‘Innovation: is the application of new solutions that meet new requirements, inarticulate needs or existing market needs. – Wikipedia'
Hosted and organized by the prestigious ‘Knowledge Entrepreneurs’, the 2013
version of the annual Innovation week was at the Advanced InformationTechnology Institute (AITI) in Accra under the theme Driving Innovation: New communities, New Opportunities, New Markets
(Driving Innovation.COM).
The five day programme was lined up with morning workshops, innovators waves, keynotes, panel sessions, speed mentoring sessions, QnA sessions amidst exhibitions, demonstrations and networking.
speed mentoring session
Participants filling up auditorium
Since IWeek13 was an ECOWAS edition, the event was
streamed live and there were participants of different nationalities including
150 university students from Nigeria in physical attendance as well. Many
startup founders, entrepreneurs, students, government agency representatives
and educators from various levels also filled the auditorium to capacity throughout
the afternoon sessions.
The hands-on ideation session with strategist Andrews Missingham saw participants on the first day thinking about feature phones and
teenage girls in ‘designing for real people’ .
We are creating the possibility that feature phones will be Africa's iPad - shared around family, always online - Andrews #iweek13 #HaccraIWRunning alongside the main event was an Enterprise Linux workshop with Mr. Ernest Ofori.
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 25, 2013
The Chairman of the National Development Planning
Commission, Mr. P.V. Obeng stated in his keynote that countries like Korea had transformed
their economies using innovative technologies. He advised that the country
needed to up intellectual capacities to match certificates since there was already
available infrastructure.
Ghana, a resource rich country, not made rich by the natural resources but there's hope ICT will change the equation - PV Obeng #iweek13The plenary session which was chaired by Hon. Victoria Hammah saw panelists like Derrydean Dadzie of DreamOval and Kinna Likimani of BloggingGhana stress the need for use of local talent and resources when looking for solutions to problems. It was summed up by Andrews Missingham in his keynote when he said that culture must be worked with not against when dealing with mobiles in Africa since Africa was mobile.
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 25, 2013
The second business day was when discussions on 'E-money
meets Real money' were held. Apart from Derek Appiah of Logiciel Ghana’s
session on business ecosystems, CEO’s of financial institutions including
Fidelity Bank spent the afternoon with 25 startups mentoring and discussing possible
opportunities for innovation and funding.
There was also Mr. Philip Sowah of Airtel Ghana who gave
participants understanding into the current mobile money system in the country.
Panel discussing E-Money and Mobile money payments #iweek13 pic.twitter.com/yAdiOnzGK3
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 26, 2013
Challenges with mobile financial transaction: Cash Culture, Consumer Trust, Regulation low awareness ..... - Philip Sowah (Airtel) #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 26, 2013
Simple Remedy: collective investment, government support and collaborative efforts with stakeholders - Philip Sowah (Airtel) #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 26, 2013
There is a long term ICT4AD policy that was drafted in
2003 to improve the quality of life
using ICT for economic and social development as mentioned by Mawuena Trebarh
of the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre. Her session gave participants the opportunity
to know about who is investing and how we can get more investments especially
in ICT. She further revealed that there is
location incentives (tax rebate) for manufacturing industries located in
regional capitals.
This was after CEO of PopOut, Mr. Ametorgoh Maximus took
participants through ‘taking innovative ideas to the market’ and an earlier
interactive ‘Emotional Intelligence’ workshop by Effie Ansah.
. @maxihere 's 5Ds of online idea development: Demand, Design, DNA, Devices and Deployment #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 27, 2013
Emotional Intelligence is about understanding one's abilities and doing same for others - Effie Ansah #iweek13Joe Mensah (IBM) and Regina Agyare (SoronkoSolutions) joined in a panel that discussed the opportunities in the ICT sector in Ghana
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 27, 2013
IBM SME Toolkit (http://t.co/bErZf5Lsmb) has locally relevant info for startup, growth & success of SMEs. #iweek13 #startup
— Nii Motey (@nmadielson) June 27, 2013
Regina @ragyare says the skills gap need to be bridged but not by coding on paper #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 27, 2013
The Enterprise Linux workshop was in its fourth and final day with Ernest Ofori on Iweek13 Day 3.
It was evident on Day 4 of a well sponsored Innovation Week 2013 that government processes need technology to make things easier and convenient. Lots of interaction went on among developers and tech community as the NCCE, NHIA, GCNet, CRS all presented what goes into their work and the challenges they are faced with. It was to find if there were any innovative ways problems such as creating different biometric databases for agencies such as NHIA, SSNIT, EC could be tackled with the feature phone (common in Ghana) in mind. The Catholic Relief Services also explained the ICT4D Innovation Challenge to participants.
Why has government of Ghana wasted our money by creating several separate biometric databases? -Dorothy Gordon #iweek13
— Kajsa Hallberg Adu (@kajsaha) June 28, 2013
There is the need for very quick exchange of information even within the 216 offices of the NCCE itself - Mrs. Osei #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 28, 2013
One objective of GCNet is to improve management information/ trade statistics to government #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 28, 2013
Tech can make government processes a lot easier and convenient @YougoraOfficial #iWeek13Whilst ‘Installfest FOSSFA’’ was going on the final day of #Iweek13, BloggingGhana was leading a session discussing ‘innovations’ and ‘inventions’. Participants discussed innovative social media campaigns that caught their attention and how they could get government to get interactive using the available platforms since about 15% of Ghana's population was online. After a lot of interaction, participants advised that BloggingGhana formed clubs in the Senior High Schools to assist in the general distribution of social media to effectively benchmark government and its agencies.
— Koku Fiadzoe (@Fkoku) June 28, 2013
#233Moments mentioned by @DonaldWardGh as one of the innovative social media campaigns he has engaged in #iweek13
— Edward Tagoe (@ttaaggooee) June 29, 2013
15% of our population has access to Internet. How do we get Government to focus on social media? #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 29, 2013
Govt engagement strategy will depend on overall distribution. #iWeek13
— Gameli Adzaho (@gamelmag) June 29, 2013
There
were briefings on Creative Commons and Worldreader’s LibraryBox before Bernard
Avle moderated a panel session on ‘Privacy, Open Government and Open Data’. Discussion
revolved around the Freedom of Information Bill. In the open data model,
there is technology, policy and demand all involved in defining what should be
regulated or not. Dorothy Gordon (DG at AITI-KACE) ,
Nehemiah Attigah, Ernest Ofori and Sabrah Mensah were on the panel.
It is all about digital sharing and innovation - Creative Commons briefing with @SDeffor #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 29, 2013
Creative Commons also would serve as a repository for creative works from Ghana. #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 29, 2013
Worldreader uses mobile technology on Kindle readers and traditional phones to deliver books to all kids - Tina #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 29, 2013
Open data does not mean government has to release all information. National security issues are usually at stake - Dorothy #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 29, 2013
Interesting platform http://t.co/OLOjmXxq8y is. A good tool for promoting open Government #iweek13
— BloggingGhana (@BloggingGhana) June 29, 2013
Participants
were encouraged to get innovative and try to find solutions to problems that we
are faced as a country in areas of health, agriculture, education etc. using
new and available technologies as tools so our economic fortunes are turned around.
More tweets from the event can be found here.