IBM Opens “Innovation Factory” Using Collaboration to Accelerate Innovation of New Products, Services
March 29th, 2007 Leave a comment Visited 28 times, 1 so far today
IBM Opens “Innovation Factory” Using Collaboration to Accelerate Innovation of New Products, Services
CTIA Wireless, IBM Labs — IBM (NYSE: IBM) has opened its “Innovation Factory,” a Web 2.0 solution that manufactures ideas and new products and services for business growth. Innovation Factory uses a blend of Web 2.0 social networking technologies to help companies rapidly conceive and test new products and services, accelerating a launch process that often takes years down to mere days.
The first industry-specific version of Innovation Factory is being demonstrated simultaneously in Boston and Orlando today and was developed by IBM’s High Performance On Demand Solutions (HiPODS) group working in concert with IBM’s Telecom Solutions Lab in Austin, Texas. IBM Innovation Factory for Telecom is designed to capture the innovation process from ideas to commercialization, speeding up co-creation among employees, partners, software developers and subscribers through online communities.
Sprint Nextel is among IBM’s first clients to pilot a solution based on IBM Innovation Factory for Telecom. “We’ve thrown open the doors of our Labs to our clients,” said Steve Mills, senior vice president, IBM Software Group. “By innovating side-by-side with leaders like Sprint, we bring research, development and market testing together right in the Lab. We end up with happier customers and better solutions.”
As telecom providers migrate to IP and next generation services, they require an infrastructure to conceive, prove, and launch a wide variety of voice and data services. Innovation Factory for Telecom uses Web 2.0 technologies like blogs, wikis, social tagging, surveys and polls, to accelerate time-to-market for new services. These social networking and information discovery capabilities apply to services co-created either within the service provider enterprise, or with an external community including subscribers, business partners and financiers.
“Our telecom clients are facing a host of competitive pressures that demand the ability to drive new revenue streams, test new business models, and accelerate the pace of innovation,” said Mike Hill, general manager, Telecommunications Industry for IBM. “Telecom operators are in a unique position to make content accessible anywhere, anytime to anyone via any device. The fundamental ability to capitalize on this opportunity and launch services quickly is where telcos count on IBM for greatest benefit.”
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