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Is the world open?
                           Richard Straub, Director of Development,
                   European Foundation for Management Development (EFMD)

Summary
We talk about open societies, open innovation, open standards, open ecosystems, open source
and open architectures. The idea of “openness” is emerging as a dominant attribute of key
developments in our economic and social fabric. Richard Straub argues in this paper that
“openness” is the defining quality of 21st century globalisation.

In today’s world of business we experience every day what openness means and what benefits
it brings to bear. Openness is associated with values such as tolerance, individual freedom,
lifelong learning, participation, empowerment and cooperation, as opposed to typical closed-
world values of command and control, top-down management, centralized and bureaucratic
governance, over-regulation and collectivist dominance over individual freedom. Monopolies or
near-monopolies are examples of the closed world as are traditional hierarchies with their
burgeoning bureaucracies and disconnected silos are typical manifestations.

The rise of social networking sites, virtual worlds, blogs, wikis and 3D Internet give us a first
idea of the potential of the “interactive and collaborative web” dubbed Web 2.0. Now we have
the infrastructure and tools to operate in new ways in open systems. While many of the
thoughts about openness and the need for more open social systems have been around for
some time, this new infrastructure and new tools accelerate the movement.

An open world is a world of great opportunity and challenge. It requires changes in our
individual behaviours and attitudes and it demands major institutional adjustments. How can
business respond to it?

Keywords: openness, collaborative web, open systems, globalisation, cooperation, participation

This article has been published previously at Global Focus, Volume 2, Issue 1 (2008).
Publisher: European Foundation for Management Development www.efmd.org



Flat – Spiky or Open?

You may remember the discussion about Tom Friedman’s Book “The World is Flat”1. Friedman
argues that technology has created a level playing field for accessing markets, skills and
expertise and integrating them wherever they might be. Innovation becomes accessible for all -
“In a flat world you can innovate without having to emigrate”. The metaphor of the “flat world”
drew acclaims but also criticism.

Richard Florida2 instead opposed the notion of “spikiness” to the assumed flatness of the world,
suggesting that there were geographical points of concentration such as centres of innovation,
of skills, patent filings and of energy consumption. In short, he argues that location still matters.
These two different lenses of looking at our world and making sense of it as far as scenarios for
economic and social development are concerned are both important and valuable. Yet, I
believe there is an additional perspective that we should not ignore. The idea of “openness” is
emerging as a dominant attribute of key developments in our economic and social fabric. We
talk about open societies, open innovation, open standards, open ecosystems, open source


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and open architectures – all using more or less consciously the foundational thinking from the
20th century systems theory.

It was the biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy3, one of the most acute minds of the 20th century
who has established the foundations for a General Systems Theory showing the importance of
a “systems view” and giving us a vocabulary and the scientific foundations for dealing with
systems.

We look at increasingly complex interrelationships between connected elements in systems at
different levels. The traditional logic focusing on cause and effect is insufficient to deal with
today’s systemic issues - be it in human, electronic, ecological or biological systems.

We talk about systems all the time but how much do we use Von Bertalanffy’s thinking? When
we talk about closed systems we should remember that they are isolated from the environment
(organisation-wise we talk about bureaucracy and “silos”) and are subject to the law of entropy
or decay.

Open systems, by contrast, receive inputs from their environment, work with those inputs and
return them to the environment in modified form as outputs.

Closed systems are in a way “machine like” and open systems “living organism like” with
significant elements of self-organisation.

Open and Closed World Views

Our world was dominated in the second half of the 20th century by the dichotomy between
Communism and Capitalism. While the world has “opened up” with the advance of
globalization and global integration during the last decades, we see even within our western
societies the rift between open and closed philosophies and concepts enduring and in some
cases even widening. Openness is associated with values such as tolerance, individual
freedom, lifelong learning, participation, empowerment and cooperation as opposed to typical
closed-world values of command and control, top-down management, centralized and
bureaucratic governance, over-regulation and collectivist dominance over individual freedom.
In today’s world of business we experience every day what openness means and what benefits
it brings to bear. Monopolies or near-monopolies are examples of the closed world as are
traditional hierarchies with their burgeoning bureaucracies and disconnected silos are typical
manifestations.

