Transcript title

Tomáš Sabol
Faculty of Economics
Technical University of Košice
Experience with European
R&D Projects
[email protected]
Content
• EU R&D projects – some advices, health check
• FP7 instruments
• Some aspects of R&D projects – partners,
project team, role of PhD students,
dissemination, budget,
• Is there any “Success story” and how to
measure it?
• Our R&D projects – what were they about?
• EU tenders
2
Why Experience & Advice?
• Experience is simply the name we give to
our mistakes.
Oscar Wilde
• Those who are already old enough to serve
as bad examples are giving good advices.
Anonymous
3
European R&D projects - Basics
• Long-term preparation needed (do not expect results
in 3 months), it is a strategic decision/investment
• Support of top management needed
• It has to be a part of organisational culture
• It is a team activity, put emphasis on team building
• Build the credit of your team
 Keep all promises
 Deliver quality (reports, SW etc.) and on time
Bad reputation travels 7 times faster than good reputation
(multiple by factor of 10 on the Internet)
• Develop and cultivate contacts with partners abroad
and at home on personal and institutional level
(Networking!)
• It is an entrepreneurial activity – you have to invest up
front (your time, effort, money) and the result is
uncertain (success rate in FP7 IST - 11%)
4
FP7 project proposal – Health check
• Is your project scientifically and technically excellent?
 Relevant to the topics addressed by the Call,
 „User/problem driven approach“ (clearly define the
problem/users needs)
 Progress beyond the state-of-the-art clearly defined, etc.?
• Well-worked out project management plan?
• Will your project have a significant impact (through
development, dissemination, use of project results)?
• Is your consortium competent and complete (balanced
- universities, companies, user partners, …)?
• Is the budget adequate (corresponding to project
activities). Do you have all the resources you need?
5
Applied research
Good to have on the country level:
• Defined national strategies, e.g. of:
• Knowledge economy (National Lisbon strategy)
• Information Society development, …
• Defined priorities of R&D
• Innovation Strategy
• Working links between Fundamental research &
Applied research
• Efficient Technology transfer mechanisms
• Efficient University-Industry cooperation
• Advisory services, NCPs, …
6
FP7 instruments
Choose the right instrument for your idea
• Integrated Project (IP)
• Specific Targeted Research Project
(STREP)
• Network of Excellence
• Coordination Action
• Specific Support Action
7
Integrated project (IP)
Purpose: Ambitious objective-driven research with
a ‘programme’ approach
Target audience: Industry (incl. SMEs), Research
institutions, Universities, and in some cases
potential end-users
Typical duration: 36-60 months
Optimum consortium: 10-20 participants
Total EU contribution: €4-25m (average €10m)
Flexibility in implementation: Yearly update of
Workplan
8
Integrated project
D
Scale of ambition is limited, reflected in limited
activities, duration, size of consortium more typical of
a STREP
C
Goals are ambitious. The proposers include key
industry players. A full range of activities covering a
substantial part of the development chain is
envisaged. Broad industry sector impact is foreseen.
SME participation has been sought/achieved. Effective
project management plans are in place
9
Specific targeted research project (STREP)
Purpose: Objective-driven research more limited in
scope than an IP
Target audience: Industry, including SMEs,
research institutes, universities
Typical duration: 18-36 months
Optimum consortium: 6-15 participants
Total EU contribution: €0.8-3m (average €1.9m)
Fixed Workplan and fixed partnership for the
duration
10
Specific targeted research project
D
The work is unoriginal, not scientifically and
technically excellent
C
A well-focused and well-planned research
project by capable partners which will
extend the state-of-the-art
11
Roles in EU R&D projects
• Project coordinator
• Project partners – development vs. user partners
(representatives of end users)
• Project officer (PO) – representative of the
European Commission
• Reviewers of the project
• Other project teams (project clusters)
• Target groups regarding dissemination &
exploitation of the project results
• Management of your organisation
12
Partners in EU R&D projects
• How to find them?
