Transcript

Madison, WI March, 2015

The Impact of Strategic Doing

The Northwest Ordinance of 1787

created a laboratory for our

democracy…it is time to use it

The Great Lakes Nation

Article 3: Religion, morality, and knowledge, being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall forever be encouraged.

Northwest Ordinance, 1787

Why is the Campus Compact

more important now than ever?

Bush Obama

Partisan differences continue to grow and show no signs of reversing

Source: The Pew Research Center, Trends in American Values, 1987-2012

State and local finances are tanking everywhere

State and local operating balance for the U.S.

Squeeze out the waste

The Standard Solution

But that leads to relentless arguments…

and people dancing in circles…

What will the Great Lakes Nation look like in 2030?

So, have we had enough?

Source: Clipart by C Charley-Franzwa - http://clipartof.com/50191

You’ve got companyStrategic Doing workshops

We have cracked the code on collaboration

We are not fixing old systems

We are designing collaboration platforms for “what’s next”

Strategic Planning

We embrace a new strategy process designed for open networks

Strategic Doing

We design complex strategies by following simple rules

“The best methodology I have seen in 20 years.”

Paul Collits President

Australia New Zealand Regional Science Association

First…The Backstory

The Strategic Doing story starts here

…and continues here… Mazda Manufacturing Complex Hiroshima, Japan

…and continues here…

…and continues here…

What’s happening?

We are sitting in the midst of a really big transition…

Grandparents Grandchildren

The foundations of our economy are shifting…

Networks move us to new opportunities

Strategic Doing started in an Oklahoma City garage in 1993

Oklahoma City today

Photo by: Luke Barrett

Muhlenberg

CaldwellHart Metcalfe Adair

Green

Spencer Owen Scott

OhioEdmonson

Rockcastle

Knox

Morgan

Pike

GreenupEstill

Lewis

Fayette

Union

Mercer

McCracken

Hopkins

The impact of globalization on rural Kentucky

Can we build a high growth ecosystem?

“The 75th largest metro ranks among the 10 fastest growing in software and Internet technology”

Brainpower21 Century Talent

InnovationEntrepreneurship

Supports

New Narratives

Quality, Connected

Places

Collaboration

We need a portfolio of collaborations

Fast Forward, Indiana, 2005

“Transform your Workforce System”

• 13 regions nationally • $15 million each • 3 years to innovate

The federal government

“Do the math…”

14 counties + Purdue

$15 million = $1 million each

County official

“Nope. Build the collaborations.”

• 60+ collaborations • 100+ partners • 200+ metrics • 80% sustained past initial funding • 2 staff hired

Vic Lechtenberg, Purdue

0

7,500

15,000

22,500

30,000

Began Training Completed Training Degrees/Certificates

Goal Result

2.7 X

2.9 X

2.7 X

Result: We exceeded goals by almost 3X

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

Money

Results

With 8% of the money…40% of the national results

First National Green Collar Certification

The National STEM Guitar Project

44© 2008, Brian D. Thompson, UWM Research Foundation 10/6/08

Funds

Fluid Transport/ Civil & Ind. Engr.