Democratic values in Business

Hence openness seems to be tied to fundamental democratic values. Closed social systems
remind us very much the times of the iron curtain….and of old style autocratic enterprise
governance. The “rediscovery” of democratic values and their power in business is reflected in
recent business literature such as “Democratizing Innovation” (von Hippel)4, “The wisdom of
Crowds” (Surowiecki)5 and showed up in a new report of the Arthur W. Pages society in the
context of democratizing channels of communications. Yet, the way openness and democratic
values show up in management literature and research reminds us not so much of the “voting
democracy” but rather as vibrant, participative democracy combined with a dose of horizontal
meritocracy – you earn your voice and your space in the community based on your experience
and contribution to the common good… Also, open environments are a fertile breeding ground
for broad based innovation.

These ideas and values are not new – why are they now getting new life? Human kind has
equipped itself during the last 15 years with a new electronic infrastructure that can potentially
connect everyone to everyone else and therefore has a limitless potential to create new social
systems at all levels. This infrastructure for communication and interaction has become



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extremely robust and is increasingly “high performing” (thanks to broadband). We see explosive
growth of new interactive capabilities and usage.

The rise of social networking sites, virtual worlds, blogs, wikis and 3D Internet give us a first
idea of the potential of the “interactive and collaborative web” dubbed Web 2.0. Now we have
the infrastructure and tools to operate in new ways in open systems. While many of the
thoughts about openness and the need for more open social systems have been around for
some time, this new infrastructure and new tools accelerate the movement. Hence technology
contributes and enables us increasingly to actually give life to many of the values that we have
been aspiring to.

The big Technology Cycles

Carlota Perez6, a Venezuelan scholar and expert on technology and socio-economic
development, has demonstrated the recurrence of typical phases in the five major technology
cycles starting with the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century. She argues that these cycles
have a duration of approximately 50 years. They start with the irruption of a new technology,
followed by period of frenzy (“Gold Rush”) that leads straight into a bubble.

The graphic shows the five cycles to date. They have in common a new technology leading to a
paradigm shift that fundamentally impacts the way we see the world, how we live, how we
organise our societies and our enterprises, how we work and so on.



      The Technology Cycles

                                                                                    Installation                      Deployment
                                                                                                          Crash
                                                                               Irruption     Frenzy               Synergy            Maturity
                                                                                                              • Formation of Mfg. industry
                      The Industrial                                                                 Panic
              1                                                                                               • Repeal of Corn Laws opening 1829
                                                                     1771
                      Revolution                                                                      1797
                                                                                                                trade

                                                                                                              • Standards on gauge, time
                      Age of Steam                                                                   Panic
              2                                                                                               • Catalog sales companies         1873
                                                                     1829
                      and Railways                                                                    1847
                                                                                                              • Economies of scale

                      Age of Steel, Electricity                                                               • Urban development
                                                                                              Depression
              3                                                      1875                                                                       1920
                      and Heavy Engineering                                                                   • Support for interventionism
                                                                                                    1893


                                                                                                              • Build-out of Interstate
                      Age of Oil, Automobiles                                                        Crash
              4 and Mass Production                                                                             highways
                                                                     1908                                                                       1974
                                                                                                      1929
                                                                                                              • IMF, World Bank, BIS

                      Age of Information and                                                       Dot.com               Period of
              5                                                      1971                          Collapse
                      Telecommunications                                                                          Innovation & Prosperity
                                                                                                       2000

      Source: Perez, C., “Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital”, 2002

                                                                                                                                  © 2007 IBM Corporation




Perez talks about an installation phase and a deployment phase following the bubble that in
turn lead into something good – a “golden age” that finally reaps the benefit of the new
technology, spawning a huge wave of innovation.

Perez has demonstrated that digital technology is now reaching the phase of “deployment”. The
benefits which are potentially huge are starting to show. While all the major cycles have shown
a similar pattern, there is no doubt that they also have different characteristics. Even though



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there is now a great opportunity for innovation and value creation there is no reason to be
complacent about this – the world is more turbulent than ever, the systemic interdependencies
may show in positive and negative ways just taking the example of today’s financial markets.
The speed of change is putting enormous pressure on all actors. Yet, a maturing and
standardizing and open technology infrastructure provides an unheard of potential of innovation
in products, services, business models and even at the societal level. With services taking the
lions share of value creation in our advanced economies (between 70 and 80 % of GNP and
employment) a transformation of our economic activity is in progress, which requires not only a
new enabling fabric but a different set of skills and competencies than were required in the
industrial economy.

