Innovation to address our biggest planet-wide challenges

This session of The Innovation Summit 2011 explored what sort of innovation is needed to solve the world's biggest problems and how should the required kinds of innovation be facilitated.

Innovation within organisations

n this session, part of The Innovation Summit 2011, Vic Hayes, Stuart Parkin, Rinaldo Rinolfi, and Paul Buchheit, debated how innovation within organisation is changing.

Innovation to improve society

This session of The Innovation Summit 2011 debated what are the most pressing social problems and what kind of thinking is needed to address them throught the participation of James Gosling, Alpheus Bingham, and Victoria Hale.

Innovation to benefit people

In this video, part of The Innovation Summit 2011, the panellists debate what is the future of medicine and what are the most important psychological, demographic, and economic trends that will affect innovators in health and well-being.

Chairman's closing remarks: Tom Standage

In this video, Tom Standage, Digital Editor at The Economist, gives his remarks closing The Innovation Summit 2011.

On public information, infrastructure and innovations

In this lecture, Sam Pitroda, Advisor to the Indian Prime Minister on Public Information Infrastructure and Innovations, presented how India built a framework to support innovators and how this will transform the lives of many.

On the secrets of social innovation at scale

As part of the Innovation Lecture Series, Kent Hahne, founder of Vapiano, shares his expertise and thought-provoking views on the power of great, innovative ideas and their impact on societies in driving social progress.

P&G: Fashioning a "decision cockpit"

At Proctor & Gamble, executives decided that providing a data-rich environment to its managers meant creating a "decision cockpit" that focuses on a specific business function or market segment. The idea, says P&G's director of business intelligence, Patrick Kern, is "to get at operational business strategies, like how to run a plant from day to day".

In Latin America, good data use means big advantages

According to survey respondents in Latin America, companies in that region seem to derive more value from data than their peers in North America. Seventy three percent of respondents in Latin America say they derive great competitive advantage from their use of data. In North America, the number of executives who say their data efforts are "extremely valuable" is significantly lower, at 63%.

Suncorp uses data to manage insurance risks

All insurance firms use statistics to assess various types of risk, from the possibility of floods to car crashes or fires. Suncorp, Australia's biggest insurer, goes a lot further in using data to gain an advantage over rivals. David Stewardson, Suncorp's executive manager in the commercial insurance business technology department, says the company analyses data to anticipate which customers might be on the verge of switching to a competitor. The point is not to keep every customer in the fold; rather, it is to hold on to the most profitable customers and let the unprofitable ones go.

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