How to build successful community open innovation networks – Innovation Excellence

Everyone seems interested in getting the most impact out of their innovation efforts. Collaborative Innovation Networks (COINs) have mushroomed since the invention of the Internet and cheap mobile communications. Community based innovation and biomedical and health online innovation networks have the potential to speed new product development, offer alternative financing platforms for early stage ventures, provide education, information and support to those with particular diseases and help to lower the costs and speed of clinical trials. A recently announced collaboration between the FDA and PatientsLIkeMe will make it easier to do post marketing surveillance for drugs.

However, questions remain about their effectiveness in creating value, security, commercial and clinical validity, legal status and sustainability.

A important question is whether COINs, particularly in biosience and health, create lasting impact, and , if so, under what circumstances. Based on my experience co-founding a non-profit COIN and contributing to efforts to transform it into a sustainable entity that meets its mission i.e. getting biomedical and health ideas to patients, leaderpreneurs need to overcome several hurdles:

1. A relentless focus on advancing a clearly defined, easy to understand mission.

2. Creating and validating a business model that generates enough revenue to sustain the organization.

3. A marketing effort that uses state of the art social media techniques to target those most interested in supporting your mission.

4. Minimizing spending on things that don’t add user defined value.

5. Continually offering new products and services as part of the platform.

6. Telling your story in a way that it appeals to the heart, not the head of potential supporters.

7. Engaging and building the community of interest until it reaches a tipping point.

8. Transitioning from working in the COIN to working on the COIN once it has reached a critical mass.

9. Cheaply creating and killing experiments early when it is clear they won’t yield positive results

10. Expanding your influence to interface or open networks with overlapping interests. COINs need to be COPINs-collaborative open innovation networks

Building collaborative open innovation networks requires:

4. Metrics and a dashboard to measure both inputs and valid outputs

5. A viable business model

7. Network engagement and advocacy

8. Innovation

10. A sustainable competitive advantage

2. Integrating innovations

COPINS can be as narrow or as wide as you like. For example, you can create a COPIN that links different academic entities on one campus v one that is an intercampus COPIN v one that connects different universities in the same state with other parts of regional innovation ecosystems. Or, you can create a global one.

Image by TheAndrasBarta from Pixabay

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Arlen MyersArlen Meyers, MD, MBA is the President and CEO of the Society of Physician Entrepreneurs at www.sopenet.org and co-editor of Digital Health Entrepreneurship