Impact on Business

The new technology capabilities enable new organizational and operational models. The
corporation is shifting from a hierarchical, monolithic, “multinational” model to one that is
horizontal, networked and globally integrated. Because the operations and responsibilities of
organisations can now be componentised, “virtualised” and distributed over an ecosystem of
business relationships, work can be located wherever it makes most sense, driven by the
imperatives of economics, expertise and open business conditions. This creates new
challenges for companies to manage their identities and reputations.

In this environment companies can no longer guarantee life-long employment. The social
contract between employee and employer has changed in a highly competitive and fluid open
world. But equally, new employees may not wish to be locked into a long-term employment
relationship. In order to attract and retain key talent companies must contribute to equipping
their employees for this new open and global environment.

Empowerment of Employees and Users

At the same time, employees are getting more autonomous. The rise of the knowledge worker
poses new challenges to HR. The balance between the need to regulate and manage
professional’s activities and their need for autonomy is difficult to achieve. Talented
professionals with knowledge enjoy a technical superiority and relative independence vis-à-vis
the organisation. They tend to relate more to their peer-communities and professional
associations than to the firm. What they need most is interest in the job, challenge, fun and
freedom. The new generation entering the workplace (Generation “Y” or Millennials) is perfectly
reflecting these new “open” attitudes.

Open Innovation taking the Centre Stage

With regard to new Web 2.0 enabled capabilities for employees, business partners and users to
get involved with companies in new ways, innovation itself is changing fundamentally.
Innovation is becoming a more open process – “open innovation” has become a catch-phrase
with a lot of reality behind it. Power is shifting to the users who can make themselves heard in
case of concerns but who are also increasingly contributing to the innovation value chain to the
point of becoming the innovators themselves. Innovation is moving from company controlled
labs into the open space – “Living Labs” are becoming a strong movement in Europe to provide
an environment for open innovation and services creation. A European Network of Living Labs
has been announced under the Finnish EU Presidency7.

Towards a “perfect storm”?

An open world is a world of great opportunity and challenge. It requires changes in our
individual behaviours and attitudes and it demands major institutional adjustments.
Transformation initiatives at a large stage are very hard to accomplish – this is where leadership
and strong, courageous actions are required. Business and Academia will have to find much



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better synergy to face the challenges of tomorrow’s world. Best academic thinking and best
enterprise practice are required to develop the “perfect storm” towards an open world.

References
1
 Thomas L. Friedman, The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century,
First edition: 2005. Updated and expanded editions 2006 and 2007, Farrar, Straus and Giroux
2
Richard Florida, The World is Spiky. The ATLANTIC monthly, Oct. 2005
3
Karl Ludwig von Bertalanffy (September 19, 1901, Vienna, Austria – June 12, 1972, New York,
USA),one of the founders of General Systems Theorie (Allgemeine Systemtheorie)
4
 Eric von Hippel (evhippel@mit.edu), Professor and Head of the Innovation and
Entrepreneurship Group at the MIT Sloan School of Management, specialized in research
related to the nature and economics of distributed and open innovation. He has written
Democratizing Innovation, 2005, MIT Press
5
 James Surowiecki has written a book on the theory and practice of The Wisdom of Crowds—
Why The Many Are Smarter Than The Few And How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business,
Economies, Societies And Nations, 2004, Doubleday .
6
Carlota Perez, Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital: The Dynamics of Bubbles and
Golden Ages, 2002, Edward Elgar Publishing
7
 The European Network of Living Labs has been launched on 20 November 2006 in Espoo,
Finland. The initiative aims to set up a new European Innovation Infrastructure where users
play an active role in the innovation and can influence this to better serve their own needs.


Author

              Richard Straub
              Director of Development, European Foundation for Management Development
              (EFMD); Secretary General, European Learning Industry Group (ELIG);
              Advisor to the Chairman, IBM Europe, Middle-East and Africa
              straubr@fr.ibm.com


Citation instruction

Please refer to the original publication: Global Focus, Volume 2, Issue 1 (2008). Publisher:
European Foundation for Management Development www.efmd.org


Edition and production

Name of the publication: eLearning Papers
ISSN: 1887-1542
Publisher: elearningeuropa.info
Edited by: P.A.U. Education, S.L.
Postal address: C/ Muntaner 262, 3º, 08021 Barcelona, Spain
Telephone: +34 933 670 400
Email: editorial@elearningeuropa.info
Internet: www.elearningpapers.eu




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eLearning Papers • www.elearningpapers.eu •
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Is the world open?