 You know them from previous projects (e.g. educational – we
used it, but did not work very well)
 Personal references
 Conferences, EU events, reviews, etc.
 Pareto’s rule applies also here: 20% of organisations has
80% of EU projects
Different categories of institutions:
• Universities:
 Usually open for cooperation, but – track record is important the
quality “speaks” (applies to the both parties)
• Knowledge Media Institute, Open University, UK
• University of Regensburg, DE
• University of Aarhus, DK
• National Technical University of Athens, ICCS, GR
• University of Reading, UK
13
Partners in EU R&D projects
• Large companies
 May be suspicious towards “unknown institutions”, their legal
departments have an important say
 Sometimes frequent changes - people are leaving and joining,
more anonymous
– British Aerospace, UK
– Siemens, DE
– Telefonica, Spain
– SYGNITY S.A., PL
• SMEs
 One-two persons sometimes doing everything, more personal
– InJet, DK
– CNET, Sweden
• Applied research institutes, think tanks

–
–
–
Usually of top quality
Fraunhoffer institutes, DE
Danish Technological Institute (DTI), DK
RAND Europe, NL
14
Partners in EU R&D projects
• NGOs
 Usually good in their area of expertise, committed
people (but also here exist exceptions)
– eISOTIS, GR
• User partners (e.g. public administration)
 Usually not very experienced in EU projects, research
– PA institutions in UK, PL, HU, SK
• Commitment and personal motivation is
important, but not sufficient,
• Important: Previous experience in international
projects, project management as a part of the
organisational culture
15
Your project team
• Optimal size: 6-8 (depends on the size of project)
• Combination of: professional + project
management + interpersonal skills (team players)
Roles:
• Project manager
• Vision owner – answers the question “What?”
• Chief architect - answers the question “How?”
• Generator of ideas – producing ideas, …
• Critical thinker – constructive criticism
• Doers (in IT = coders)
• Good communicator (“social glue”)
 One person can play several roles
 Categories: Specialist / Generalist / Versatilist
16
PhD students in R&D projects
• Benefits (Pros):
 Working on real problems, applications
 Professional growth, improving language skills,
learning principles of project management
 Possibility to travel
 Availability of resources
 In frequent contacts with international research
community, …
• Cons:
 Too busy working on the project(s), do not have time
to write PhD thesis ;-)
 May be offered jobs by partners from abroad
• Some finished here (Jan Hreno, Robert Kende, Karol Furdik)
+ Some left for abroad
 Is it good or bad?
17
Dissemination
• Dissemination towards specified target groups
– Specified targets for dissemination
• Target groups:
 Research community
 Conferences, workshops
 Journals, monographs – in our case much less (BUT depends on the
research area – in IT different than in economy)
 Business community
 Fairs (CeBIT, …), presentations, workshops,
 End users (e.g. public administration)
 Presentations, workshops
• + Press releases, Newsletters,…
• Exploitation Plan
– Business plan (definition of the products/services, added value,
definition of customer, business model, price policy, licence policy,
…)
18
Budget
• Main budget items:
 Personnel costs – major item
• Month-rates depending on the track-record
 Travel & subsistence
• More travels in IPs (demanding coordination, integration) than in
STREPs
 Equipment – limited (in our projects)
 Consumables (SW, books, …)
 + Indirect costs (Overheads)
• Travelling
– Within EU
– Outside EU only with prior approval of the EC (PO)
– Project management meetings (twice a year), WP meetings,
project reviews
– Conferences, workshops – only where we have presentations
(no “private travel agency”)
19
Project Review
•
•
On average every 12 months (if not request for an additional review)
Participants:
•
•
One full day exercise (e.g. 9.00-16.00) in Brussels or at one of the
partner’s (e.g. user partner’s) site
Presentations:
•
Potential results of the review:
•
Tough (to produce good quality code is not enough, if you do not have a
clear idea who and how the project products will be used) - but
professional, objective and fair!
