Ha pasado poco más de un año desde la ultima entrada en este blog. Ha sido un período en que lo urgente ha desplazado injustificadamente a lo importante y el espacio reservado para la preparación de estas notas ha sido ocupado semana tras semana por otras actividades. Hoy buscamos retomar el esfuerzo con esta nota que desde nueva Zelandia nos manda Ifor, nuestro amigo y gran experto clusters.
Red Lights & Green Lights on Cluster Development
Ifor Ffowcs-Williams
On the final day of the TCI Monterrey conference, during the plenary discussion on ‘Clusters in the World’ chaired by Karin Gjerløw Høidal from Innovation Norway, I shared some of my experiences on what works and what doesn’t work with regards to the practicalities of cluster development. A number of participants asked for a copy of the notes I was talking to. These notes, with some elaboration, follow.
Forty-two countries were present at Monterrey, demonstrating today’s global interest in cluster based economic development. My own experience over two decades of cluster development work covers many of the 42 countries and a number of others that were not present, including Iceland, South Africa, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Peru, Grenada, Bahamas, Trinidad, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu, Tonga and Samoa.
These summary comments draw on this cumulative experience.
Red lights on cluster development
1. Clustering initiatives that are artificially confined:
- Confined by geography, often to a political region;
- Confined by short-term support, with results expected
within a few months;
- Confined by limiting the clustering intervention to
supporting SMEs;
- Confined by limiting the approach to precinct development (the quick fix
aspect … developing the social & the knowledge infrastructures are much
more essential, more complex and longer term);
- Confined by funders predetermining the cluster’s strategies;
- Confined by funders who view analysis/reports as action items and a prime deliverable;
- Confined by cluster development being introduced as just another economic development project, rather than centre stage.
Underperformance is auto-designed into confined clustering initiatives.
- Engagement just on fashion/me-to/wanna-be clusters:
- The all-too-common nano, eco, creative, ICT …
- Not focussing on what may be the prime wealth creating clusters, clusters
that may be ‘unsexy’;
- Some driver clusters being dismissed as ‘low tech and old economy’;
- Not appreciating that sustainable diversification can evolve from unsexy
clusters.
- Paralysis-by-analysis:
- Seeking to comprehensively understand everything about a cluster prior to
engagement on it’s development;
- Outsiders parachuting in to determine the cluster’s forward agenda;
- Viewing cluster analysis as raw material for MBAs;
- Forgetting that clusters are firstly a social system.
Green lights on cluster development
- Seeking to comprehensively understand everything about a cluster prior to
- Clustering initiatives that are learning-by-doing:
- Comfortable in quickly engaging on immediate issues,
opportunities;
- The co-development of bottom-up strategies by those who
will be involved in implementation;
- Viewing analysis as an on-going activity, not a one-off prior to engagement;
- Identifying over time the hot-spots within broadly defined clusters.
- Comfortable in quickly engaging on immediate issues,
- Clustering initiatives that aggressively lever their (limited) resources by enlisting cooperation:
- Integrating different policy agendas around the cluster’s needs, addressing coordination failures;
- Integrating a clutter of support organisations;
- Attracting co-funding across public agencies, donors.
- Clustering initiatives that have broad agendas:
• Appreciating that there is no one silver bullet for their cluster;
Filed under: Metodología y Proceso de Intervención, Proceso Humano | Tagged: clusterización, Clusters, colaboración, Monterrey MX | Leave a comment »