Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
1 Innovation The role of standards by Marcus Long, BSI British Standards 13 November 2008 BSI Group 2 Who is BSI? • Governance along international PLC lines – full Board of Non-Exec and Exec Directors • Independent, no owners/shareholders • Formally, a Royal Charter Company and National Standards Body • Core activities: • Facilitate, promote, sell and distribute standards • Register, approve and affix quality marks • Market and sell – Systems assessment services – Product and materials inspection – Testing and certification – Training • Portal to international standards making 3 4 BSI British Standards Total staff 300 Committee members 7,673 Technical and Subcommittees 1,247 Current projects 6,175 Current British Standards 25,750 Standards published per annum c. 2,000 ISO/European secretariats held 212 Renowned standards originating from BSI And next… ISO 9000 ISO 14001 ISO/IEC 27000 ISO/IEC 20000 ISO 10002 OHSAS 18001 BS 25999 Building Consensus 5 Benefits of standards for innovation • Share best practice: designers focus on real product enhancement • Set benchmarks: performance, quality, safety • Establish parameters for interoperability • Make transparent technical requirements that innovative products must meet to gain market acceptance • Reduce risks/costs: development, production, transaction • Include all stakeholders: large companies, SMEs, NGOs • Promote fair competition • Increase diversity and quality of suppliers 6 7 Standards portfolio: the consensus ‘pyramid’ 8 CONSENSUS ISO Benefits: Consumer Awareness Marketing Potential Risk Management Credibility European Standard British Standard Types of Documents: Technical Specifications Codes of Practice Method Guide Publicly Available Specification Private Standard Company Manuals CONTROL Innovation communication: getting the message out • Increasingly important focus on innovation • Publication puts together the message about innovation in the context of several key areas, e.g. – Nanotechnology – Biometrics – Marine energy – Transport/logistics 9 10 Innovation Engagement and Coordination 11 Importance of innovation in Government objectives • PSA 4: ‘Promote world-class science and innovation in the UK’ – Recognition in government papers of BSI as integral part of ‘innovation ecosystem’ along with metrology, patents and Technology Strategy Board – Development of key programmes • Nanotechnologies, biometrics, advanced materials, services – Strategic view of innovation: management of innovation 12 Importance of innovation in DIUS objectives • DSO 1: ‘Accelerate the commercial exploitation of creativity and knowledge through innovation and research …’ – Concept of ‘Innovation support network’ – Ongoing collaboration and relationship-building 13 Innovation update: TSB engagement • Key element of Sainsbury Review and ‘Innovation Nation’: coordination between bodies • Senior-level relationship-building • Scoping out potential for pilot areas of work: – Level of present standards engagement, e.g. in KTNs – Workshops and ‘pilot’ programmes to meet both organizations’ aims – Presentation to KTN Directors end November 2008 • Also appropriate coordination with NPL, UKIPO and other members of the DIUS ‘family’ 14 Standards in services: why it matters for innovation • Economies increasingly ‘service-driven’ (c. 75% of UK GDP – BERR) • Forthcoming EU Directive, due to come into effect 2009 • Development of outcome-based service standards focuses on interface between customer and service provider to raise quality of service without restricting innovation • CEN’s CHESSS project: “a consortium of national standards bodies … to determine the feasibility of horizontal service standardization. The underlying concept … is that there are fundamental principles of good service, delivery and assessment that will be applicable to any service offering” 15 Services: UK Govt focus on innovation • BERR/DIUS reported on how to stimulate and support innovation in and across service sectors to enable them to meet the global challenges of the future • Role of standards recognized, particularly in sectors such as logistics • Case study of the carbon ‘footprint’ standard (PAS 2050) 16 Innovation ‘management’: UK and Europe • BS 7000-1, Guide to managing innovation – new edition April 2008 • UK Government focus: raise innovation capability in business for benefit of economy • CEN study (e.g. national certification standards in Spain and Portugal): a new committee now likely • DG Enterprise’s scheme for SMEs ‘IMP3PROVE’ 17 How it works: www.bsigroup.com/nano • Nanotechnologies – Started with Nanoparticles vocabulary (PAS 71) in 2005, sponsored by Government; now in development at ISO – Nine UK standards publications on terminology and guidance – a growing programme 18 Other key areas • Medical – Regenerative medicine glossary (PAS 84) and guidance – New ultrasonics techniques • Sustainability – The first carbon footprint standard (PAS 2050) – Energy techniques 19 20 bsigroup.com [email protected]