Episoder
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Anthony Impey MBE is CEO of SME support network Be the Business, and he wants to change the world. Today he slips off his super-hero cloak and joins Professor Neil Maiden to delve into the UK’s productivity problems and discuss what can be done to solve them.
Be The Business has supported an increase in SME productivity to the tune of £462 million in the UK, and in this wide ranging conversation we discuss the current challenges facing business owners; why we are now in the “Age of the Entrepreneur”; how uncertainty creates opportunities for business; and the generative AI tools that will support productivity.
Produced by Emilia Rolewicz
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.dsoundraw.io
Links
Be the Business website https://www.bethebusiness.com/
Anthony Impey Twitter @Impmister
Anthony Impey LinkedIn
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
Business-Sparks
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Alice Frost, Director of Knowledge Exchange at Research England, discusses the UK’s knowledge economy and the dark art of getting innovative ideas out of higher education to create real-world impact.
How well is the UK doing in this field? Alice explains her obsession with evidence, avoiding “wifty wafty” stakeholder engagement, and how the UK’s academic research and development achievements translate into £billions of pounds for the UK economy. If you are interested in the current debate on the wholesale reform of how universities think about their spin out and licencing strategies, this podcast is for you.
Produced by Emilia Rolewicz
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.dsoundraw.io
Links
UK Research England website UK Research England (UKRI)
Alice Frost LinkedIn
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
DesignSparks
SportSparks
Business-Sparks
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Manglende episoder?
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How can businesses of every size learn to embrace curiosity and creativity?
Andy Wilkins, business consultant; Honorary Visiting Fellow at Bayes Business School; and co-founder of consultancy Perspectiv, discusses creativity in business with Professor Neil Maiden.
The conversation covers a wide range of issues and considers how ten years ago, industrial focus was on process improvements, which has now given way to the leadership of complexity, establishing cultures, and the delusion of self-awareness. The current business environment is increasingly volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous (VUCA) and this podcast offers insights from two experienced guides in business and creativity.
Produced by Emilia Rolewicz
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.dsoundraw.io
Links
Perspectiv website https://www.perspectiv.co.uk/
Andy Wilkins Twitter @AndrewNWilkins
Andy Wilkins LinkedIn Andy Wilkins
Course Masters in Innovation Creativity & Leadership
Book Breaking the Code of Change
Amy Edmondson Professor of Leadership and Management at Harvard Today’s Leaders Must Learn To Think Like Scientists
Professor Ruth Noller Creativity Equation
Paper: The Creativity Crisis
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
DesignSparks
SportSparks
Business-Sparks
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Anna Whitelock is Executive Dean of the School of Communication & Creativity, at City University of London. She also just happens to be an expert in the history of the UK Monarchy and had a few things to say about the recent coronation of King Charles III.
The School of Communication and Creativity was opened in the Autumn of 2022 and Anna explains what it’s all about and how their ambition is to break the mould of performing arts schools and be more accessible to a wider range of students with a focus on diversity and inclusivity and an ambition to change the creative industries.
This wide-ranging conversation takes in the need to support creativity in business, defines creative intelligence and examines the fundamental differences between human creativity and AI-generated content.
Produced by Emilia Rolewicz
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.dsoundraw.io
Links
Anna Whitelock Twitter @annawhitelock
School of Communication and Creativity Twitter @CityUniSCC
Anna Whitelock LinkedIn
Website: School of Creativity and Communication
Courses: Masters in Innovation Creativity & Leadership
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
DesignSparks
SportSparks
Business-Sparks
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This week’s CreAtIve Tech podcast is a sports roundtable. Professor Neil Maiden is joined by Stuart Armstrong, Strategic Lead for Workforce Transformation at Sport England, and Alex Wolf, Sports Consultant and founder of Strength and Conditioning Academy.
Stuart and Alex consider the culture of curiosity and creativity that sports coaching must support for successful outcomes; the importance of psychological safety in training; and the effects of power dynamics on coaches and athletes.
Join the debate on the difference between good and bad sports coaching, re-appraising coaching behaviour, and why being tough and mean is antithetical to high performance.
Produced by Emilia Rolewicz
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.dsoundraw.io
Links
Strength and Conditioning Academy https://strengthconditioning.academy/
Play Their Way website https://www.playtheirway.org/
Alex Wolf Twitter @AlexpWolf
Alex Wolf LinkedIn
Stuart Armstrong LinkedIn
Stuart Armstrong podcast Talent Equation podcast
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
SportSparks
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Hamish McAlpine is a Director at international innovation consultancy company, Oxentia. In September 2023, CebAI and Oxentia won funding to develop a co-creative AI tool to accelerate high-growth companies.
