Gregory Keogh

 
avatar for Gregory Keogh



 

My Schedule

 

7:30 AM
to 8:00 AM

Breakfast
29 Attendees
Location Ballroom
  Enjoy a complimentary breakfast in the main stage area.

8:00 AM
to 9:00 AM

Opening plenary with Tina Seelig and James Barlow
34 Attendees
Location Ballroom
  Join us for the kickoff session of the NCIIA annual conference, designed to ignite innovation. Come prepared for an experiential exercise that will get your creative juices flowing and stimulate spirited collaboration. You will get a chance to work with your colleagues on a fast-paced challenge focusing on strategy, team work, and creative problem solving.

9:00 AM
to 10:30 AM

Development of a Business Model for the Implementation of a Sustainable Point of Use Water Filter Program in the Dominican Republic
4 Attendees
Location Mason II
  The lack of clean water remains a critical public health challenge throughout the developing world, and developing viable, sustainable programs is part of this challenge. This presentation describes a business model that was developed in partnership with a Dominican Republic NGO through a NCIIA Sustainable Vision grant. The program incorporates elements of health promotion, social marketing, microfinance and local entrepreneurship to help the rural poor purchase point-of-use water filters. The presenters will share their experiences and lessons learned.
Tags  Thurs 1C3

10:30 AM
to 11:00 AM

Break
17 Attendees
Location Second Floor

11:00 AM
to 12:30 PM

Credit Well Deserved: Strengthening the business case for Corporate Social Responsibility and poverty alleviation
4 Attendees
Location Montgomery
  We provide a new conceptual model that has the potential to bridge the capacity of companies and the needs of the underserved by harnessing the opportunity of corporate social responsibility (CSR). Analysts have suggested that CSR initiatives have the potential to effectively address global poverty and economic development issues. This paper makes a business case for corporations to align their CSR strategies with core business activities, such as design, development, and dissemination, to encourage the availability of products to people in developing countries. While some companies are on the vanguard of the CSR movement, the majority of firms are seeking some form of tangible, convincing measure of the return on investment of CSR before moving forward with such activities. This report suggests a quantifiable solution to this end.
Tags  Thurs 2C2

12:30 PM
to 2:30 PM

Lunch and keynote speaker Doug Richard
28 Attendees
Location Ballroom
  Doug Richard is a leading proponent and practitioner of entrepreneurship in the United Kingdom and the US. In this keynote address, Doug will discuss entrepreneurship, its importance in the modern economy, and the role of government and universities in catalyzing entrepreneurship. Doug will talk about: Why the public interest is best served by self-interest; Why the most successful enterprises are all social enterprises; Why entrepreneurs are never born, only made; Why the US must learn to export entrepreneurship not merely to the rest of the world but the rest of the nation; Why governments can only create playing fields; Why capital is not what limits the rate of entrepreneurship; and Why universities are our best hope for cultural change.

2:30 PM
to 4:00 PM

Are You Innovative?
7 Attendees
Location Jackson
  This workshop is a result of an on-going NCIIA-sponsored project for the design and development of an innovation-focused event (Ideation to Innovation, I2I). In this hands-on, interactive workshop participants will learn about: (a) the traits of innovative individuals, and (b) enhancing individuals' innovative skills. Innovators share some common traits, many of which can be learned and enhanced. Quick literature survey shows some commonalities between Steve Jobs, Walt Disney, Thomas Edison, Eli Whitney, and many others, some of which will be discussed. In particular, the workshop will present traits such as observing, thinking, experimenting, teaming, dreaming, persisting, having fun, and being passionate about the work. Hands-on exercises and teasers will allow participants to experience most of the discussed innovators' skills, and to use them in a classroom setting.
Tags  Thurs 3A

4:00 PM
to 5:30 PM

Poster session
21 Attendees
Location Prefunction space outside the ballroom, third level
  Featuring twenty posters covering a wide range of topics, an open bar and time to network.

7:00 PM
to 11:59 PM

 

 

8:00 AM
to 9:00 AM

Breakfast
19 Attendees
Location Ballroom

9:00 AM
to 10:30 AM

The Last Mile: Building an innovation ecosystem to support technology entrepreneurs
11 Attendees
Location Washington
  The last mile in the development of a new venture, moving from feasible concept to business, can result in the venture never starting. Entrepreneurs, especially those in rural communities, often lack access to the resources and expertise needed to harden the concept and convert it to an operating business. In 2009, the N2TEC Institute launched a unique summer accelerator program that included an AI2V intensive workshop and an eight-week period that addressed the critical knowledge, expertise, and resource issues of the participants by surrounding them with a team of mentors and experts. The result was the launch of five new businesses in South Dakota and one in Oregon. Participants were selected from a national call for technology entrepreneurs willing to move to Sioux Falls for the summer, receive a stipend of $15,000, and work aggressively toward the launch of their business.
Tags  Fri 1D

