Love from Finland: The journey’s end

The square outside Helsinki central railway station

The final two students to take part in the Knowledge Exchange Finland (KEF) programme, have returned to South Africa. Anton Delen and Nobert Jere have been the last two post-graduate students involved in this enriching and exciting journey, which has seen a total of seven students embark on the learning adventure of a lifetime.

Throughout this Love from Finland series, it has been wonderful to gain insight into what the initiative has meant for students, in terms of what they have learned, and how this exchange has changed their world-view. For the last time, we caught up with the final two students, to find out what kind of impact this knowledge exchange programme has had on their future studies and their personal outlook.

Anton Delen is a student at the Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) who has recently submitted his Masters of Technology (MTech) thesis. Anton’s focus is on semantic meta-data repositories and architectures in healthcare, where he developed an ontology for home-based healthcare by also considering healthcare standards

Anton Delen enjoying the snow

Anton, when did you leave for Finland and when did you return to South Africa?

Prior to taking up the Knowledge Exchange in Finland, I was in Delft at The Hague University of Applied Sciences for a week, where I was attending to Industrial Design and IT students whom I supervise. I arrived in Finland on the 27th of March and returned to South Africa on the 7th of May.

The focus of your Masters’ research was to look at service design challenges in home-based healthcare, based within the Socio-Tech project. Do you believe that this KEF programme will help further inform your research project?

Yes, the knowledge exchange has given me confidence in this new field of Service Design, which is currently still unheard of in South Africa. The most encouraging thing about Service Design is that MBA students worldwide are paying it lots of attention. I think it is extremely encouraging for economists and business students to be sold into design process and practice. In short, Service Design is central to the creation of a service economy. The confidence I gained while speaking to fellow students and experts on the subject has allowed me to apply my subject to a host of projects in which our Innovation Hub is involved. We hope to be able to demonstrate the usefulness of this to industry stakeholders with our next few project deliverables.

(more…)

GeoMed: Mobile phone-based innovation in the healthcare sector

Community care givers receive their Nompilo-enabled phones at the training workshop. Pictures courtsey of Geomed.

GeoMed is described as a pioneer of mobile health applications and integrated solutions. Their work revolves around the development and supply of patient-centered solutions to meet clinical demands. JP de Vos, founder and director of GeoMed, explained that GeoMed was built on over five years of experience in consulting and product development in the health informatics field: “As you develop a better understanding of the needs of citizens and care providers (and the shortcomings of the existing systems) you realise that there are a lot of simple solutions out there that can make a big difference in their respective lives.”

One such project is GeoMed’s Tshwane e-Health Living Lab (TeLL), which brings health service and solutions providers together with health care clinics, health providers and related stakeholders, in order to drive innovation in the health sector.

The project was born out of GeoMed’s involvement in stakeholder-related community events in the health informatics field, “We had been approached by the Innovation Hub to attend one or two workshops where different stakeholders representing the Department. of Health and Social Development were present. During these workshops we’ve been able to identify several problems that can be resolved through the use of cost effective and easy-to-use e-Health and/or m-Health services,” said de Vos.

Based on its success in Finland and other European countries, the Living Lab model was used for the project as a way to provide a testing ground for issues such as usability, interoperability, cost efficiency and effectiveness; as de Vos explained, “The focus of the Living Lab (for us) was to provide a test bed to validate the business case and cost models for both the provider and the receiver of the service being tested.”

Assisting Community Care Givers through mobile technology

A successful project that was run through the TeLL in Northern Tshwane was Nompilo, which aims to help reduce operational inefficiencies and deliver cost-savings and enable health and social care workers to enhance their work as Community Care Givers (CCGs). In South Africa there are over 75,000 CCGs operating at grassroots level, who are the heart of the National Healthcare system. They currently use a Monitoring and Evaluation system that is paper-based, these reports are then provided to the local NPO on a monthly basis, which are then aggregated and provided to the relevant Health Department. (more…)

Infopreneurs®: A new paradigm in understanding how ICT enabled networks can enhance development actions

Rensie and Infopreneur® Phophi on location, discovering the breathing stone in the Nzhelele valley.

Working within the CSIR Meraka Institute’s stable of innovators and scientists is a team of accomplished practitioners involved in the CSIR Citizens Information Services (CSIR CIS). This programme undertakes research, development and implementation (RDI) of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) in the African development context.  The team, led by Johann (Rensie) van Rensburg, has spent the better part of twenty years investigating solutions to empower South Africa’s marginalised communities through the use of information and communication technologies.

In recent years, the team’s combined expertise has evolved a fundamental shift within the ICT4D arena.  Development solutions have moved beyond the identification and creation of technological tools and processes as the foundations for development, to a prioritisation of the actions of individuals, enterprises and organisations who together form a network through which local skills and resources emerge and grow to deliver on the developmental mandate.  This paradigm shift has resulted in the creation of what is termed the Infopreneur® network wherein people are  the key to expanding the economic value chain to create opportunities for new entrants.  According to a paper collaboratively written in 2010 by van Rensburg and his colleagues, Braam Cronje and Uys du Buisson,  the importance now is to “validate and understand an ICT-enabled, sustainable network of enterprises.”

The networked community

Since 1994, the team has undertaken research and development in South Africa’s developing economy with emphasis placed on the deployment of services and resources for rural communities.  It has been over the last six years, however, that a business model for sustained delivery – which includes active involvement by stakeholders at the bottom of the pyramid (BoP) – has been implemented and tracked.  Van Rensburg’s team is currently investigating how the networked community which is involved in delivering economic and social solutions within their communities, can be scaled-up and sustained.

