Cornelia's Weblog

my sporadically shared thoughts on, well, whatever is capturing my attention at the moment.

Archive for October, 2008

EMC = Innovation?

Is that what springs to mind when you think of EMC? Isn’t it HP that = “invent”? Well, yeah, that HP marketing campaign was very successful but marketing or no, HP’s simply known for that innovative spirit. But EMC – what are they known for? Storage systems? Great sales force? Yes and yes. But innovation?I admit, this isn’t likely to spring to mind but, at least for me and I suspect many of my colleagues, this is changing. I just got back from a week in Franklin, MA where EMC held its second annual innovation conference and I’d like to tell you a bit about it. First, it is an internal conference – last year it had attendance of approximately 300 – this year over 1000, more than half of which were via remote participation including video conferencing (so frankly, I think parts of it were attended by far more than 1000 people). There are several significant elements to this event.First, is the Innovation Showcase. In the June timeframe a call for papers goes out (internally) where employees are encouraged to submit their ideas. From the submissions 30 finalists are selected and those are presented at the conference, both for “official” judging and for people’s choice. Of those 30, one people’s choice award is selected, and the top 4 are selected by that official panel of judges. Last year there approx 450 submissions were made, this year 984 from 19 countries. The cool thing is that ideas come from many different functions, in many cases individuals submit ideas that are not specifically related to their day jobs. By and large the ideas are mostly technical, though some of the finalists presented process oriented ideas as well – one of these won an honorable mention this year. The spirit of friendly competition is fantastic and the ideas are just superb. Very, very fun. (And I just saw a PR go out on the conference – you can see more of the details on the showcase and other things here)The agenda includes internal speakers, at least one strategic customer and a set of talks from our university partners. Of those sessions, this year there was one that was quite a highlight: on Thursday morning we had a “round the world tour”. This session had a moderator in the room in Franklin who kicked off by giving us all an overview of the Centers of Excellence within EMC. We have them in China, India, Isreal and Russia and in some locations the number of employees is significant. After this overview we switched from slides on the screen to video. The first stop was China and when the camera came up on a room full of probably two to three hundred people (mind you, it was between 10 and 11PM in China!!) with one representative standing at the front with a headset on, something very cool happened. All of our China colleagues waved. And we waved back. I know it seems simple and perhaps no big deal, but it was really, really cool. There were folks in the room with whom I have been working for months via online collaboration and frequent conference calls. Particularly since I telecomute and am used to working with people remotely, I already feel I know these folks pretty well, in spite of never having seen them. But to have a video connection was somehow powerful – we really connected!! That session was quite the buzz – my impressions seem to have been shared by the bulk of the audience. I’m looking forward to our next concall with my China colleagues to get their impression.Innovating as a big company with many established products and customers is never easy. Not only is balancing investment in those existing products and customers with investments in the new stuff is a challenge, the cultural differences are also a challenge. EMC made the committment a few years ago to take a different approach to research, creating an Innovation Network instead of autonomous research centers. The Innovation Conference, along with other things such as a EMC Fellow and Distinguished Engineering Program and lecture series are making a big impact.Yeah, EMC is a wicked cool place to work.

one.org

I try, every once in a while, to make my way over to ted.com to watch one of the always inspirational talks. I must admit that it is hard to not watch one after the other but so far I’ve been good at rationing – I always want to make sure there is one more talk I haven’t yet seen.This evening I watched Bono speak. The recording was from 2005 and, of course, covered the cause emergency that he is now well known for – the plight in Africa. It’s somewhat ironic that I watched this now, in the fall of 2008, a time when the economy of (historically) one of the world’s major, superpowers is absolutely melting down. I couldn’t help but think about the blow that this movement will sustain because attentions are (necessarily) adverted elsewhere. That is not to say that this issue has to go on the back burner – no way – we just need to multitask!In any case, the talk was great! Bono is a gifted speaker with boatloads to coolness added in. For those of you who may not be familiar with the statistics – Bono tells that 6500 people die in Africa from Aids EVERY DAY. Today there are 11 million Aids orphans on the continent – by the end of the decade there will be 20 million.Woah.And furthermore, millions more are dieing simply because they don’t have enough to eat.Woah.One thing I particularly liked about Bono’s talk was his assertion that helping Africa is more than just a human rights issue but that it also just makes good business sense. Befriending people today that might otherwise be our enemies tomorrow – that is a very good investment. Can’t argue with that can we?But the coolest thing about his delivery is that the rock star spoke to the geeks in the room. He expressed his admiration for the work that they have done and the tremendous change it has brought to the world. And he then called on everyone to use that same ingenuity, and yes, even the technology, to change the world again.Rather than giving away any more of the talk I’ll encourage you all to view it yourselves, and afterward go sign up at www.one.org. I did.I’ll leave you with one final quote from Bono:

Where you live in the world should not determine whether you live in the world.