Download - Presentation "Fab Lab Life Cycle & Business Models"; Pieter van der Hijden; Bologna, 2016
Fab Lab Life Cycle
and
Business Models
Pieter van der Hijden msc
http://sofos.nl – [email protected]
Seminar “Open Innovation Economy”R2B - Research to Business 2016
11th International Exhibition of Industrial Research and Innovation
BolognaFiere | June 9th – 10th 2016
Sofos ConsultancyPolderweg 196,
1093KP Amsterdam, The Netherlands
www.sofos.nl – [email protected]
Fab Lab SurinameProf. Kernkampweg 37Paramaribo, Suriname
http://fablab.sr [email protected]
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons
Attribution 4.0 International
License.
Introduction
http://sofos.nl
3
Concept and photo from Fab Lab Vestmannaeyjar , Iceland
Fab Lab (FABrication LABoratory) concept developed by
Neil Gershenfeld, director of the Center for Bits and Atoms (CBA)
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
June 2016:
673 Fab Labs
in 87 countries
Global organization: Fab Charter, Fab Academy, Fab Annual Conference
Introduction
http://sofos.nl
4
FAB CHARTER (Draft, October 2012)
What is a Fab Lab? - Fab Labs are a global network of local labs, enabling invention by providing access for individuals to tools for digital fabrication.
What's in a Fab Lab? - Fab Labs share an evolving inventory of core capabilities to make (almost) anything, allowing people and projects to be shared.
What does the Fab Lab network provide? - Operational, educational, technical, financial, and logistical assistance beyond what's available within one lab.
Who can use a Fab Lab? - Fab Labs are available as a community resource, offering open access for individuals as well as scheduled access for programs.
What are your responsibilities?
Safety: not hurting people or machines;
Operations: assisting with cleaning, maintaining, and improving the lab;
Knowledge: contributing to documentation and instruction.
Who owns Fab Lab inventions? - Designs and processes developed in Fab Labs can be protected and sold however an inventor chooses, but should remain available for individuals to use and learn from.
How can businesses use a Fab Lab? - Commercial activities can be prototyped and incubated in a Fab Lab, but they must not conflict with other uses, they should grow beyond rather than within the lab, and they are expected to benefit the inventors, labs, and networks that contribute to their success.
ConceptionEarly
childhoodComing to
age
Fostering new
businessesSurviving
Developing 1st year 2nd year 3rd year 4th year ...
Fab Lab
Life Cycle
http://sofos.nl
5
(Source: Infosyncratic.nl; http://bit.ly/whitehousefab)
ConceptionHow to start, paperwork,
funding, and all issues until
the lab goes live
http://sofos.nl
6
Create bottom-up
ownership
Introduce
convenient project
management
Develop business
model
Fab Lab Kamakura, Japan
Early childhoodTeething problems,
challenges during the first
year
http://sofos.nl
7
Improve daily
operations
Manage your risks
Build a learning
organization
Picture: Safety measures in Fab Lab Tulsa; source: newson6.com (http://bit.ly/Wbs7OL)
Example of a weekly Fab Lab schedule
with a mix of activities
Coming to ageManagement issues, professional PR and
advocacy, service
development
http://sofos.nl
8
Develop your
services
Develop your staff
Develop your
organization
Fostering new
businessesSupporting the creation of
new products, processes &
organizations
http://sofos.nl
9
Find your position in
the "innovation
market"
Learn from other
Fab Labs good
practices
Count your
blessings
Training course in Fab Lab Paramaribo
SurvivingFunding, business model,
good practices,
community building
http://sofos.nl
10
Prepare multi-
annual plan
Organize structural
funding
Think globally, act
locally
Woelab, Lomé, Togo, 3D-printer based on recycled PC-chassis (http://www.woelabo.com/)
[A]
Category
[B]
Year 0 -
actual
situation
[C]
Year 1 -
next
year
[D]
Year 2
[E]
Year
3-5
[F]
Midterm
ambition
Target
groups
Services
Activities
Resources
Revenue
streams
Costs
Business models Vision
Mission
Some suggestions
Business model canvas
Success factors
http://sofos.nl
11
Vision
http://sofos.nl
12
Source: Maker Impact Summit, 2013
Shared vision on
what is going on in
the world
Mission
http://sofos.nl
13
What do
we want to
contribute?
“Some representative players in the Maker ecosystem. Roles and players are constantly evolving.”Maker Impact Summit 2013
Success factors Start bottom-up
Align with vision and mission
Balance revenues and costs right from the start
Set-up:
Infrastructure management
Knowledge management
Service management
People management
Stimulate client development from general public tinkerer technopreneur
Learn by doing
http://sofos.nl
16
References Business model generation; Alexander Osterwalder et al.; self-
published; 2009; available in various languages; http://www.businessmodelgeneration.com; preview 72 pages: http://bit.ly/previewbmg
Hub in a box; workshop to crowdsource business models for sustainable hubs; http://wiki.movement.open.co/hubinabox/
Impact of the maker movement; Developed by Deloitte Center for the Edge and Maker Media from the Maker Impact Summit Dec. 2013; Makermedia and Deloitte, 2014; http://bit.ly/1vt81im
Sustainable Fab Labs; presentation; John Boeck and Peter Troxler; FAB7, Lima, Peru, 2011; http://bit.ly/1oTQY1q
The Fab Lab Life Cycle; report of the Fab10 Workshops (Report); Van der Hijden, Pieter (Fab Lab Paramaribo & Sofos Consultancy) & Juarez, Beno (Fab Lab Lima) et al.; FAB10 International Fab Lab Conference, Barcelona, Spain, July 2014; http://bit.ly/fablablifecycle
Think like an innovator; Navaz Karim (ed.); Vigyam Ashram & Fab Lab, India; http://bit.ly/thinklikeaninnovator
http://sofos.nl
17
Thank you for your attention!
18
Pieter van der Hijden, Sofos Consultancy – 2016 –
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Unported License.
http://sofos.nl
Pieter van der Hijden