Steve Nimmons

Steve is head of Enterprise Architecture Consulting in the UK, a member of the Atos Scientific Community and global track leader for Open Innovation. A Certified European Engineer, Chartered Engineer, Chartered Fellow of the British Computer Society, Fellow of the Royal Institution, Royal Society of Arts, Linnean Society, Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Institute for the Management of Information Systems and Institution of Analysts and Programmers he is a Freeman of London, an Honorary Citizen of North Carolina and a Commissioned Kentucky Colonel. Steve describes himself as a “polymath, lapsang souchong ‘addict’ and a pattern seeker”

Open Innovation and the Ecosystem of Everything

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Towards Increased Openness

Innovation in the 21st century is increasingly open, collaborative, multi-disciplinary and global. There are erosion factors which are providing increasing challenges for traditional R&D functions to retain knowledge. Of these mobility of people, loss of technological hegemony, increasing sophistication of university research schemes, knowledge leak, pervasive communities of users practicing their own innovation and availability of venture capital are key factors.

Closed Innovation is being challenged; Joy’s law states:

No matter who you are, most of the smartest people work for someone else.

Tapping into the knowledge that sits outside of the enterprise and having a process to cross-fertilise internal innovation strategy is therefore important and increasingly prevalent. read more

Vanguard of the Age of Reason

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The Age of Enlightenment

One of my favourite periods in history is that of the 18th Century Enlightenment, a great outpouring of intellectual and scientific achievement. My heroes are the vanguard philosophers, mathematicians and scientists who challenged norms, received wisdom and at times wilful ignorance. Bacon, Descartes, Spinoza and Hobbes as forerunners, Francis Hutcheson, Adam Smith and David Hume, Newton, Diderot, Leibniz, Locke, Kant and Montesquieu and other influential thinkers across Scotland, England, France, Germany, Russia and Poland. read more