An evolving Nokia knows that the world is full of creative people with smart ideas – and it is opening its doors to them. The latest thing from the Nokia is “Invent With Nokia” – an initiative inviting people to submit ideas that Nokia will pay for if they decide to use them.
The Nokia Conversations blog explains: “Having a great idea is one thing, but having that idea turned into a reality is often much more difficult, costly and time consuming and so ideas rarely come to fruition. What if you had a great idea for a future device, or a radical new feature or service? Nokia has today launched a new programme that allows you to submit your ideas. Invent With Nokia is now open for ideas.
“If you have a genuinely useful and innovative idea that could be turned into a product or service by Nokia – whether or not you are a full time inventor – imagine the feeling of having your vision realised by a company such as Nokia that can make it happen,” it says.
Just how generously is not so clear.
“Nokia’s business is very diverse and the inventions we review are similarly broad. Whilst we take a common approach to valuing and rewarding our partners, there will be some variability,” the Invent With Nokia site explains. “In principle you will be eligible for an award if we apply for a patent based on your invention. You may be eligible for a further award depending on the success of the product and the level of award you choose at the patent application stage.”
And remember, money is not everything – there is fame, too. In addition to monetarily rewarding good ideas: “You’ll also take your place in a hall of fame,” states the May 19 blog post, “giving you public recognition for your invention so everybody will know who you are.”
Nokia’s CEO Stephen Elop, in a video on the Invent With Nokia site, speaks of his pre-CEO roots. “As an engineer, I understand the importance of innovative ideas and intellectual property,” he says. “As a result, we have insured that Invent With Nokia is a secure environment in which you can safely present your concepts to us. I encourage you to consider sharing your creative work and joining us in the amazing future of mobility.”
Since becoming CEO in September 2010, Elop’s other big ideas to help reverse the phone maker’s slipping market share have been to switch Nokia’s focus from the fast-losing-friends Symbian OS to Microsoft’s Windows Phone platform; to outsource Symbian responsibilities to Accenture; to lay off 4,000 employees and shift 3,000 others to Accenture; and, most recently, to rebrand Ovi services as straight-up Nokia services.
“These last few years, and moving forward,” Nokia Executive vice president and CMO Jerri DeVard said in a May 16 statement about the Ovi phase-out, “our mission remains unchanged: we will continue our work to deliver compelling, unified mobile service offerings and next-generation, disruptive technologies.”
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