The Irish Times Innovation Awards April 2014 | Page 10
JUDGING
Awards to celebrate ordinary
people with extraordinary
commitment
Chris Horn
The process started early last December when more than
100 companies submitted entries; followed by an evaluation
in January to produce a short list of 18 finalists and then a
finalists’ judging day in mid February.
There are six innovation categories, with a prize in each
category: agri-food, bioscience, creative industries, energy
and the environment, IT and telecommunications, and
manufacturing. There is also a special recognition award,
for the best North-South collaboration. Finally, an overall
Innovation of the Year is chosen from among the six category
winners.
I had the privilege of chairing the finalists’ panel of seven
judges. A few weeks earlier, we had been sent the submission
from each of the three finalists in each of the six categories,
allowing us plenty of time to read through the entries.
Four of the 18 are based in Northern Ireland. The judging day
was hosted in the board room of The Irish Times in Dublin,
with each of the three teams in the various categories in turn
making a short presentation to the judges and answering
questions.
Also, the various independent referees cited by the finalists
were contacted and the veracity of each submission
confirmed.
The six category winners individually receive a media deal
worth €10,000, and an iPad with one year subscription to The
Irish Times.
The overall Innovation of the Year will also receive a
communications and advertising package worth €150,000, an
executive education programme from UCD and a high-end
laptop (with an Irish Times subscription).
It certainly was a challenge for the judging panel to compare
and contrast the varying business focus of the finalists.
We were keen to establish that each entry already has
satisfied customers, rather than just being a prototype with as
yet unproven market prospects.
We also wanted to establish the sustainability of each
innovation: if a new offering does not have a viable business
model, and a clearly articulated competitive positioning, then
we deemed it a weak submission.
Yet another consideration for us was to what extent the
innovation is defensible. Can it be easily duplicated by a
competitor, and what barriers to entry (such as specialist
know-how, market leadership, technical complexity, and
patents) are in place to reduce this risk?
An important deliberation for us was whether an innovation is
potentially a world-first, or instead just an idea already wellproven elsewhere which has been imported into the Irish
market.
Does the innovation have export potential?
For me, the most encouraging conclusion from the finalists
was the breadth of entrepreneurship and innovation
across different business sectors, North and South. I saw a
determination to innovate and compete, in new products,
services or novel business processes.
Established companies are successfully reinventing
themselves, and new ventures with significant innovations
are being successfully launched.
There is also a strengthening interaction between companies
North and South, and it was noteworthy how many of the
finalists have formed collaborative clusters of expertise.
The annual Irish Times InterTradeIreland Awards are so
valuable because they celebrate the determination and
courage of individual innovators and entrepreneurs. The
short-listed finalists all show how belief, persistence, and
teamwork can transform people into leaders not only
respected by those who work with them, but also by society
at large.
Leaders become inspirations for others: if my family relative,
if my friend down the street, if my colleague in my sports
club, can achieve so much, then maybe I can also do so.
Entrepreneurs are ordinary people who have developed
extraordinary conviction.
The economy of the Republic is still dependent on the
benefits received from a relatively high proportion of
multinationals operating here. The economy of Northern
Ireland is still dependent on a relatively large public sector.
Pivotal private sector
Changes in global regulations for corporation tax, led by the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development,
are imminent and almost certainly will have detrimental
consequences for the Republic’s economy.
The economy in Northern Ireland needs to substantially
strengthen its private sector. Both North and South, we need
to revise our economies to bring innovation to the fore. We
need to revise economic policies so that entrepreneurship is
more proactively rewarded.
I have written before in this column on how public
procurement and taxation policies could be augmented to
this end. Both economies need to rapidly evolve so as to
attract and retain foreign direct investment primarily based
on the creativity and inventiveness of the indigenous sector,
providing a torrent of practical innovations primed for the
global market.