The concept of the community Infopreneur® – a person who facilitates partnerships and processes between community actors and service providers within the value chain – works  in harmony with the notion of so-called Living Labs. Over the years, the team has experienced the benefits of the Living Lab approach which draws all stakeholders into a real-world context where there is both shared risk in terms of the research and commercialisation processes as well as shared success.   Similarly, the idea of the Community Infopreneur®  is to be an active, sustainable approach to rural empowerment, where the Infopreneur® is a key change agent who is embedded into the network to support the creation and facilitation of products and services.  According to van Rensburg et al, Infopreneurs® act as “information highway bridge builders …  [with the aim of] eventually enabling ‘intelligence-based’ niche production and export.”

The Infopreneurs® and the value chain

Infopreneurs® are local people living in – and understanding – local conditions and dynamics.  They are supported by a strong chain of stakeholders, including a back office which is set up by the CSIR.  The back office provides start-up resources and establishes strategic partnerships with public-sector departments and private corporations where necessary.  In close contact with the back office is the Regional Infopreneur® (RIP) who is supported directly by the CSIR Meraka Institute. The RIP not only has a wide skills-set and qualifications to manage the diverse relationships along the value chain, but will depend on the income generated by the network for services people are prepared to pay for.   The Community Infopreneur®, working closely with enterprises and people at the community level, is supported and guided by the Regional Infopreneur® and also has to build a set of income-generating services to justify their own existence. (more…)

Open for business in the second economy

Within the South Africa retail sector, the second economy makes up a robust, entrepreneurial segment of the industry and is one of the largest job creating vehicles in South Africa.  Despite this, second economy traders have been historically overlooked as viable business drivers at both the policy and economic development levels.  First Business South Africa (FBSA), in partnership with SAFIPA, Local and Provincial Government, is about to change this perception with the creation of the first business incubator for  informal traders.

FBSA and partners plan to effect real change in the informal retail sector that will benefit consumers and traders alike. Utilising an innovative business model, FBSA is currently developing a pilot training and trading hub – in effect a living lab – for entrepreneurs in the Bloekombos area of Kraaifontein in the Western Cape.

Informal traders refers to market traders, hawkers or street vendors, spazas and house shops.  These traders typically operate in our cities’ streets, and in high-density areas such as townships and informal housing settlements.  Many of these residential areas are under-resourced in every sense of the word, from having few basic services such as water and  sanitation, to limited opportunities for active participation in South Africa’s economy.  (more…)

The Future is here: foresight methodology for innovative development

“Sipho is a small business owner from Mussina, who sells goods to Zimbabwean visitors on behalf of Makro SA.  Sipho is about to register his business with SARS, CIPRO and the Department of Labour.  He has another appointment in an hour from now, so he needs to do this quickly.  Without leaving his living room, he takes out his cellphone with embedded DNA biometrics that he uses for banking transactions.  He also makes sure that he has his smart card on hand to access the e-Government services via his cellphone.  The certificate on his ID card was issued by an NGO service provider affiliated with a UN organisation based in Switzerland, and recognised by the South African Government.  He logs onto the Government portal, authenticates using his smart ID card, DNA biometrics and cellphone.   He completes this transaction in five minutes.  This includes confirmation of a unique company name, and verification of his data already on record.  In order to protect his private information, the interaction with the back-end system is encrypted, similar to the Government systems that are also encrypted.  In a day from now he receives a signed certificate for his business registration and uses this to open a business bank account.  What Sipho doesn’t know is that his business will be so successful that in 2025, five years from now, he will list his company and eventually retire a wealthy man.”

Pic by o palsson on flickr.com, CC BY 2.0

Whilst the above might read like an entertaining extract from a new sci-fi novel this is, in fact, an entirely probable future as developed by a group of participants in the Foresight for Development workshop that was hosted earlier this year by the CSIR Meraka Institute in conjunction with SAFIPA.

The beginning of Futures
Foresight technique is the latest strategic movement that has sectors as diverse as academia, corporations and even governments around the globe incorporating it into their strategic development and innovation processes.   Surprisingly, the notion of Futures study, or Foresight, is not a new phenomenon.  Almost a century ago in the 1930s, the famous British science-fiction writer, HG Wells, spoke publicly about the importance of turning Foresight or Futures study into an academic discourse.  Yet it was not until the seventies that the methodology received serious consideration, and only now, in the twenty-first century, that it has been broadly adopted as a resource of significance.

At the end of last year, SAFIPA invited Finnish Foresight expert, Olli Hietanen, Project Director at the Finland Futures Research Centre within the Turku School of Economics, to facilitate Foresight workshops which were to be led by the CSIR Meraka Institute.  Finland is one of the leading countries to have launched official, government-supported Foresight programmes.  According to a report compiled by the CSIR Meraka Institute’s Neeshal Munga and Barend Taute, Finland and a number of other developed countries such as Japan, Germany, Australia and the United States, have used Foresight techniques with some success in ‘selecting and exploiting (more…)

The SAFIPA Newsletter

The final SAFIPA Newsletter, Spring 2011

This is the final edition of the SAFIPA newsletter. The month of November 2011, marks the conclusion of this dynamic initiative.



This newsletter pays tribute to the SAFIPA programme in the form of commentary and insights gathered during the very successful SAFIPA 2011 Conference. Project partners from the MFA, DST and CSIR Meraka Insitute applaud the programme. And SAFIPA supported projects have a final opportunity to showcase their innovations and processes.



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