– Project officer (PO)
– 3-5 independent experts (from all over the EU) invited by the EC (company
senior managers, developers for private sector, university professors, …)
– All partners represented
–
–
–
–
–
Technical presentations on individual WPs
Live demonstration (preferably online)
Pilot projects
Dissemination & Exploitation (business models, …)
Project Management
 Red flag – Pay the money back (for the undelivered work)
 Yellow flag – You can continue, but have to rework deliverables Dx.x, Dy.y, …
(and reviewers can ask for an additional review)
 Green flag – Go ahead! See you at the next review
• Each project deliverable is accepted or rejected (with impact on financing –
rejected deliverables are not financed)
20
What do we mean by „Success Story“?
www.google.com:
• define: Success story
• … „An example of a successful practice“
If we accept the definition:
• “… this term is used to distinguish those
that have succeeded with a practice from
those that are experimenting …”
• … Then we are experimenting with
international R&D projects for 14+ years
21
How to measure success? (1/2)
Management adage: What cannot be measured,
cannot be managed.
• What is an indicator of success in applied research
projects?
• Approved project?
 It takes about one year - from starting to work on a project
proposal till starting the project
(Writing project proposal, Submitting it, Evaluation of proposals,
Negotiation, Signing a contract)
• Amount of funding (grant) / Project total budget?
– Different tools in FP7 (STREP, IP, NoE, SA, NoE, …)
– STREP: 1.5 – 3 million EUR, IP: 8 – 12 million EUR, NoE: 3 – 6
million EUR
• Successfully closed project?
 Successful final review, satisfied project officer (PO)
 About 3-4 years of effort
22
How to measure success? (2/2)
• Project results accepted by the “client” (end
users), applied in private/public sector?
 Somebody is interested in the project results, will use it. And
even willing to pay for it?
 Additional 1-2 years of effort
• Recognition by international partners?
– Awards, prices, invitations, …?
 About 5+ years of effort
• Satisfaction of members of your project team
– Are they willing to work with you on another project?
• Some spin-off?
– Business? Another project, … ?
 Success factor: Sustainability, repeatibility. Not just a
one-off activity
23
So how will we measure it? (1/2)
• Number of projects you participated in?
• Amount of money?
 Total amount of grants for your institution?
 Total amount of grants of projects you wrote?
 Person-month rates for you?
• Economic impact of practical applications of the
realised projects
 FP7 is applied research – there should be measurable
socio-economic impact
• Satisfaction of the project team members
 Do you have a stable core team? Is it growing?
24
So how will we measure it? (2/2)
• Recognition by the European Commission
 Invitation to workshops/conferences organised by the
EC (invited speaker)
 Invitation by the EC for project proposals evaluation,
to act as project reviewer
 Nomination for the “Project of the Month”
…
• Recognition by project partners abroad?
 How many times were you asked by them to join
projects they initiated?
