jueves, 18 de mayo de 2023

Programa ACELERA STARTUPS - Programa gratuito de aceleración para PYMEs aragonesas

El Centro Europeo de Empresas e Innovación de Aragón, CEEIARAGON, en colaboración con la Escuela de Organización Industrial (EOI), lanza el Programa Acelera Startups Aragón, cuyo objetivo es seleccionar un mínimo de 34 proyectos empresariales de carácter innovador e incluirlos en un programa personalizado y gratuito de aceleración empresarial acorde a su estado de desarrollo empresarial.

Se pretende así que las empresas beneficiarias puedan fortalecer y asentar su proyecto empresarial.

Para la elaboración del presente programa se han tenido en necesidades del territorio, los emprendedores y el tejido empresarial de la zona de implantación, así como la Estrategia Regional de Especialización Inteligente (RIS3/4).

El programa está subvencionado al 100%.

Es un programa de aceleración de 5 meses que incluye:

  • 50 horas de formación en talleres prácticos impartidos por gente top
  • 40 horas de mentoring personalizado (20 con mentores expertos según las necesidades de la empresa)
  • Búsqueda de financiación y capital relacional
  • Espacio físico en Zaragoza, Huesca y Teruel en sala compartida

Más información en: https://www.ceeiaragon.es/programa-acelera-startups/

 

martes, 16 de mayo de 2023

Aragón European Digital Innovation HUB lanza la AEDIH Academy

Más información en https://www.aragondih.com/academy/

 

El objetivo de este programa es impulsar la competitividad de las pymes aragonesas a través de la formación en diferentes ámbitos digitales

A partir del martes, 16 de mayo, las empresas aragonesas que quieran mejorar su competitividad en el mercado único digital podrán inscribirse en Aragón EDIH Academy, un ecosistema de formación diseñado para brindar apoyo en la transformación digital y el desarrollo de profesionales y empresas.

Este programa nace en el marco de Aragón European Digital Innovation HUB (EDIH), la iniciativa aragonesa que pretende potenciar el éxito empresarial de su ecosistema -pymes, grandes empresas, start-ups, investigadores, aceleradoras e inversores, etc.- gracias a la implementación de oportunidades digitales. En junio de 2022, fue seleccionado por la Comisión Europea como uno de los 12 Centros de Innovación Digital españoles de referencia en Europa, consiguiendo así el sello de excelencia.

AEDIH Academy BASIC cuenta con cuatro módulos – Marketing digital, Comunicación, Ciberseguridad y Resolución de problemas y Decisiones basadas en datos– distribuidos en diferentes jornadas formativas que se celebrarán a lo largo de 2023. Las empresas que realicen todos los módulos recibirán un certificado emitido por Aragón EDIH como muestra de haber superado este itinerario formativo. Cada módulo estará impartido por un agente digitalizador vinculado al EDIH aragonés y tendrá lugar de forma presencial en cada una de sus sedes: Cámaras Aragón, CEOE Aragón, CEPYME Aragón y el Instituto Aragonés de Fomento. Más adelante se anunciarán nuevos programas, AEDIH Academy ADVANCED y AEDIH Academy EXPERT, con nuevos contenidos digitales. Los tres programas formativos son gratuitos y están financiados por la Comisión Europea. 

Para inscribirse es necesario acceder a este enlace, y para solicitar más información es posible hacerlo enviando un correo electrónico a academy@aragonedih.com.

AEDIH ACADEMY BASIC
En el mes de junio arranca la primera edición de Aragón EDIH Academy con el programa BASIC, que se extenderá hasta noviembre con diferentes jornadas formativas celebradas los martes y jueves en horario de 16 a 20 horas. Los cuatro módulos cuentan con una duración de 24 horas.

El primer módulo está dedicado al Marketing digital y se desarrollará los días 8, 15, 20, 22, 27 y 29 de junio de 2023 en la sede de Cámaras Aragón. Tratará los aspectos básicos del marketing digital y proporcionará una guía sobre cómo establecer una estrategia, además del comportamiento del consumidor, la generación de contenido, la estrategia de SEO y SEM, estrategias de comercio electrónico y canales de venta, entre otros.

El segundo módulo estará dirigido hacía la Comunicación y se realizará ya en septiembre, los días 12, 14, 18, 20, 25 y 27, en la sede de CEOE Aragón. Versará sobre el correo electrónico, Whastaspp Business, compartir información a través de tecnologías digitales, el uso básico de las redes sociales y herramientas colaborativas. Dispondrá también de un apartado dedicado al ciberacoso, la suplantación de identidad, la huella digital y los derechos de autor.

El tercer módulo se ocupará de la Ciberseguridad y Resolución de Problemas, y será los días 3, 5, 17, 19, 24 y 26 de octubre en la sede de CEPYME Aragón. Permitirá conocer las principales amenazas dirigidas a los sistemas de información, cómo identificar las principales herramientas de seguridad, así como su aplicación para cada caso, y la valoración sobre la necesidad de gestión de la seguridad en las organizaciones.

