Archive for November, 2009

The key word is responsibility

For a 54 year old… this is a scary event – my first blog contribution!

Innovation, photo: theonlyone/flickr

Innovation, photo: theonlyone/flickr

Last week we had the visit of Dr. David E. Goldberg, from iFoundry and of Dr. Lynn Stein, from Olin Engineering.  The occasion was the launch of our new undergraduate program on Innovation Project Leadership. The conversations led me to realize that we need to add a key dimension to this program.  Specifically, far more than fostering people who know about innovation, and who can use this knowledge to generate a real project…. we need to center on an environment where the leadership of and the practice of Innovation can be enjoyed and expressed.

I capture the above through the following statement:
“Innovation is the expression, the evidence of personal responsibility – a responsible person acts to generate, and contribute to the future of the institution it serves.  This gives meaning to the tasks, the risks, the aspirational acts of assertiveness, the leadership, etc.  An Innovative culture = a culture of responsible individuals shaping the future.”

The key word is responsibility. One is responsible for the future of oneself, of the organization or institution one serves, of one’s community, society, and so on.  If one simply follows, one fails to express the “creative gene” that each and all of us have and must use so that each and every one of us prospers.

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About philosophy, engineering and the human element

This week’s MNN guest of honor was David E. Goldberg from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

David E Goldberg

David E Goldberg


Let us tell you how we got to know David. Two months ago in our class of “Innovation, Design and Strategy” we discussed a presentation of David about the missing basics in engineering education. We then realized that he shares the same thoughts as we do and we contacted him by mail in order to explore possible ways of collaboration between our department of Business Landscaping at the Tecnológico de Monterrey and the iFoundry, the Illinois Foundry for Innovation in Engineering Education.

Who would have thought that we would be so privileged to have David as our guest at the Tec so soon? Right on his arrival day he gave us a talk about philosophy and engineering.

Asking what engineers can learn from the conceptual rigor of philosophers, David invited us to go back in the history of thought and to start at the human beginnings of conceptual clarity.

Why isn’t there a philosophy of engineering?
David’s interest in this question led him to establish a forum gathering philosophers and engineers. By the way, the 2010 Forum on Philosophy, Engineering, and Technology (FPET-2010) will be held on 9-10 May 2010 in the Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, and is open for submissions.

Engineering hasn’t cared much about philosophy for a long time, yet this is changing. As for philosophy, it only punctually gave attention developments in the world of technology.

But why is philosophy important to engineering right now and vice-versa?

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My new own challenge. Creativity is the way.

Creative people…

have a great deal of physical energy… tend to be smart yet naive at the same time… alternate between imagination and fantasy

…they have a rooted sense of reality… tend to be both extroverted and introverted… are humble and proud at the same time… to an extent, escape rigid gender role stereotyping… are very passionate about their work….

I´m glad to have this little space that people from MNN gave me so I can write downs my thoughts.

First I need to say I´m just a spectator on that big and colorful environment.

From MNN 11 November 2009

My name is Anaiz Espinoza and I just started helping out as an intern in the Business Landscaping department by bringing some ideas so you readers can be aware about the opportunities MNN have prepared just for you.

Sufficient is to say that 3 weeks after I met this people I can´t stop thinking about that big idea, that big bang on my mind that is going to change my professional life.

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WE can CHANGE the WORLD!

Hi people, I found this video thanks to Vanessa Huerta from Babson College. She is the Marketing & Program Manager for all Latin America. I think that this video will encourage you to BE and MAKE a CHANGE in our WORLD!!

This video was made by Grasshopper, a business belonging to Babson College alumni.

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We have what is most important in life

Our mission is to foster a new generation of entrepreneurs by breaking paradigms and inciting radical innovations.

MNN students in class

MNN students in class

To complete our mission statement, we will quote a passage from Buckminster Fuller’s masterpiece, Critical Path.

When asked by a ten years old boy whether he was a doer or a thinker, Fuller replied the following in a letter, dated February 16, 1970:

“The things to do are: the things that need doing: that you see need to be done, and that no one else seems to see need to be done. Then you will conceive your own way of doing that which needs to be done- that no one else has told you to do or how to do it. (…) Try making experiments of anything you conceive and are intensely interested in. Don’t be disappointed if something doesn’t work.”

Let us paraphrase Fuller by saying:

We have what is most important in life. And that for sure is initiative.

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Welcome to our blog

Welcome to the MNN blog, the blog of the Master in Innovation and Technological Entrepreneurship at the Tecnológico de Monterrey.

Who are we and what are we here for?

Some of us are recent graduates. Others already have years of professional experience.

Because of our different backgrounds, from Chemical Engineering to Political Science, we know quite a few things about the world and how it functions. We come from different parts of Mexico and the world. Some beliefs we share and some we don’t. But there is one reason that unites us all in this master’s program: the will to pursue our own projects.

We feel that we have a personal mission to accomplish: An entrepreneurial endeavor in which our knowledge comes in and in which we define ourselves as nobody-but-ourselves.

Our ideas are new. Our ideas are brave. We have joined to take innovation one step further and to make this world a better place.

This is the MNN experience.

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