 Offers of other types (tenders, individual expert, …)
25
R&D projects (1/3)
Participation in FP4, FP5, eTEN, FP6, FP7:
• Contract No. 217098 „Secure Process-oriented
Integrative Service Infrastructure for Networked
Enterprises (SPIKE)”, FP7, STREP, 2008-2010
• FP6-2004-027020 Access to e-Government Services
Employing Semantic Technologies (Access-eGov), FP6,
STREP, 2006-2008
• FP6-2004-27128 Semantic-enabled Agile Knowledge–
based e-Government (SAKE), FP6, STREP, 2006-2008
• IST-2005-034891 Networked Embedded System
Middleware for Heterogeneous Physical Devices in a
Distributed Architecture (HYDRA), FP6, IP, 2006-2010
• FP6-2004-027219 Democracy Network (DEMO_net),
FP6, NoE, 2006-2009
26
R&D projects (2/3)
• 517476 Interoperability Initiative for a European
eHealth Area (I2Health), eTEN, SA, 2005-2007
• IST-1999-20364 “Web Technologies Supporting
Direct Participation in Democratic Processes
(Webocracy)“, FP5, STREP, 2000-2003
• IST-1999-29088 „Providing Innovative Service
Models and Assessment (PRISMA)“, FP5, SSA, 20012003
• IST-2000-26224 “Best eEurope Practices (BEEP)”,
FP5, SSA, 2002-2003
• IST-2000-26393 „European Knowledge Management
Forum“, 5RP, Thematic Network, 2000-2003
27
R&D projects (3/3)
• HPSE-CT-2001-00065 „EU Integration and the
Prospects for Catch-Up Development in CEECs. The
Determinants of the Productivity Gap (Productivity
Gap)“, FP5, 2001-2004
• IST-2000-29518 „e-VOTE“, FP5, STREP, 2003-2004
• Esprit 29065 “Web in Support of Knowledge
Management in Company (KnowWeb)”, FP4, 19982001
• Esprit 29015 “Enriching Representations of Work to
Support Organisational Learning (ENRICH)”, FP4,
1998-2000
• COPERNICUS CIPA-CT94-0149 „Environment for
Configuration Design (ENCODE)“, FP3, 1994-1997
28
Research areas (1/2)
• Constraint Satisfaction Problem (ENCODE)
• Design problems (predefined components, constraints between
components which have to be satisfied → to choose components
in such a manner that the resulted artefact will achieve requested
functionality and satisfy all the given constraints
 E.g. to design a portfolio of … satisfying pre-defined constraint
• Knowledge management (KnowWeb, ENRICH)
• In knowledge economy knowledge is the most important asset of
the organisation
 Easy access to all knowledge within the organisation
 Support of organisational learning
• ICT and Knowledge economy (PRISMA)
 Scenario Planning, technology foresight
 To identify scenarios of potential future development
• Applications of ICT in service sector – eHealth,
eTransport, eLearning, eGovernment (BEEP)
 Good practice processing, socio-economic assessment of ICT
applications
29
Research areas (2/2)
• Analysis of FDIs in New Member States (ProductivityGap)
 Realisation of survey, statistical processing of the survey results
+ application of artificial intelligence techniques (data mining)
• eGovernment and application of semantic technologies
(Webocracy, SAKE, Access-eGov)
 Efficient government - condition of the country competitiveness
 Knowledge modelling, semantics (meaning) processing
• Ambient intelligence (HYDRA)
 Pilot applications: eHealth, Agriculture, Smart house
 Value modelling, business modelling
• Networked enterprises (SPIKE)
 Support of virtual enterprise creation (temporary alliances) in
knowledge economy
 + Business plan, Business models, Risk analysis, Quality
assurance plan (ALL projects)
30
EU tenders
•
•
•
•
•
•
Call for tenders published by the EC
Average size of EC tenders: 0.5 mil. – 5 mil. EUR
Duration: 6 – 18 months
Bids are evaluated by the EC
Result (survey etc.) of the tender is the property of the EC
Studies, analyses, benchmarking exercises, best practice
identification, policy evaluation, … - usually in EU27
• Process:
– Contacted by an experienced partner from abroad (empirica,
DTI, RAND, ECOTEC, …) who knows you from previous project
– Submitting necessary legal documents, short description of
organisation, list of previous projects, CV of key personnel
– Signing a subcontract with main contractor
• Our subcontract – usually less than 10 000 EUR
• Responsible for a given report (survey in SK, policy
analysis, … etc.)
31
Participation in EU tenders (1/3)
• eHealth Benchmarking. Subcontract agreement under
EC contract No. 30-CE-0160355/00-37, contractor:
empirica GmBH, Germany, 2008.
• Ex Post Evaluation of Cohesion Policy Programmes 2000
– 2006 co-financed by the ERDF. WP6: Enterprise
environment and innovation. Contractor: Danish
Technological Institute, Denmark, 2008.