  • 1. Is the world open? Richard Straub, Director of Development, European Foundation for Management Development (EFMD) Summary We talk about open societies, open innovation, open standards, open ecosystems, open source and open architectures. The idea of “openness” is emerging as a dominant attribute of key developments in our economic and social fabric. Richard Straub argues in this paper that “openness” is the defining quality of 21st century globalisation. In today’s world of business we experience every day what openness means and what benefits it brings to bear. Openness is associated with values such as tolerance, individual freedom, lifelong learning, participation, empowerment and cooperation, as opposed to typical closed- world values of command and control, top-down management, centralized and bureaucratic governance, over-regulation and collectivist dominance over individual freedom. Monopolies or near-monopolies are examples of the closed world as are traditional hierarchies with their burgeoning bureaucracies and disconnected silos are typical manifestations. The rise of social networking sites, virtual worlds, blogs, wikis and 3D Internet give us a first idea of the potential of the “interactive and collaborative web” dubbed Web 2.0. Now we have the infrastructure and tools to operate in new ways in open systems. While many of the thoughts about openness and the need for more open social systems have been around for some time, this new infrastructure and new tools accelerate the movement. An open world is a world of great opportunity and challenge. It requires changes in our individual behaviours and attitudes and it demands major institutional adjustments. How can business respond to it? Keywords: openness, collaborative web, open systems, globalisation, cooperation, participation This article has been published previously at Global Focus, Volume 2, Issue 1 (2008). Publisher: European Foundation for Management Development www.efmd.org Flat – Spiky or Open? You may remember the discussion about Tom Friedman’s Book “The World is Flat”1. Friedman argues that technology has created a level playing field for accessing markets, skills and expertise and integrating them wherever they might be. Innovation becomes accessible for all - “In a flat world you can innovate without having to emigrate”. The metaphor of the “flat world” drew acclaims but also criticism. Richard Florida2 instead opposed the notion of “spikiness” to the assumed flatness of the world, suggesting that there were geographical points of concentration such as centres of innovation, of skills, patent filings and of energy consumption. In short, he argues that location still matters. These two different lenses of looking at our world and making sense of it as far as scenarios for economic and social development are concerned are both important and valuable. Yet, I believe there is an additional perspective that we should not ignore. The idea of “openness” is emerging as a dominant attribute of key developments in our economic and social fabric. We talk about open societies, open innovation, open standards, open ecosystems, open source 1 eLearning Papers • www.elearningpapers.eu • Nº 8 • April 2008 • ISSN 1887-1542
  • 2. and open architectures – all using more or less consciously the foundational thinking from the 20th century systems theory. It was the biologist Ludwig von Bertalanffy3, one of the most acute minds of the 20th century who has established the foundations for a General Systems Theory showing the importance of a “systems view” and giving us a vocabulary and the scientific foundations for dealing with systems. We look at increasingly complex interrelationships between connected elements in systems at different levels. The traditional logic focusing on cause and effect is insufficient to deal with today’s systemic issues - be it in human, electronic, ecological or biological systems. We talk about systems all the time but how much do we use Von Bertalanffy’s thinking? When we talk about closed systems we should remember that they are isolated from the environment (organisation-wise we talk about bureaucracy and “silos”) and are subject to the law of entropy or decay. Open systems, by contrast, receive inputs from their environment, work with those inputs and return them to the environment in modified form as outputs. Closed systems are in a way “machine like” and open systems “living organism like” with significant elements of self-organisation. Open and Closed World Views Our world was dominated in the second half of the 20th century by the dichotomy between Communism and Capitalism. While the world has “opened up” with the advance of globalization and global integration during the last decades, we see even within our western societies the rift between open and closed philosophies and concepts enduring and in some cases even widening. Openness is associated with values such as tolerance, individual freedom, lifelong learning, participation, empowerment and cooperation as opposed to typical closed-world values of command and control, top-down management, centralized and bureaucratic governance, over-regulation and collectivist dominance over individual freedom. In today’s world of business we experience every day what openness means and what benefits it brings to