El cuarto y último módulo se centra en la toma de Decisiones basadas en datos, realizándose los días 7, 9, 14, 16, 21 y 23 de noviembre en la sede del Instituto Aragonés de Fomento. Este persigue fortalecer las capacidades de las pequeñas y medianas empresas ante la identificación y el abordaje de sus propias demandas de datos e información.

viernes, 12 de mayo de 2023

A look back at three innovations that have changed our lives

 (An article by Alex Moore read on innovationmanagement.se on 4th April, 2017)

Nowadays, the words “innovation” and “creativity” get thrown around a lot in the business and academic world. But the road to making successful innovations is filled with challenges, opportunities taken or missed, and plenty strikes of luck. Often, people invent machines to face a recurrent problem. These inventions, in turn, spawn other inventions and innovation. These types of inventions have the most impact on society. Here’s looking at three inventions that have changed our lives forever.

The Sewing Machine

Although Elias Howe is credited with the invention of the sewing machine, he actually wasn’t its first inventor. According to Cambridge History, as many as four patents for sewing machine prototypes existed before he invented the machine that would cause a gigantic shift in easing the burden of domestic chores.

Howe’s invention was one born of necessity. He himself suffered from a type of disability that made his life as a physical labourer very challenging. In fact, at one time, this disability forced him to abandon the workforce. To pick up the financial slack, his wife took on odd sewing jobs to help the family make ends meet.

Howe’s challenges with finances, as well as his physical challenges, played a role in motivating him to create a more efficient sewing machine. Actually, initially, he was interested in making a machine that could knit.

Being told that he’d make more money from the invention of the sewing machine, he was persuaded to build the sewing machine. It took him a couple of years to figure out how a sewing machine works or should work, however.

In the beginning, he was only able to sew the seams of clothes. Eventually, he created the machine that earned him the patent number #4750 and allowed him to sew pretty much everything.

The Mill Museum website suggests that the invention of the sewing machine helped women prove that they could operate complex machinery. It also revolutionized the sewing trade and it became the symbol of the industrial working woman.

The Gutenberg Printing Press

Could you imagine having to write a book out by hand? In the 1400s, this was the way to do it, mostly. Making books of any kind required a great deal of patience and labour. While many people consider the Gutenberg press the first printing press, it wasn’t – it was one in a series, according to Live Science. However, it was the first movable type press of any importance.

The Chinese are credited with inventing the precursor to the printing press. More than half a millennium before Johannes Gutenberg invented the printing press, the Chinese used block prints to print out their works.

In fact, one of the oldest surviving Buddhist manuscripts, “The Diamond Sutra,” was printed using this method. In some respects, the Gutenberg press built on what the Chinese had already learned about the printing press.

Innovations often arise from the work or ideas of others.

And certainly, the hatching and development of ideas – lots of ideas – are some of the most important first steps the inventor can take, according to Innovation Management. More specifically, a person inventing something must be willing to have a lot of ideas (a few bad ones) to invent something worth having.

So it was with the printing press. This machine, which revolutionized the dissemination of information and of books in mass quantities, was the product of many ideas that had been adapted and improved upon. For example, a modified wine press gave Gutenberg the screws he needed for part machine and linseed oil and soot became the ink.

Quite fascinating, isn’t it?

The Automobile

This great invention that helped people move past the horse and buggy as a means of travel also spawned a great number of creative endeavours. According to a University of Michigan report, the automobile changed the landscapes of America.

The invention of the car necessitated the creation of the highways and byways that criss-cross America. This, in turn, also had an impact on how communities got clustered together.

But cars brought more than just communities with them. The concept of the roadside diner and motels arose from the automobile industry, at least indirectly. Tourists traveling about the country needed places to stay and eat. What people now think of as modern businesses like McDonald’s or Holiday Inn really are in some respects the children of the roadside food shacks that began appearing beside the road in the early years of the automobile.

Naturally, these cars also needed a way to refuel, which led to the construction of gas stations and eventually, even truck stops. The way people interact with their communities and their neighbors today is thanks in large part to the invention of the automobile all those years ago.

Final Thoughts

Studying the innovations of the past gives us several instructive lessons about the nature of creativity. Often, the most creative ideas people have come about because the inventor was struggling with a problem. Other times, the inventor has a great number of ideas to build upon. And the best inventions often spark the need for other inventions and innovations. It’s a circular process that produces a never-ending cycle of new ideas and products.

Don’t let the fear of going over budget, the fear of standing up alone, or the fear of failing step in your way of creating something with the potential to change people’s life. That’s why we are here. To help one another, to create, to explore and leave a statement of our most courageous acts, out most enduring efforts, our most burning passions.

About the author

Alex Moore is a professional sewer. Alex believes that to be able to innovate, you must accept and work with what is, welcome error and failure, and risk starting all over again. No matter who you are, or where you are, you can certainly prove to yourself you can do it if you allow yourself to fail enough times.

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