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Competitions Encourage Innovators to Tackle Tough Challenges
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By Adam Phillips
New York City
01 July 2009
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Every great innovation, from the wheel to the microchip, has required an imaginative leap into the unknown by someone willing to make what seemed like an outlandish idea into a practical reality. Some of these inventors sought honor and fame. Others wanted merely to help themselves, or others.
And often, there was a great deal of money to be made. Prize competitions continue today as a way to encourage our most creative thinkers to tackle our most vexing problems.
 | | Representatives from the corporate, non-profit and government sectors packed a United Nations meeting hall recently for the Incentive2Innovate Conference | Nearly 300 "movers and shakers" from the world's corporate, non-profit and government sectors packed a United Nations meeting hall recently for the , which had been convened to explore cutting-edge ways to spur inventiveness through competition for prize money and other rewards.
"As humans, we have evolved to compete. It's in our genetic code," said entrepreneur and conference co-convener Peter Diamandis of the .
"When people get lazy, they are happy with the way things are," added Diamandis. "But if we can tap into that human energy around competition, we can get people to do extraordinary things."
Competitions spur innovators to action
 | | Entrepreneur Peter Diamandis helped to convene the conference, based on overwhelming positive results from the X Prize competitions his foundation has offered | Diamandis first gained worldwide renown for arranging for the $10-million to whomever launched the first reusable manned spacecraft into space twice within two weeks. The prize, which was awarded in 2004, gave a big boost to the private spaceflight industry. The success of the Ansari X Prize prompted Diamandis and foundation sponsors and partners to plan other competitions to solve important challenges, notably involving energy, the environment, health care, life sciences, underwater exploration, education and global development. X Prize competitions are structured with clear, objective, measurable goals that will challenge creative thinkers anywhere on this planet, whether those thinkers are considered "experts" in the relevant industry or not.
"And the person who actually does it wins," said Diamandis. "This is about action."
Contest encourages youth to tackle technical challenges
At the Incentive2Innovate Conference, master inventor noted that breakthrough achievements often require as much cooperation as competition. Kamen is founder of the , which is designed to introduce teams of high school students to the pleasures of hands-on science and engineering work. He said that today's world is in a race between technical competence and catastrophe.
"We need way more kids in the next generation to be technically competent, or catastrophe is going to win this race," he warned.
 | | Inventor Dean Kamen, who holds over 400 patents, is dedicated to inspiring young people with the wonders of scientific and engineering research and innovation through the FIRST Foundation and the Robotics Competition | In the FIRST Robotics Competition, the challenge is to use a bag of assorted parts to create a robot that solves a specific engineering problem - sending balls through a hoop, for example, or stacking tires on a pole - in the most efficient and elegant way. Prizes include medallions in several areas, and all participants are eligible for generous college scholarships.
At the initial FIRST championship in 1992, 28 teams competed in a high school gym. This year, says Kamen, 1,680 teams from 11 countries faced off in the Georgia Dome stadium.
"There is no question in my mind…," he added, "… that one of those kids somewhere is going to cure cancer, and another one is going to build an efficient engine that doesn't pollute, and another is going to work on some other major global problem."
Kamen said that is why those young competitors were actually building much more than a robot.
"They're building self-confidence. They're building an awareness of what the world is like for people who know how to think and solve problems. They are building serious relationships with serious adults."
Collaborative competition
Relationships are what 21st-century innovation is all about, says Charlie Brown, the director of . It offers up to 15 cash each year for "social entrepreneurs" who are working to find solutions to global problems such as inadequate health care, women's inequality and water pollution.
 | | Charlie Brown of Ashoka Changemakers believes that, in the 21st century, "open source, collaborative competition" will result in greater innovations, in less time, than contests where competitors innovate in secret | Brown does not believe in the "one solution, one winner" approach. In contrast to many contests, where participants keep their ideas secret until a winner is chosen, Ashoka competitors share their innovative solutions online for anyone to see. It's a process Brown calls "collaborative competition."
"Sharing is what the best innovators do," he said. "We're playing off each other's ideas."
That's because, said Brown, "Innovators and social entrepreneurs want the problem solved. They don't want to spend the rest of their life [working on one problem] because that means they didn't actually succeed."
The faster people are replicating ideas, said Brown, "… the faster people are sharing ideas, and the faster we're going to solve this problem, and the faster we get to go to the next innovation!"
While inertia is always in competition with innovation, Incentive2Innovate Conference organizers hope that, given today's pressing problems, daring solutions will win the day.
Comments:
1. honest competitive advantage
innovation is a great way to thinking,innovating and using that by right way for things to be useful for human wants not for misleading which create conflict among nation or human.
if we look to any firm in any market we can say the major goal for it is to creat competitive advantage and improve great profit but how that must be done.i think if that complete by misleading or unpractical way that will occur that firm will stop at middle way.
so put that in fron of sight when to decide who's gotten to be respect by all.
Submitted by: ebrahiem (egypt)
07-16-2009 - 09:18:49
2. Open Source != Gates Foundation
"Charlie Brown of Ashoka Changemakers believes that, in the 21st century, "open source, collaborative competition" will result in greater innovations, in less time, than contests where competitors innovate in secret"
A visit to the site shows it to be funded by the Gates Foundation. While Microsoft pays lip service with an occasional open source product, usually, a careful reading of the agreements one must accept to use such products, shows a fundamental misunderstanding of the concept, and cultural disconnect between Bill et al, and the open source community...
Submitted by: Kevin (United States)
07-14-2009 - 19:00:31
3. competition may be a sham
While I applaud the public perception of efforts of organizations like the X-prize foundation to effect advances in technology, from my own perspective, the competitions may be a sham. Specifically what I refer to is ommision of entrants such as MDI (compressed air) from Nice, France from the energy efficient vehicle competition. I have copied an image from their site (just in case it should disappear) of a blue bug looking vehicle (lower right of the four images) with the mouse over caption of MDI / ZPM that as a vehicle more that beats any mpge that the other 110 teams could hope to achieve. Why are they not listed in the teams? Why doesn't the media applaud the innovation and recognize their efforts to zero out that vehicle's carbon footprint? Is the energy competition effort a sham and just a feel good media thing to pacify the citizens of the world or an extensive effort to keep the greed and gluttony of the energy providers and vehicle manufacturers out of the public eye? I
Submitted by: stormynites (US)
07-14-2009 - 02:58:21
4. competition
we can really get something valuble from competition, which could improve our innovative thinking and our desire to get into something !so i hope this website could hold some competition to let the readers to join in and have fun,enjoy themself!
Submitted by: jack (china)
07-08-2009 - 13:17:19
5. where are the women in social entrepreneurship?
Dear Adam, thanks for this story I also attended this forum at the UN, which was inspiring. But I was sorry that it featured few stories from women entrepreneurs, and that there are no women featured in your story. In case you need help finding one for next time, check out Sustainable Health Enterprises http://sheinnovates.com .
Submitted by: Emily Davila (USA)
07-02-2009 - 19:18:41
6. HEALTH
HELLO!
How's everying?
I want to know more about how to learn speaking-English very well.I am looking forward your reply!Thank you!
Submitted by: YANGSHILI (CHINA)
07-02-2009 - 05:57:50
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