• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

Create an Environment for Young Talent with New Business Ideas

The HSE International Institute of Administration and Business held a master-class with Peter Knauer, management advisor for the food manufacturer Mars Inc in Russia. Peter Knauer has more than 20 years experience of working in Central and Eastern Europe and specialises in the chocolate business. He was head of  Cadbury’s in the region and a director for Mars in the CIS. Peter’s presentation was called ‘Innovations in Business: nice to have or must be?’He gave an interview to HSE’s News Service.

— What would you say are the keys to a successful start up? What advice would you give to young graduates fresh out of university?

It’s a difficult question. There are three elements. First, it's intuition —  a deep inner conviction that your idea will be useful, that it’s in demand and will be successful.  Then, it's the capacity to be realistic, even pessimistic, to analyze results, develop and devise worst case scenarios and back-up plans. And finally, it's commitment to implementation and the ability to ‘digest’ set-backs and adapt your idea.

And one piece of advice would be, don’t forget to spread your idea as widely as you can. Tell everyone, particularly potential backers…

— You’ve been working in Russia for a long time now. Are there aspects of the Russian way of doing business that hinder innovation and success?

— There are certain ways of doing business here but I wouldn’t call them typically Russian. It’s more that they are Soviet but you come across them in a lot of countries. Corruption for example. It kills the honest competition that is a main driving force for innovation.

And then there’s the hierarchy, the lack of democracy and elitism in companies. When the principle of closed offices, of ‘I’m the boss and you’re an idiot’ means no one wants to offer their ideas. If people don’t understand the importance of the new, open culture in business there won’t be any successes.

A barrier distinctive to Russian business is the continuing high dependence on a resource-based economy. So long as there are ‘useful’ minerals there’ll be less focus on ‘useful’ innovation. 

— Who do you consider a business leader? Who could inspire Russian businessmen to take some decisive steps towards innovation?

— A good business leader looks ahead, and not three years, but ten or twenty. He understands that the pace of innovational processes, of technological change, is increasing all the time and that what we’re doing today will be out of date the day after tomorrow. He devises new products and new ways to do business.

Who can inspire business in Russia? Well, I’m not sure it needs inspiration. I’ve met a lot of businessmen who support innovation and are very interested in new technology. Look at Kaspersky Lab - they’re leaders in one of the fastest changing markets.

The question I would ask is how can we find, develop, keep or attract the talented, creative young people in Russia to create an environment where their ideas are not wasted but transformed into real products - we need more brains!

— What do you think about working with HSE and how do you see the future of your cooperation?

— Working with young people, especially with universities like HSE is interesting in itself as a direct dialogue with bright youngsters and as a chance to talk about myself and our company, its principles and the development opportunities we can offer them. It’s one of the ways we can attract that young talent I’ve been talking about. We want to help them to make informed choices.

 Innov8 Presentation (PDF, 6.09 Мб)

 

See also:

In Assessing Motivation, Rating Scales Are Far from the Best Choice

Researchers from HSE University and the Pushkin Institute have demonstrated that pairwise comparisons work better than rating scales for measuring motivation. The reason is that many people cannot rank their motives in a hierarchical fashion. The study findings are published in Frontiers in Psychology.

Researching the Link Between Organizational Culture and Innovation

Professor Carl Fey from Aalto University has been invited to speak at the 20th Annual April International Academic Conference at HSE Moscow. In his talk, entitled ‘Facilitating Innovation in Companies in Russia: The Role of Organizational Culture’, Professor Fey will present research that he has been conducting with his colleagues on the relationship between organizational culture and innovation. 

Innovation Supercluster to Appear in Moscow

Russian President Vladimir Putin signed Decree No. 672 on November 26 'On the creation of an innovation cluster in Moscow,' thus putting in motion an initiative of Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin that the Higher School of Economics had played an active role in developing. Throughout the past year, HSE specialists studied the best practices of the world’s innovative megacities, worked with the Moscow government to hold a series of expert discussions on the principles of forming an innovation supercluster, and developed a draft concept establishing guidelines for interactions between potential cluster participants. Over time, the planned supercluster has the potential to embrace Moscow’s entire advanced-technology economy.

Professor from HSE School of Business Informatics Presents Innovations at Forum in Skolkovo

The 7th Moscow International Forum ‘Open Innovations.’ which took place from October 15 – 17 in Skolkovo, included an exhibition on the results of research carried out by academic institutions, small enterprises and leading universities, including HSE.

BRICS Countries Look for Their Place in Biotechnology Market

Over the past 20 years, the BRICS countries' contribution to biotechnology development has increased manyfold, but it may be too early to predict a change of global leaders in this field, according to HSE ISSEK researchers who examined biotechnology patenting in the BRICS countries and published their findings in Trends in Biotechnology.

First National Educational Platform for Business Knowledge and Services Presented at the Festival of Youth and Students

A Russian nationwide educational online platform for entrepreneurs and to help develop infrastructure for the provision of public and commercial services based on a ‘one-stop-shop’ system, created by the Ministry of Economic Development together with Sberbank on the basis of the bank’s Business Environment online platform was presented on the last day of the youth festival. This platform is also known as the ‘National Knowledge and Solutions Platform’. HSE is a partner on the project.

Russia’s Innovation Powerhouses

HSE released its fifth Russian Regional Innovation Ranking, based on the 2015 findings, at a press conference hosted by TASS. Almost half Russia’s regions are relatively stable in terms of innovative development: their positions in the ranking have not changed significantly.

Imitation Drives Innovation

Creating totally new and exclusive products, business models and technology solutions is not always necessary in today's innovative economy; it is often sufficient to use the knowledge and inventions already available worldwide, according to professor  Mikhail Shushkin and associate professor  Sergey Alexandrovskiy, researchers at the Department of Marketing, Faculty of Management, HSE Branch in Nizhny Novgorod.

Morgan Poulizac: ‘Sustainability 2.0 – The Story of How Cities Now Adapt to the Modern Age’

On June 9, the head of the Urban Planning master’s programme at Paris’ Sciences Po, Morgan Poulizac, gave the lecture ‘Social Innovations as an Urban Development Tool: Examples of French Cities’ as part of the Adaptive City seminar series organised by the Graduate School of Urban Studies and Planning.

HSE Students Win Competition for Public Service Advertising Against Corruption

Students at the HSE School of Integrated Communications, Faculty of Communications, Media and Design won all the prizes in a public service advertising competition against corruption. The contest is run by the Moscow City department for competition policy. The HSE students’ posters were selected from 175 pieces submitted from different Russian regions and the near abroad. The prize giving ceremony was in a city government building on New Arbat on December 10.