bear. Monopolies or near-monopolies are examples of the closed world as are traditional hierarchies with their burgeoning bureaucracies and disconnected silos are typical manifestations. Democratic values in Business Hence openness seems to be tied to fundamental democratic values. Closed social systems remind us very much the times of the iron curtain….and of old style autocratic enterprise governance. The “rediscovery” of democratic values and their power in business is reflected in recent business literature such as “Democratizing Innovation” (von Hippel)4, “The wisdom of Crowds” (Surowiecki)5 and showed up in a new report of the Arthur W. Pages society in the context of democratizing channels of communications. Yet, the way openness and democratic values show up in management literature and research reminds us not so much of the “voting democracy” but rather as vibrant, participative democracy combined with a dose of horizontal meritocracy – you earn your voice and your space in the community based on your experience and contribution to the common good… Also, open environments are a fertile breeding ground for broad based innovation. These ideas and values are not new – why are they now getting new life? Human kind has equipped itself during the last 15 years with a new electronic infrastructure that can potentially connect everyone to everyone else and therefore has a limitless potential to create new social systems at all levels. This infrastructure for communication and interaction has become 2 eLearning Papers • www.elearningpapers.eu • Nº 8 • April 2008 • ISSN 1887-1542
  • 3. extremely robust and is increasingly “high performing” (thanks to broadband). We see explosive growth of new interactive capabilities and usage. The rise of social networking sites, virtual worlds, blogs, wikis and 3D Internet give us a first idea of the potential of the “interactive and collaborative web” dubbed Web 2.0. Now we have the infrastructure and tools to operate in new ways in open systems. While many of the thoughts about openness and the need for more open social systems have been around for some time, this new infrastructure and new tools accelerate the movement. Hence technology contributes and enables us increasingly to actually give life to many of the values that we have been aspiring to. The big Technology Cycles Carlota Perez6, a Venezuelan scholar and expert on technology and socio-economic development, has demonstrated the recurrence of typical phases in the five major technology cycles starting with the Industrial Revolution of the 19th century. She argues that these cycles have a duration of approximately 50 years. They start with the irruption of a new technology, followed by period of frenzy (“Gold Rush”) that leads straight into a bubble. The graphic shows the five cycles to date. They have in common a new technology leading to a paradigm shift that fundamentally impacts the way we see the world, how we live, how we organise our societies and our enterprises, how we work and so on. The Technology Cycles Installation Deployment Crash Irruption Frenzy Synergy Maturity • Formation of Mfg. industry The Industrial Panic 1 • Repeal of Corn Laws opening 1829 1771 Revolution 1797 trade • Standards on gauge, time Age of Steam Panic 2 • Catalog sales companies 1873 1829 and Railways 1847 • Economies of scale Age of Steel, Electricity • Urban development Depression 3 1875 1920 and Heavy Engineering • Support for interventionism 1893 • Build-out of Interstate Age of Oil, Automobiles Crash 4 and Mass Production highways 1908 1974 1929 • IMF, World Bank, BIS Age of Information and Dot.com Period of 5 1971 Collapse Telecommunications Innovation & Prosperity 2000 Source: Perez, C., “Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital”, 2002 © 2007 IBM Corporation Perez talks about an installation phase and a deployment phase following the bubble that in turn lead into something good – a “golden age” that finally reaps the benefit of the new technology, spawning a huge wave of innovation. Perez has demonstrated that digital technology is now reaching the phase of “deployment”. The benefits which are potentially huge are starting to show. While all the major cycles have shown a similar pattern, there is no doubt that they also have different characteristics. Even though 3 eLearning Papers • www.elearningpapers.eu • Nº 8 • April 2008 • ISSN 1887-1542
  • 4. there is now a great opportunity for innovation and value creation there is no reason to be complacent about this – the world is more turbulent than ever, the systemic interdependencies may show in positive and negative ways just taking the example of today’s financial markets. The speed of change is putting enormous pressure on all actors. Yet, a maturing and standardizing and open technology infrastructure provides an unheard of potential of innovation in products, services, business models and even at the societal level. With services taking the lions share of value creation in our advanced economies (between 70 and 80 % of GNP and employment) a transformation of our economic activity is in progress, which requires not only a new enabling fabric but a different set of skills and competencies than were required in the industrial economy. Impact on Business The new technology capabilities enable new organizational