• Multi-channel delivery strategies and sustainable
business models for public services addressing socially
disadvantaged groups [Contract Number 30-CE0161843/00-50]. Contractor: ECOTEC Research and
Consulting Ltd, United Kingdom, 2008-2009.
• Benchmarkimg Sectoral Policy Initiatives in Support of
eBusiness for SME´s. Contract NO.S12.449074,
contractor: empirica GmBH, Germany, 2007.
32
Participation in EU tenders (2/3)
• Benchmarking eSkills Policies on multi-stakeholder
partnerships. Contract No. S12.444992,
contractor: empirica GmBH, Germany, 2007.
• Measures to increase trust and confidence of
consumers in the Information Society
(CONSTRUST). Contract No. 30-CE-0033938/0070, contractor: empirica GmBH, Germany, 2006 2007
• MeAc - Measuring Progress of eAccessibility in
Europe (eAccessibility). Contract No. 30CE0039801/00-96, contractor: Empirica GmBH,
Germany, 2006 – 2007.
33
Participation in EU tenders (3/3)
• eTEN Study, Contract No. C28955 “Study on transEuropean deployment potential, sustainability and
exploitation models for public services in the context of
an enlarged European Union”. For the eTEN Unit of DG
Information Society, European Commission, contractor:
Danish Technological Institute, Denmark.
• Study: “eBusiness Market Watch”, for the European
Commission, Contract No. FIF 20030224, contractor:
empirica Gesellschaft für Kommunikations- und
Technologieforschung mbH, Germany.
• ENISA study: “Member States’ Activities in Information
and network Security – Inventory and Best Practices
Guide”, contractor: Empirica Gesellschaft fur
Kommunikations − und Technologieforschung Mbh,
Germany
34
Participation in EU tenders
Topics covered:
 eHealth
 Evaluation of Structural Funds tools (R&D,
innovation)
 Inclusive eGovernment
 eBusiness
 eSkills
 Trust and Confidence in Information Society
 eAccessability
 eGovernment
 Information and network security
• Cooperation with external experts if needed
• Subcontract is paid after delivering the work
and approval of the EC (no advance payment)
35
Conclusion (or Introduction?) - New concepts, buzz-words,
technologies, trends, … appeared:
•
Web 2.0 (Social web), Web 3.0 (Semantic web), Web 4.0 (connecting intelligence, people and things
reason and communicate together)
• Ambient intelligence, Ubiquitous computing, …, Utility computing
• Market-facing company, Enterprise 2.0 (social & networked changes to enterprise, social SW), … Virtual
enterprises, Networked enterprises, …
• Knowledge economy  Knowledge (the most important company asset)  knowledge management,
knowledge technologies, knowledge asset management, …
• Networked economy, Service oriented economy (services - intrinsically tradeable & valued according to some
notion of exchange value; technology strengthens labour inputs)
•
•
• Creative sector (media, the arts, …), creativity index, …
Business modelling  value modelling
• Scenario building, technology foresight, technology assessment, …
Mega trend: Growing complexity/Networking (Complexity science), a-Life, Self-reflective systems, ..
• So, are we ready for inter-/trans-disciplinary research
(besides giving nice presentations/speeches on these topics)?
•
Do we have methods/techniques for knowledge assets evaluation/assessment, new value/business
models, …
 Will there be “Economic Science 2.0”? ☺
•
Economics = the social science that studies the production, distribution, and consumption of goods
and services (Wikipedia)
• What will NOT change in this? (production, distribution, services, Wikipedia?)
• & … Is anybody out there? (To do this research)
The future is already here. It is just not evenly distributed. (W. Gibson)
Zítřek je vždy tak trochu třaskavá směs (V. Nezval)
36
Thank you for attention!
Questions (2.0)? Comments?
Contact: [email protected]
Intellectuals … are not original thinkers,
but purveyors of second-hand ideas
(F. Hayek)
37