How Companies Should Behave More Like Universities

A quality engineering University does at least three things for society:

  1. Research and develop new materials, products and processes.
  2. Educate undergrads the basics and what they’re learning via professors and graduate students.
  3. Spin-off companies or sell intellectual property so new technology can be commercialized for the benefit of the public.

For the companies that heavily invest in high-tech R&D to generate future business, perhaps they should be looking to certain universities as models to innovate more effectively.  #1 above applied to company is of course the main function of most R&D divisions in a high-tech company. With #3, companies typically keep possession of their own businesses and IP and do not often spin-off. Role #2 however, may be a stretch for a company to embrace as something they should focus on; in role #2 I propose that the educators should be the managers, scientists, engineers and technicians and the students are those same managers, scientists, engineers and technicians.  We should be comfortable with wearing both “hats”, we should be full-time teachers and students.

I think the role of teacher in a R&D company is largely neglected, teaching skills are rarely developed if at all, they are only developed in a select few employees. I think this is a major mistake in R&D high-tech companies today.

The concept of collaboration, conferences, technical reviews and even internal monthly reporting is largely a teaching activity.  If you think about it we are teaching constantly but largely we do not teach with intention.  

Companies with large R&D investment in their business plans ought to accept the idea that almost all employees should be actively teaching and developing their teaching skills.

How much of your time is spent teaching and/or being taught throughout your work day?

Say No, Every Day

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Your capacity to say “No” determines your capacity to say “Yes” to greater things.
E. Stanley Jones

I say no every morning to sleeping in so I can say yes to excercise and writting.

What have you said no to recently?

When Smart is Not Enough

 

“Most organizations exploit only a fraction of the knowledge, experience, and intellectual capital that is available to them. But the healthy ones tap into almost all of it.”  – Patrick Lencioni

This quote is very true and can not be emphasized enough.  I work with some of the most intellectually talented people.  I am an engineer from an above average engineering program in glass and ceramics, my grades were above average.  But compared to some of the people I have worked with I feel quite simple.  Our company is quite fortunate to have some of these people as employees, but one thing I’ve noticed is that no matter how intelligent some of employees are it really does not matter if there is not a healthy culture as their foundation.  If there is a secretive, credit-stealing work ethic with unhealthy competition then the intelligence of these scientists, engineers and managers is almost completely neutralized. It is mostly culture that determines the effectiveness of an innovative team of researchers, the intelligence of the team is a factor but much less so than culture and health. When ‘crazy’ dominates an organization (no matter how smart they are!), and worse yet when managment routinely promotes ‘crazy’ it is under-cutting competance and pursuit of knowledge, it is throwing fairness and good ethics ‘under the bus’. I’ve seen it, I’ve experienced it, I’ve seen the impact it has on the quality employees.  I look forward to the day that all R&D teams that I work on or lead are healthy and mature so that the intelligence and creativity of ALL team members is harnassed like it can be for maximum growth and so the fastest time to market can be realized. .

What qualities do you think should be in an healthy R&D organization?

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