Innovation
leader Hans Moller described it as history in the making. BT liked it so much they
want to hitch their own innovation challenge to it next year. CEO Heidi Mottram claimed it as a global first.
A race
course in Northumbria may seem an unlikely venue for ground-breaking of this magnitude
but there’s no doubting the combination of festival spirit with design thinking
AND a data hackathon created an open innovation festival the likes of which
experienced participants had never witnessed before, including this writer.
In the
final session of Northumbrian Water Group’s five-day Innovation Festival on
Friday afternoon innovation outputs were described in video, song and prototype.
The range included:
- Flooding Ranger –a digital platform to inform and support people in the community, to help identify risk, act on it, and get real support when the worst happen
- Rain To River – a sweeping commitment to creating blue and green corridors to keep water on the surface and return it to rivers without causing flooding in homes.
- Hot Spots – by hacking open data and NWG’s own data the data scientists identified 20 key areas in Essex (part of NWG’s remit) where action would halt the rise in leakage. Targeting another 50 they found would reduce it to customer-targeted levels. (water leakage currently spirits away 20% of the flows through the network). Data hacking also revealed an unexpected truth – When they work on a repair the likelihood of leaks near where work has been conducted increases six fold.
- Home Leak detector; If your toilet is leaking, you are wasting water. If you tweet about it NWG could listen to pro-actively respond cutting your costs and saving water.
- Lab In A Box – Making use of the 65,000 holes currently dug by NWG every year – when the ground is open, take data on the conditions of soil, pipes and other factors which could help predict where future leakage may occur.
- Breathe Easy; Part of the commitment to the environment all water companies must make, saw one group looking at solutions for greener living. The Judge’s prize in this case was for Moss Trees. Already in use in some parts of the world, these are structures on which moss can grow and be sustainably maintained with rain water. Moss is 275 times better at absorbing carbon dioxide than trees are – and take up considerably less space. Expect to see this one on the side of roads in Newcastle within the year.
- E-Commute; To reduce unnecessary journeys for staff, E-Commute will provide simple text messages warning of delays, alerting to car share possibilities, and suggesting when it may be better to stay home.
- Bradley: Provides hands free comms, advice and direction via voice – useful in conditions where touching anything can be difficult (around caustic chemicals, for example).
- LISA: A personal life assistant to filter all the things you don’t need to know out until a time that better suits, while bringing key information to you at the right time.
- Squirrel: Alexa meets Uber meets VR. An AI powered service which identifies your problems, finds a service provider, makes the booking knowing your movements, and provides the service provider with onsite support via VR to fix almost anything. It only stops short of enabling the user to do the same.
- iThrive; Uses VR to create your preferred working environment while sharing a space with others or connecting you with others when working from home.
- Womble: Combining underground robot data with overground sensor readings from vans and drones to make infrastructure visible and monitor it.
- Community Portal: For communities to share the kind of infrastructure needs they indentify for themselves and direct NWG resource to resolution if and when in relevant areas.
- Infrastructure Corridors: You and I may assume that each utility has access shared and permanent access to each others’ maps of pipework etc. Or even that they share plans for repairs to limit the number of times the roads are dug up. Sorry. True only in very rare circumstances. As a step toward resolutions Infrastructure Corridors will be trialled in a test location of new build where the challenges and regulations of bringing all the pipeworks together in an accessible but secure channel away from the roads will be tested. The data and other collaboration required to pull this off could serve as a template for roll out across the country.
- Light from Dark: Dark Fibre-optic networks can be utilised to measure and monitor movements in the soil, changes in temperature and other dynamics which could identify leaks (as previously stated- a huge water industry problem, particularly in open rural areas where they may go undiscovered by human eye for many months.
- I-Job: Bringing together customer data, past work at same location, skills matching and training for employees on the road. The intent is to also overcome the connectivity problem often experienced in rural areas by making use of updates to the van when passing back into connected spots. The group wants to supplement this with employee-made how-to videos to enable scaling of skills across teams.
And these
are just some of the highlights presented in the final sessions by each team –
each of which had started with hundreds of ideas. CEO Heidi Mottram intends to tot up how
much value all these outputs could bring. Already the 'six months of innovation in one week' estimate made yesterday has been revised up to a year's worth at event's end. Crucially Heidi is committing to taking
all of the outcomes forward (at least for further business case development).
And it doesn’t
stop there. There were the results of an internal Invest Quest challenge. Five
finalists were meant to fight it out over a £250k investment. The ideas proved
so strong the business doubled the pot and committed to backing all five.
There were
visions of the future from a teenager’s bedroom pov. There were customers who
showed up to join in part of a sprint and found themselves so taken by the
spirit they stayed all week.
The outputs
inspired commitments from vendors, partners and other water and utility
companies – all of which everyone involved will be watching with interest with
plans for a grand reporting back next year – when it all happens again.
What has it
taken to get to this. CIO Nigel Watson had the vision. But, as he points out,
it has taken a brave boss (in Heidi) to create something of this scale.
As Nigel
commented: “Someone told me when Glastonbury started it was smaller than this.”
They have
88 acres still to fill at Gosforth Park. But imagine a festival of innovation
on that scale – what problems we might solve… in a week!
See also yesterday's post.
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