowledge and solving real-world business problems. The roundtables were part of something called "One Million Acts of Innovation."

The event flyer explained little about the process or the expected outcomes, but CIOs showed up. The roundtable conversations have begun in earnest. They have sparked collaboration between CIOs and the post-secondary educational sector and will soon help new Canadians establish themselves in the enterprise. There are another seven sessions planned over the next year. If they succeed, these loosely-organized executives will redefine how we measure the role of CIOs in innovation on a national level, not just within their individual companies or industries. And maybe how we define innovation itself.

 

The first act of innovation might be the way the roundtables were set up. Maulucci has been a fairly high-profile CIO for years, appearing on the cover of this magazine, appearing on panel discussions at IT World Canada events and networking with his peers at others. It was at a session hosted by IBM Canada, however, that initially brought him into contact with Taimour Zaman, president of the Access Group, and got One Million Acts of Innovation going.

At the event, Maulucci and the audience heard about a study by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) which ranked Canada 14 out of 17 countries in business R&D expenditures as a percentage of the economy. According to the OECD, Canadian business R&D spending is only one per cent of GDP, well below the OECD average of 1.6 per cent. South Korea, Finland and Sweden all spend more, and the U.S. spends double. To put that into perspective, an article in the Globe and Mail pointed out that Canadian business would have to spend $10 million more each year to reach the OECD average.

"All of those innovation sessions are the same – I go there, someone presents something to me, I may get inspired to write a note, but do I do something with it?" Maulucci says, adding that the OECD numbers were particularly troubling. "It starts to get on your nerves – why is this happening?"


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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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