Sunday, October 05, 2014

La app de los 115M de pesos ($8.8M) - 25/11/2013

Estos días hemos estado muy ocupados en ESADE con un workshop con el World Bank, un par de eventos tipo TEDx y Smart City Expo. Todo alrededor de las Smart Cities. Allí hemos tenido oportunidad de escuchar muchas historias de cómo el código abierto, compartir código y metodologías como Living Labs están avanzando en el mundo local. Una de estas historias ha logrado resonar en muchos de nosotros porque es una muestra de la creciente capacidad de las comunidades de desarrolladores en América Latina y por ende de su capacidad de realizar propuestas viables, brillantes y transformadoras.
En Marzo del 2013 el gobierno mejicano abrió un concurso para la realización de una app para el congreso y para ello abrió un concurso que dotó con 115M de pesos (alrededor de unos $8.8M). Este concurso creó sin duda una gran expectación por lo exagerado de su cuantía, de hecho un experto señaló como más adecuada la cifra de $500,000. Sin embargo, a la comunidad de desarrolladores mejicanos liderada por Codeando México  le siguió pareciendo exagerada y vio en este concurso una oportunidad de usarlo como ejemplo de que estos temas se podían y deberían enfocar de una forma diferente.

Para ello lanzó un reto a la comunidad de desarrolladores ofreciendo como premio el 0.01% del premio original, es decir 115.00 pesos, equivalente a unos $880, es decir unas 10,000 veces más barato y un iPad mini de premio. El título del reto fue sin duda sugestivo: "Derrocando a la mexican tech mafia!.

Aproximadamente diez días después (el 23 de marzo- el reto del gobierno se presentó el 13 de Marzo del 2013) se habían presentado más de 100 apps, algunas de ellas de altísima calidad. De ellas se escogieron tres. El congreso anuló el concurso oficial, escogió las apps elegidas y se sumó a la entrega de premios.

Este es un ejemplo más de uno de los temas candentes en la administración. La realidad del mundo del software ha cambiado radicalmente en las últimas décadas. Hoy en día, ésta viene caracterizada por ecosistemas mixtos donde coexisten empresas y desarrolladores individuales, organizaciones for profit y non-for-profit. Apple y Google han entendido perfectamente el mensaje y la App Store y Google Play son una muestra de esta diversidad. Es hora de que desde lo público hagamos lo mismo, la app de los 115 millones de pesos y la reacción de la comunidad de desarrolladores mejicanos es una muestra de ello.


  

Innovation Policy - From monetary incentives to behavioral and experimentation - 10/3/2013

When we think of policies, we inevitably think of taxes or fiscal stimulus. Innovation is certainly no stranger. The promotion innovation is often implemented as a tax relief for investments categorised as innovation.

I guess we are all immediately able to recognise the limitations and shortcomings of this practice. Just to follow with the line of reasoning above, once the tax relief is effective, suddenly many investments are re-labeled as innovation investments or if the implementation is costly and the elasticity of the sector is low ... they fail to attract companies that want to implement it.

We all are aware that monetary incentives go as far as they go and very often backfire. This is particularly true when we deal with a complex system where solutions vary a lot in their effectiveness as a result of small changes in either their design or implementation.

Complex systems are the result of multiple factors interacting together and many agents that try to adapt to them. Markets and particularly innovation, are good examples. As a result of this interaction, excellent solutions are close to the ones that don't work, there is not a smooth path, an incremental way to approach best solutions.

In addition to that, the new all digital world makes more necessary to put in place specific policies. We need to promote apps that use Open Data or innovation in citizenship by developing new participatory systems or the change in business models in the electrical grid allowing co-generation. All this is certainly very specific, very precise to be able to be addressed by generic monetary stimulus.

Therefore leading agencies and leading cities are promoting new types of policies where the monetary incentive takes the backseat.

A good example of this is the use of challenges - competitions - in order to promote innovation in a particular field. This is not new, the XIX century is full of them, but actual IT platforms make it straightforward and global. DARPA competitions or any Open Data or apps4x challenge such as Bigapps, apps4Amsterdam, apps4Barcelona, apps4Finland, etc...

This type of policies draw more on the behavioural aspect than on monetary incentives, and they backfire less. A good example of these policies is the use of the concept of free versus a small payment. Humans don't react linearly between free and small amounts, free always draws more than a proportional level of attention.

Therefore the use of small payments is useful in situations such as traffic congestion. Because traffic congestion is also not linear, a proportionally small reduction of it produces a more than significant impact, the use of small payments can lead to this small reduction and therefore to solving a problem that looked insolvable. A good example of this is Stockholm, where this small tax was introduced, taken away and reintroduced, producing a kind of natural experiment. And by the way, surveys show that the population is happy about the tax (it is important that the tax doesn't limit the behaviour of a sector of the population because of affordability ... this is certainly not the case of Stockholm).

Therefore it looks like this kind of problems are better solved by using behavioural policies. However, if this is a complex system how can we be sure that they are appropriate?

The easy and complex answer is that you cannot. In complex systems is very difficult to predict the REAL outcome without trying, therefore experimentation is a must. Experimentation can we implemented in multiple forms but it is the only way to really learn about colateral effects and overall effectiveness and experimentation has to lead to getting rid of the policies that don't work, modify and perfect the ones that are promising and strength the ones that work.

Policies have to be easily understood and known by the actors in order to be effective. Nothing more useless that an unknown policy or one that only tax-experts are aware of. This is the reason why they must be simple, limited in number and easy to understand. Attention, particularly now, is scarce.

Summarising, the future of innovation policy is headed towards simple, limited in number, behavioural and experimentation enabled by IT and IT platforms that aim to address specific sectors and needs. This is certainly a dramatic change and we look at the reality of our legislation system and the organizations that implement policy ... a long way to go. However, I suspect that it is the only effective one ...

Three years ago ... and why now, why again - 03/10/2013

It has been three years since my last blog. In these three years many things happened both in my personal life and in innovation, the subject of this blog ...

As Bill Gates once said, Innovate or Die is the logic behind in the market we are in, or if we want to express it in other words, most of market now competes on innovation and this is probably more true than ever.

However, the way in which this competition occurs is changing fast. Innovation is no longer well represented solely by the interchange of new technologies or product/service/business models developments between two firms.

Innovation doesn't even have to be incorporated in your company for being able to use it in competition. In ecosystems, you align your strategy with the ones of other companies allowing the whole ecosystem to compete with the innovation of others without internalizing it, benefiting from the externalities of it.

The Public Sector, particularly Cities, is also changing fast. From Open Data to Urban Labs or Code Sharing through efforts such as Code for Europe, Code for Africa or Code for America, is poisoned to change the way cities are managed, at least the leading ones. Efforts where, in some of them, I have the fortune to participate.

Therefore, plenty to talk about, where hopefully I could contribute to the general discussion on Innovation and Innovation Policy.

One last thing, Dear Reader, thanks a lot for being there, your comments and discussion are always welcome. Please let's enjoy it !!!!

esteve almirall