Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Gen Z and Disruptive Innovation

I won’t soon forget the looks on the faces of some of North Carolina’s most distinguished leaders as more than 50 high school Gen Z Ambassadors flash-mobbed the audience at the 27th annual Emerging Issues Forum in Raleigh earlier this week.  For two days over 1000 people assembled to talk with, not at, youth from across the state about our collective future.  The results were provoking, at times sobering, inspiring and incredibly hopeful.  And the necessities of innovative thinking, communicating, engaging and acting were woven throughout the conversations. 

From there I went on to AshokaU’s “Disrupting Higher Education” hosted by Arizona State University and its innovative leader Michael Crow.  Nearly 500 students and educators came together to discuss the future of Higher Ed.  In his pioneering work on disruptive innovation, Harvard’s Clay Christensen frames the challenge this way: How can we take something very complex, expensive and available to a few and make it simple, affordable and available to many?  AshokaU expanded on that framing of disruptive innovation with a global to local approach: to effect the change we want to see in the world, what do we, as universities, need to offer and how do we, as individuals, prepare?  It was thrilling to be part of such energetic and change-provoking dialogues, and I was pleased to have the opportunity to share my thoughts on the role of leadership in this important work.  As a recent Reuters article demonstrates, Carolina is fortunate to have our own pioneering thinker on being an innovative campus in Chancellor Holden Thorp. 

What I heard from young people in Raleigh and Arizona reinforced my sense that traditional walls separating social and commercial entrepreneurship, nonprofit and for-profit enterprise, and curricular and experiential learning continue to crumble.  And that the behaviors associated with entrepreneurship, invention, and innovation (at times disruptive) are becoming an ever-more critical part of the tools we all need to thrive in a global world. 

At UNC, we are steadily working to punch holes in silos, foster interdisciplinary collaboration and exploration, and ramp up the teaching of entrepreneurship to students across campus.  Budding social entrepreneurs have a new home, financial and capacity-building support at the Campus Y, and plans are in place to have wet lab space available on campus later this spring to UNC scientists who are starting companies based on their research.  We are developing ways to make UNC research more accessible to the public through an exploding smart-phone and tablet market, and our entrepreneurs-in-residence are expanding student engagement and practice.

Steadily and with thoughtful leadership, UNC continues to bring disruptive innovations to our approach, and produce innovations that are changing the world as a result. 

Monday, January 30, 2012

A New Year for Innovation at UNC


How can we top a year that saw UNC talent bring international recognition for world-class work on stopping the spread of AIDS? Ask our entrepreneurial students, faculty and staff! Innovation is off to a great start for 2012 at Carolina. 

Last weekend, the Chancellor’s Student Innovation Team and Carolina Creates led a sell-out crowd in thinking big to take on the world’s most pressing problems at TEDxUNC.  With UNC’s Global Entrepreneur-in-Residence Dennis Whittle (co-founder of the World Bank’s Global Giving) as emcee, Chancellor Thorp laid out his vision for universities as the place to take on tough issues, and treated us to a performance with student musicians MipsoTrio. We heard from speakers as varied as Liquidia co-founder Joe DeSimone, WSJ Deputy Editor and J-School alum Alan Murray, and the captain of Afghanistan’s first women’s soccer team Shamila Kohestani. They expanded our thinking and challenged our hearts to do more, better. Check out student news site reesenews for video from the event.

Meanwhile, Chapel Hill, Raleigh and the RTP are all leading strategic conversations on how to strengthen local innovation ecosystems, attract more startups and investors, and grow the regional economy. And our friends at CED in Durham just released this important report on the State of NC’s Entrepreneurial Economy, authored by UNC researchers in public policy and planning.

Carolina is part of these discussions and working to lead through our programs.  The CarolinaExpress License is fast-tracking faculty research start-ups.  Carolina Kickstart and Launching the Venture continue to support UNC entrepreneurs.  CarolinaChallenge is readying the next set of student enterprises, a new Social Innovation Incubator at the Campus Y will support the launch of social ventures, and we are building partnerships to help keep UNC start-ups local.   

It promises to be a great year in Chapel Hill – stay tuned. 

Judith Cone
Special Assistant to the Chancellor for Innovation and Entrepreneurship
@innovateunc