Engineering serendipity?

Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

Roland Harwood at NESTA wrote about Engineering Serendipity last week and it’s been on my mind since then. He’s been meeting lots of companies that try to broker relationships between people and their ideas:

With more distributed organisations and specialised knowledge the need for these type of organisations is increasing who can organise integrate knowledge and organise innovation between organsisations. And it’s organisations like Innocentive Kluster, Innovaro, The Disrupters, Innovation Arts, WhatIf and CellCentric that all create value by aggregating knowledge and brokering relationships. I’m going to coin a term and acronymn and describe them as an engineering serendipity businesses (ESB), which I also think is the business NESTA Connect is in too.

I think he’s put his finger on an interesting paradox here, how can we engineer that which is meant to be fortuitous?

My own two cents is that most efforts I’ve witnessed in organisations focus way too much on the engineering and have little faith in the accidental. There’s too much effort to create “innovation processes” as if this is all very complicated and difficult. I tend to think in terms of opening space, creating a simple container for conversation and let structure emerge and fade as needed.

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