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Spring 2007

Toronto Cluster
Action/Research Event

The Value of Networks:
21st Century Economy and Business

Friday 23 March 2007
8:00am - 5:00pm

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GenIsis Technology & Value Network Fieldbook
(Use Discount Code VNA41)

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Toronto Cluster
Action/Research Event

The Kingbridge Centre
The Learning Laboratory

12750 Jane Street
King City, Ontario
Canada L7B 1A3

Tel: 905.833.3086
Fax: 905.833.3075
Reservations: 800.827.7221
 


The Value of Networks:
21st Century Economy and Business

Secure Registration Form

Time Interaction Speaker
07:30 - 08:30 Continental Breakfast & Registration Staff
08:30 - 9:45 Complexity Complex Systems

 

 


Network Strategies for Enterprise Value Networks
Organizational and Value Network Analysis
 

 

Verna Allee

 

09:45 - 10:30 Tools and Applications

Value Network Analysis Case Studies:
Tools, Standards, Results


Oliver Schwabe
10:30 - 11:00 Participant Introductions
Morning Break
All
11:00 - 11:45 Enterprise Value Networks

 

 

 

Customer Interaction Network
Cisco Systems Customer Intimacy Strategy


LaVeta Gibbs

 

11:45 - 12:30 Global Value Networks

Wikinomics:
How the Smartest Companies Create Value
in the Age of Mass Collaboration

 


Anthony D. Williams


12:30 - 1:30  Hosted Luncheon All
1:30-2:00 Value Network Adoption

 

Intangibles:
How to Identify Intangibles
 


Bryan Davis

Kaieteur Institute For Knowledge Management
 

2:00-2:45 Value Network Adoption

NetMat Group Exercise:
How to Identify Intangibles
 

Verna Allee
Oliver Schwabe
 

2:45-3:30 Network Visualization and Analysis

GenIsis V1.0
Open Source Tools for Value Networks

 

Oliver Schwabe
 
3:30 - 4:00 Afternoon Refreshments All
4:00 - 5:00 Panel


The Future of Networks


Verna Allee
Dr. Nick Bontis 
Dave Pollard
LaVeta Gibbs
Oliver Schwabe
Anthony Williams

 
5:00 Spring 2007 Adjournment and Reception

Benefits

The Action/Research themes for Spring 2007 are value networks, social networks and network analysis. Over the last several years network archetypes and analysis have exploded onto the KM, collaboration, community, organizational and institutional scene. A relatively mature and established discipline, social networks and value network analysis are now being applied broadly with stunning results. A lot of new applications have emerged and new, innovative practices have been discovered. The non-commercial, open, low-cost and authentic Spring 2007 action/research conversations will cover this territory and equip you with the following benefits and advantages.
 

-Develop leadership skills in value and social networks
-Be able to define and elaborate value and social networks
-Learn the synergy of value networks and social networks
-Understand how to plan and apply value network analysis
-Develop relationships with value network leaders and users
-Become active in the global value networks and SNA community
-Describe value network users organizations and their advantages
-Transform yourself and organizations to the value networks perspective
-Greatly expand your value network and analysis capability with Open GenIsis™ Technology
-Elaborate how value networks and SNA expands and improves current methods such as Lean, TQM, 6-Sigma, Hoshin, ISO-9000, OD/OL, System Dynamics, Baldridge, etc.
 

Your clusters are 100% governed, sponsored, funded and led by participants.

"Now that I know the value networks methodology, I would not consider doing a six sigma, lean, or any other kind of project without first doing a VNA to provide the "systems" context for the initiative." – Glenda Turner, Boeing, Supply Chain Integrator, Integrated Defense Systems

Value propels organizations. Networks are how organizations are defined. Yet, well-meaning people continue to focus on information access, transactions, process, frameworks and productivity only. The same people freely admit 80%, 90% or even 100% (service/support networks) of their business and value is based on intangibles, yet they continue to only focus on transactions and tangibles!