Detection

Materials

Bioscience

Pumps/ Valves/ Components

Analysis/ Measuring/ Control

Water User

Consumer Products

Treatment/ Processing/ Softening

Utilities

Funding Agencies

Academic Institutions

Private SectorPublic Sector

Milwaukee 7 Water Cluster

DOE

EPA

NSF

USDA

DoD

NOAA/DOC

Interior

World Bank

Foundations

International Partners

NIHGreater Milwaukee Foundation

UWM

Marquette

UW-Madison

WATER Inst.Chem & Biosci

School of Freshwater Science

CEASPhysics

MSOEFluid Power

Rapid Proto Center

M7/GMC MMSDCity of Milwaukee

DNRUNDP

Federal Government

Municipalities

Water Council

Pentair• Filtering & purification

GE

Badger Meter• Water meters • Meter reading systems

Procorp• Water reuse & softening • Phosphate & radium removal

AO Smith• Water heaters

Kohler• Faucets • Materials, coatings, plating • Casting technology

Miller Coors• Intake quality, output quality • Energy consumption

AquaSensors Thermo Fisher Scientific

Fall River

Great Lakes Water• Water treatment equipment Advanced

Chemical Systems• Ind. wastewater treatment

CH2MHILL• Engineering services

ITT

Sanitarie• Wastewater treatment

design

Flygt• pumps

SiemensJoyBucyrus

Veolia• Water utilities

OpportunitiesEnvironmental • Algae control (& exploitation) • Removal of PCBs from lakes & rivers • Storm water containment, • Road salt • Ship’s ballast – policy/enforcement • Aquaculture • Lake Michigan contamination • Policy issues – metering/incentives

Energy/Efficiency • Ethanol production efficiency • Tar sands water treatment • Elimination of boiler scaling • Increasing brewing efficiency • Increased efficiency of water heating • Speeding treatment for large volumes • Increasing treatment efficiency

Processing/Treatment•Municipal wastewater treatment –Storm water treatment –Reduced use of chemicals •Industrial wastewater treatment –Farm manure, food processing waste, metals –Utilizing sewer sludge •Residential Water Treatment –Residential water treatment, home filtration –Residential Water softening without salt

•Reverse Osmosis •Softening •Ships ballast - treatment •Treatment targets –PCBs in sewer pieps –Desalinzation –Radium in ground water –Pharmaceuticals –Phosphate

Monitoring/Detection • Water security • Real time monitoring • User detection systems • Real time sensing for life forms • Pharmaceuticals

• Joe Aldstadt – analytical methods • Peter Geissinger – detection • Alan Schwabacher– pharmaceuticals in water

• Carmen Aguilar – microbiology • David Petering –metal metabolism • Val Klump

• Rohatgi, Pradeep – adv. castings, lightweight, lead-free • Aita, Carolyn – advanced coatings • Gong, Sarah – polymer materials

• Chen, Junhong – nano materials, sensors

• Li, Jin – pollutant transport modeling • Bravo, Hector – hydraulic modeling • Christensen, Erik – pollutants in water • Amano, Ryoichi - CFD • Pillia, Krisna – porous media modeling • Kevin Renken- mass transfer • Sobolvev – biproducts utilization • Doug Cherkauer – groundwater hydrology

• Jim Waples – water aging • Tom Consi – aquatic robots • Tom Grundle - harbors

• Tim Ehlinger – aquatic systems

• Burlage – PCR environmental test

• Shangping Xu – safe drinking water

Partnerships • Sponsored Research Proj. • Shared equipment • Graduates • Workforce training • Subcontractor/supplier • Extramural grant support • Philanthropic support

Cluster Effects • Shared resources/equipment • Collaborative grants • Improved competitiveness • Translational science

Milwaukee: The Capital of Water

7

Figuring out what’s next after this goes away

Rebuilding Flint neighborhoods

Redesigning engineering education | 37 universities

“The Strategic Doing (SD) approach might be one of the most effective ways of implementing change on campus.”

Ilya V. Avdeev, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Department of Mechanical Engineering

Founder, UWM Student Startup Challenge (SSC) Director, Advanced Manufacturing and Design Laboratory (AMDL)

University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Medora, Indiana (population 693)

Connecting across Kansas

It comes down to this…

Thinking in New Ways

Public Sector Private Sector

Old thinking leads to gridlock…

Our economy works differently…

Civic Economy: Publicly valuable, but not privately profitable

Market Economy: Publicly valuable and privately profitable

Prosperity emerges from collaborations in The Borderland

Behaving in New Ways

In a democracy, civility matters

Building trust takes doing…

Trust powers shared value on The Borderland

Doing in New Ways

Strategy answers 2 questions

A 30/30 commitment drives learning and adjustments

“If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.”

John Quincy Adams

Connect

strategicdoing.net/wcc

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