and operational models. The corporation is shifting from a hierarchical, monolithic, “multinational” model to one that is horizontal, networked and globally integrated. Because the operations and responsibilities of organisations can now be componentised, “virtualised” and distributed over an ecosystem of business relationships, work can be located wherever it makes most sense, driven by the imperatives of economics, expertise and open business conditions. This creates new challenges for companies to manage their identities and reputations. In this environment companies can no longer guarantee life-long employment. The social contract between employee and employer has changed in a highly competitive and fluid open world. But equally, new employees may not wish to be locked into a long-term employment relationship. In order to attract and retain key talent companies must contribute to equipping their employees for this new open and global environment. Empowerment of Employees and Users At the same time, employees are getting more autonomous. The rise of the knowledge worker poses new challenges to HR. The balance between the need to regulate and manage professional’s activities and their need for autonomy is difficult to achieve. Talented professionals with knowledge enjoy a technical superiority and relative independence vis-à-vis the organisation. They tend to relate more to their peer-communities and professional associations than to the firm. What they need most is interest in the job, challenge, fun and freedom. The new generation entering the workplace (Generation “Y” or Millennials) is perfectly reflecting these new “open” attitudes. Open Innovation taking the Centre Stage With regard to new Web 2.0 enabled capabilities for employees, business partners and users to get involved with companies in new ways, innovation itself is changing fundamentally. Innovation is becoming a more open process – “open innovation” has become a catch-phrase with a lot of reality behind it. Power is shifting to the users who can make themselves heard in case of concerns but who are also increasingly contributing to the innovation value chain to the point of becoming the innovators themselves. Innovation is moving from company controlled labs into the open space – “Living Labs” are becoming a strong movement in Europe to provide an environment for open innovation and services creation. A European Network of Living Labs has been announced under the Finnish EU Presidency7. Towards a “perfect storm”? An open world is a world of great opportunity and challenge. It requires changes in our individual behaviours and attitudes and it demands major institutional adjustments. Transformation initiatives at a large stage are very hard to accomplish – this is where leadership and strong, courageous actions are required. Business and Academia will have to find much 4 eLearning Papers • www.elearningpapers.eu • Nº 8 • April 2008 • ISSN 1887-1542
  • 5. better synergy to face the challenges of tomorrow’s world. Best academic thinking and best enterprise practice are required to develop the “perfect storm” towards an open world. References 1 Thomas L. Friedman, The World Is Flat: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century, First edition: 2005. Updated and expanded editions 2006 and 2007, Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2 Richard Florida, The World is Spiky. The ATLANTIC monthly, Oct. 2005 3 Karl Ludwig von Bertalanffy (September 19, 1901, Vienna, Austria – June 12, 1972, New York, USA),one of the founders of General Systems Theorie (Allgemeine Systemtheorie) 4 Eric von Hippel (evhippel@mit.edu), Professor and Head of the Innovation and Entrepreneurship Group at the MIT Sloan School of Management, specialized in research related to the nature and economics of distributed and open innovation. He has written Democratizing Innovation, 2005, MIT Press 5 James Surowiecki has written a book on the theory and practice of The Wisdom of Crowds— Why The Many Are Smarter Than The Few And How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies And Nations, 2004, Doubleday . 6 Carlota Perez, Technological Revolutions and Financial Capital: The Dynamics of Bubbles and Golden Ages, 2002, Edward Elgar Publishing 7 The European Network of Living Labs has been launched on 20 November 2006 in Espoo, Finland. The initiative aims to set up a new European Innovation Infrastructure where users play an active role in the innovation and can influence this to better serve their own needs. Author Richard Straub Director of Development, European Foundation for Management Development (EFMD); Secretary General, European Learning Industry Group (ELIG); Advisor to the Chairman, IBM Europe, Middle-East and Africa straubr@fr.ibm.com Citation instruction Please refer to the original publication: Global Focus, Volume 2, Issue 1 (2008). Publisher: European Foundation for Management Development www.efmd.org Edition and production Name of the publication: eLearning Papers ISSN: 1887-1542 Publisher: elearningeuropa.info Edited by: P.A.U. Education, S.L. Postal address: C/ Muntaner 262, 3º, 08021 Barcelona, Spain Telephone: +34 933 670 400 Email: editorial@elearningeuropa.info Internet: www.elearningpapers.eu 5 eLearning Papers • www.elearningpapers.eu • Nº 8 • April 2008 • ISSN 1887-1542