Value and knowledge span artificial and administrative organizational boundaries. It is time to reorient all knowledge-based activities to the concept of value and value networks. Your federated action/research network will examine value networks in depth. You will gain the models, analysis tools, methods and language needed to elaborate and optimize value networks.

Social computing, social networks and network analysis are also a foundation of these emerging value webs and networks. They help define the pathways and topologies for effective value networks. These key techniques are also covered in-depth.

Innovation is important only as far as it creates value. Many innovation and productivity initiatives create little/no true value. Only through deliberate network mapping and visualization can value be uncovered, expanded and led. It is value that drives innovation. It's not product features, productivity, transactions or efficiencies. All innovation depends on value and value networks.

No one ever bought a product or recommended a company because the company was ‘productive.’ Customers expect and deserve broad value from their relationships. To win, keep and strengthen customers and business, value and value networks must be visualized and led.

Value networks are omnipresent. They are instrumental in achieving breakthrough outcomes for all human activities, not just business. Many non-profits, government agencies, NGO and institutions are adopting value and social network archetypes to advance there missions and create spectacular outcomes.

Sponsor Testimonials: http://www.vnclusters.com/Testimonials.htm 

Your next, low-cost Action/Research Network conversations and open collaborations will focus the knowledge leadership priorities of of social networks, media & analysis and value networks.

Mastery of these key methods is essential to excellence and leadership in the 21st Century knowledge economy.

The Toronto Spring 2007 Action/Research Cluster will examine these clear priorities. Your action/research network event sponsored in part by Cisco Systems. All are welcome. For the agenda and open registration, please visit the event Web.

For information on future community collaborations and gatherings in your region, simply syndicate KM Blogs http://www.kmblogs.com.

The goal of your local, low-cost, non-commercial Clusters is periodic, dialogic inquiry and close-in, open conversations with global thought leaders and top practitioners. Unlike expensive, crowded mega-conferences, the modality is not PowerPoint presentations, it's authentic, open conversation.


Abstract

Identifying lucrative and powerful network opportunities requires the ability to quickly assess a complex environment and accurately map the current and emerging value potential. Many traditional enterprise analysis methods are inadequate in the current network economy and have not kept pace. Eye opening conversations will demonstrate how the innovative and proven ValueNet Works™ methodology can help rapidly analyze and evaluate business value both horizontally and vertically. In this one-day, hands-on experience you will learn how to identify key roles, relationships and value interactions – for any enterprise, industry or institution -- large and small. This approach can also be used for designing more effective networked business models by:

  1. Identifying previously unseen influencers

  2. Making critical intangible relationships visible

  3. Highlighting potential effects of disruptive innovation

Workshop facilitator Verna Allee is an internationally recognized leader in bringing forward new business methods for the networked, knowledge-intensive enterprise. Their combined experience across multiple industries always generates multi-faceted insights and dialogue.

Who should attend ValueNet Works™?

  1. Executives, directors and managers

  2. Knowledge leaders, brokers and journalists

  3. Entrepreneurs and intrapreneurs

The ValueNet Works methodology is the best way to identify, analyze, evaluate, prioritize and manage and lead knowledge networks. Why is this possible?

  1. Focus on business value networks in addition to value chains, transactions and social networks

  2. Consideration of roles, networks and transactions in addition to organizations and processes

  3. Leverage of community values and transorganizational value models

Note: Those interested in continuing on to become fully qualified, this workshop completes the prerequisite for registration in the Fast Track Workshop.


The Value of Networks:
21st Century Economy and Business

Event Themes

Complex Systems

Complex adaptive systems
, are a special case of
complex systems. They are complex in that they are diverse and made up of multiple interconnected elements and adaptive in that they have the capacity to change and learn from experience. The term complex adaptive systems was coined at the interdisciplinary Santa Fe Institute (SFI), by John H. Holland, Murray Gell-Mann and others. John H. Holland is one of the inventors of evolutionary computation and genetic algorithms. Nobel Prize laureate Murray Gell-Mann discovered quarks.

