annual conference 2010

Supplemental materials

These are materials that presenters have made available in addition to their conference presentations.

Powerpoint presentation for Guiding Principles for Sustainable Humanitarian Engineering Projects, Thursday 1A1

Paper for Quality and Consistency in Idea Pitch, Research Proposal and Business Plan Competition Judging, Saturday 2E3

D-Lab Wind Belt instructions, Saturday 2B

Open 2010 in San Francisco next week!

Register now for Open 2010! There's still time.

Open 2010 is next week!

Join 250 thought leaders at the premier conference on innovation and entrepreneurship:

More about Open! See you in San Francisco next week! (March 25-27)

Places of Invention Tour

   

Join us for a tour of seminal "places of invention" in Silicon Valley! This four-hour minibus excursion, on the Thursday afternoon and Friday morning of Open 2010, will visit:

Space is limited to 24 seats (12 per day)! Reserve your seat NOW!

Join tour guides from the Lemelson Center for the Study of Invention and Innovation and The Tech Museum of Innovation and enjoy a unique view of Silicon Valley.

More information and reserve your seat NOW!

 

'Open 2010' Speakers

 

Doug Richard: The Entrepreneurs' Revolution

Keynote, Thursday March 25, 1pm.

Doug, founder of the School for Startups, will give the keynote address at Open 2010, the NCIIA Annual Conference. Known in the UK and the US as an outspoken and leading entrepreneur, Doug will address:

  • Why the public interest is best served by self-interest;
  • Why the most successful enterprises are all social enterprises;
  • Why entreprenuers 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 entreprenuership; and
  • Why universities are our best hope for cultural change.

 

Steve Blank

Breakfast plenary, Saturday, March 27, 8:30am

Steve is the author of the hottest book on marketing today: Four Steps to the Epiphany. He started up eight high tech companies during the boom time in Silicon Valley 1978-1999; he's since taught entrepreneurship at U.C. Berkeley, Stanford University and the Columbia University/Berkeley Joint Executive MBA program. The "Customer Development" model that Steve developed in his book is one of the core themes in these classes.

 

 

 

Keynote - Doug Richard: The Entrepreneurs' Revolution

 

We're very pleased to welcome Doug Richard, founder of the School for Startups, to the NCIIA Annual Conference. Doug is a leading proponent and practitioner of entrepreneurship in the United Kingdom and the U.S. In his keynote address, Doug will discuss entrepreneurship, its importance in the modern economy, and the role of government and universities in catalysing 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 entreprenuers 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 entreprenuership; and
Why universities are our best hope for cultural change.

He's known to many as a TV star - he appeared in the first two series of the Dragon's Den, a show that sees entrepreneurs pitching for investment from some of Britain's top business brains.

Doug brings with him a considerable entrepreneurial pedigree. He's the founder of School for Startups, Chairman and CEO of Trutap, founder and member of the Cambridge Angels, Chairman of the Conservative Party Small Business Task Force, director of Pearl Software and non-executive director of BeatsDigital.

In 2006 Doug was an Honorary Recipient of The Queen's Award for Enterprise Promotion. In 2007, he became a fellow of the RSA and in July 2009 was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Essex.

Doug is a successful entrepreneur with 20 years' experience in the development and leadership of technology and software ventures, both in the US and in the UK. Between 1996 and 2000 he was President and CEO of Micrografx, a US publicly quoted software company. Prior to that he also founded and subsequently sold two other companies: Visual Software and ITAL Computers. Doug holds a BA in Psychology from University of California at Berkeley and a Juris Doctor at the school of Law, University of California at Los Angeles.

Venues

For the first time, the NCIIA Annual Conference will be held in San Francisco, the technology innovation capital of the US.

We are pleased to hold the conference at the Hilton-Financial District, adjacent downtown San Francisco. Book your room here.

March Madness for the Mind, the NCIIA's annual showcase of student innovation, will be held at the nearby Exploratorium Museum.

Travel and directions
The main airport in San Francisco in San Francisco International. SFI is about 12 miles from the Hilton Financial District. You can then take the BART (or a taxi) to the hotel:

Ground transportation and directions to the hotel (from SFI)
The Hilton has these suggestions.

Bay Area Rapid Transport (BART) system
We encourage you to use the BART, San Francisco's public transport system, to travel between SFI and the Hilton. It's the cheapest (approx $4) and greenist option.

Fees and Register

Register today!

Affordable ...

Presenter $490
NCIIA member
$650
Non-NCIIA member (before Feb 15, 2010) $845
Student $325
One-day only $250
March Madness for the Mind only $75

... and great value! Included in your registration:

  • Thursday, Friday and Saturday breakfasts and refreshment breaks
  • Thursday, Friday and Saturday luncheons
  • Friday evening March Madness for the Mind event and dinner (includes transport to and from the Exploratorium)

 Register today!

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