10:30 AM
to 11:00 AM

Break
14 Attendees
Location Second Floor

11:00 AM
to 12:30 PM

Sustainable Design for Sub-Saharan Africa
7 Attendees
Location Mason II
  This presentation describes a multi-year collaboration between Malian and American schools of engineering, business and agriculture in the design of an evaporative cooler to efficiently cool a small building in sub-Saharan Africa. Highlights include an innovative water delivery system that can simultaneously cool beverages, easy-to-use pad holders designed to fit indigenous pad materials, and a decorative, culturally inspired exterior. Technical work included fan sizing,water usage, Solid Works drawings,an extended field test, and analysis of the in-country manufacture and assembly of the unit. A revised design will be installed in a classroom at the National School of Engineering in Bamako Mali this year to encourage diffusion of the low energy cooling technology. A business plan and market analysis were also performed.
Tags  Fri 2A2

12:30 PM
to 2:30 PM

2:30 PM
to 4:00 PM

Student Development Workshop (students only)
6 Attendees
Location Sansome
  One of the many challenges when setting up your venture is knowing how and where to spend that scarcest resource of all, your time. Building your networks, developing your product or service, understanding how your strategy evolves along with every new bit of information you discover, and working out how to keep your business progressing the way you want can be tough with so many moving pieces. This highly interactive session will help you develop the way you think strategically and understand how to build meaningful relationships with customers, partners and potential investors as well as mentors and advisors in the most effective way.
Tags  Fri 3A

6:30 PM
to 11:59 PM

March Madness for the Mind
21 Attendees
Location Exploratorium
  The March Madness for the Mind exhibition is a celebration of student E-Team innovation and entrepreneurship. Each year, top E-Teams (collaborating groups of college students, faculty and industry mentors) showcase their work in a science or technology museum during NCIIA's annual meeting, many unveiling their cutting-edge innovations to the public for the first time.
 

 

8:00 AM
to 9:00 AM

Breakfast plenary: Steve Blank
22 Attendees
Location Ballroom
  Steve Blank, author of Four Steps to the Epiphany, will share currents and trends in Silicon Valley as they relate to entrepreneurship and design thinking educators.

9:00 AM
to 10:30 AM

What's Your Problem? Designing Questions that Lead to Creative Solutions
13 Attendees
Location Jackson
  Some people call it Need Finding, others call it Point of View, and others call it Problem Definition. Whatever you call it, crafting a thoughtful question is key to finding a valuable solution. Without a well-thought-out problem, the resulting solutions are apt to be mundane or meaningless. This workshop will focus on framing problems in ways that lead to the most creative solutions. Participants will be introduced to powerful techniques that facilitate the process of finding innovative solutions to challenging problems in all areas, including design, research, business, teaching, and in their personal lives.
Tags  Sat 1E

10:30 AM
to 11:00 AM

Break
13 Attendees
Location Second Floor

11:00 AM
to 12:30 PM

Quality and Consistency in Idea Pitch, Research Proposal and Business Plan Competition Judging
2 Attendees
Location Mason I
  The results of entrepreneurial idea pitch and research proposal competitions often determine the award of cash prizes (e.g. $100,000 at MIT) and scarce resources. The recipients of these awards are determined by judging processes. These judging processes are rarely audited or evaluated as to quality or consistency. In this session, the competition judging quality issue will be described, the results of calculating Awg for a variety of competitions will be shared, interventions identified as possible causes of higher levels of consistency will be identified, recommendations will be made as to how to produce a higher level of Awg (meaning higher quality competition judging processes), and participation in collaborative application of the recommendations will be solicited in order to continue the research.
Tags  Sat 2E3

11:00 AM
to 12:30 PM

UC Davis D-Lab Activity: Build a small wind generator in two hours!
8 Attendees
Location Sansome
  The WindBelt wind generator is a example of a "confluent technology": a design that grows out of the highly constrained energy landscape of developing countries with far-reaching applications worldwide. This hands-on workshop, adopted from the UC Davis D-Lab curriculum, will teach participants the basic theory behind power generation and walk them through the steps to build one. Each group will build a working prototype from scratch and test it in the NCIIA "wind tunnel." The workshop will include: basic theory behind power generation; an overview of the need for small-scale power generation in the developing world; the use of basic hand tools; the use of jigs and fixtures; and the basics of wind power.
Tags  Sat 2B