The term complex adaptive systems (or complexity science) is often used to describe the loosely organized academic field that has grown up around the study of such systems. Complexity science is not a single theory— it encompasses more than one theoretical framework and is highly interdisciplinary, seeking the answers to some fundamental questions about living, adaptable, changeable systems.

Examples of complex adaptive systems include the stock market, social insect and ant colonies, the biosphere and the ecosystem, the brain and the immune system, the cell and the developing embryo, manufacturing businesses and any human social group-based endeavor in a cultural and social system such as political parties or communities. There are close relationships between the field of CAS and artificial life. In both areas the principles emergence and self-organization are very important. (Wikipedia)

Value Networks

Value networks (value webs), are the human and technical resources in a business that work together to form relationships and add value to a product or service. Included in a company’s value network are research, development, design, production, marketing, sales, and distribution. These components work interchangeably to add to the overall worth of a product or service.

Value is created from the relationship between the company, its customers, intermediaries, complementors and suppliers (1). Two types of values that are added to a value network are tangible and intangible value exchanges:

Tangible value: All exchanges of goods, services or revenue, including all transactions involving contracts, invoices, return receipt of orders, request for proposals, confirmations and payment are considered to be tangible value. Products or services that generate revenue or are expected as part of a service are also included in the tangible value flow of goods, services, and revenue (2).

Intangible value: Two primary subcategories are included in intangible value: knowledge and benefits. Intangible knowledge exchanges include strategic information, planning knowledge, process knowledge, technical know-how, collaborative design and policy development; which support the product and service tangible value chain. Intangible benefits are also considered favors that can be offered from one person to another. Examples include offering political or emotional support to someone. Another example of intangible value is when a research organization asks someone to volunteer their time and expertise to a project in exchange for the intangible benefit of prestige by affiliation (3).

Value networks have replaced the traditional value chain. Historically we have been in an industrial age, focused on a linear value model, and have recently begun to switch to a new business style in which there are a web of different resources that work together to create value.

Often value networks are considered to consist of groups of companies working together to produce and transport a product to the customer. Relationships among customers of a single company are examples of how value networks can be found in any organization. Companies can link their customers together by direct methods like the telephone or indirect methods like combining customer’s resources together (4).

The purpose of value networks is to create the most benefit for the people involved in the network (5). The intangible value of knowledge within these networks is just as important as a monetary value. In order to succeed knowledge must be shared to create the best situations or opportunities. Value networks are how ideas flow into the market and to the people that need to hear them.

Value Network Analysis

Value network analysis is an essential and critical knowledge leadership priority. All contemporary process analysis disciplines are heavily transactional in focus. They fail in complex, boundary-spanning knowledge-based environments. Social network analysis (SNA) offers a good description of relationships and flows, but does not show the business model. Only value network analysis bridges these disciplines offering a complete, systems-level view of your knowledge-based business ecologies.     
 

Value Network Analysis
 

Value network analysis is a natural and common-sense way to elaborate and improve business productivity, expand innovation and retire/reduce costly, inefficient processes. It is a boundary-spanning, holistic method. Value network analysis elaborates the intangibles that account for 90% or more of revenue and earnings in your knowledge-based businesses.
 

Value Network Tools and Methods

Tangibles are goods, services and revenues. Intangibles are relationships, brand, experiences, social networks, knowledge markets and other key enterprise assets. Intangibles create most of the wealth in today's knowledge economy. Intangibles are central to innovation, cost savings and productivity growth. Yet, organizations don't know how to elaborate or measure intangibles. Sometimes, they try to apply 20th Century transactional or manufacturing methods like 6-Sigma or TQM. This efforts always fail.

Organizations now have new, superior methods for understanding, visualizing and leading their intangibles. Collectively, these methods are known as value networks (VN) and value networks analysis (VNA). Equipped with these techniques, organizations can articulate, optimize and master intangibles. The outcomes are improved resource utilization, productivity, innovation and sharply improved performance overall.

The leading toolkit for intangibles is GenIsis. It is part of the ValueNet Works offerings. The illustration below outlines some of these integrated, easy-to-use offerings.

Genesis Application Portfolio

Why Networks are Important


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