To kick off series 3 of the Creative Tech podcast, Professor Neil Maiden and Hamish McAlpine discuss the aims of the project, AI tech strategies for business consultancies, working with global innovators, the future of AI, and the most important questions of the day – Barbie or Oppenheimer? and how Douglas Adams’ was 50 years ahead of his time…
Produced by Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.dsoundraw.io
Links
Oxentia website https://www.oxentia.com/
Hamish McAlpine Twitter @hamish_mcalpine
Hamish McAlpine LinkedIn Hamish McAlpine
UK Research England (UKRI)
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
DesignSparks
SportSparks
Business-Sparks
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Who controls technology? How is it developed? Who benefits from AI? How do we change things for the best? Cultural curator Irini Papadimitriou, Creative Director at innovation lab and cultural agency, Future Everything, on challenging norms, queering datasets, and inherent bias in artificial intelligence.
From the LAPD and deadly robots to the National Trust, Irini champions inclusivity in technology using art and collaborating with a wide array of innovative artists from around the world.
Produced by Diana Squires
Edited by Emilia Rolewicz
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.soundraw.io
Links
You and AI: Through the Algorithmic Lens
National Trust at Quarry Bank: Unintended Consequences
The Normalising Machine
Stop LAPD Spying Coalition
Bill Balaskas
Forensic Architecture
Adam Harvey: V-Frame
Jake Elwes: Zizi - Queering the Dataset
Creative Comm 21
Future Everything
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
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In this free and frank exchange of views we look inside life at the very top of elite coaching with Nigel Redman, former Team GB Olympic swimming coach, now England Rugby’s 'Kingmaker' and Head of Team Performance. And Chris McLeod who looks after the UK's top tennis talent in his role as lead strength and conditioning coach at the Lawn Tennis Association.
Together with host, Professor Neil Maiden, the panel discuss the importance of getting out of your comfort zone and listening to people with more diverse experiences and points of view; the difference between boundaries and barriers; how important the environment is to supporting or suppressing creativity; and the dead weight of tradition in sports coaching that impedes new and more creative ways of working.
Produced by Diana Squires
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.soundraw.io
Links
England Rugby
Lawn Tennis Association
Masters in Creativity, Innovation & Leadership
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
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Is your body part of the interface? Do you track your health and fitness on your smart phone? Are you quantifying yourself to the point of modification? Do you realise how much money corporations can make from the personal data you upload to the web?
Ghislaine Boddington is an award-winning Creative Director, Presenter and Researcher. She is a Cofounder of body>data>space (fka shinkansen), an interactive design collective based in East London who have advocated for the living body to be at the heart of the digital debate since the early 1990s. She is a Reader in Digital Immersion at the School of Design, University of Greenwich where she researches the future of collective embodiment under her theme “The Internet of Bodies”.
In this episode, Ghislaine speaks with Professor Neil Maiden about why technology should enhance not just the brain but the body, the blurred virtual and physical world the pandemic created, and reveals the single most important thing she needs in order to be creative
Produced by Diana Squires
Edited by Emilia Rolewicz
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.dsoundraw.io
Links
Ghislaine Boddington The Internet of Bodies website.
Ghislaine Boddington biog
Ghislaine Boddington twitter
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
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How do self-defence classes make you a better negotiator? What do F1 crews and KPMG consultants have in common? Parenting, innovation and being a leader at Microsoft, all covered in this conversation with high-roller Bunmi Durowoju, Senior Strategic Business Development Manager at Microsoft.
Professor Neil Maiden and Bunmi discuss what stops leaders from being creative, how to nurture creative self-belief, and why ensuring diverse voices creates the most innovative solutions.
Bunmi is brilliantly pragmatic on EDI issues, an advocate for inclusive, sustainable, humanistic leadership within Microsoft, and heads up the Underrepresented Ethnic Group (UEG, BAME) initiatives for Women@Microsoft UK.
Produced by Diana Squires
Edited by Emilia Rolewicz
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.soundraw.io
Links
Bunmi Durowoju
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
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What's it like working with Dominic Cummings? How can we innovate effectively in large organisations? How does a Japanese TV presenter fit in to all of this?
In this wide-ranging chat, Neil Maiden catches up with Sir Professor Finkelstein, MBE, an old friend and former Chief Scientific Advisor for the British government. This conversation spans his distinguished career from software systems research, through innovation in government to his new role leading City, University of London. Prof Finkelstein discusses what he made of working with Dominic Cummings, the concept of creative destruction and what constrains creativity in institutional systems. He explains how strategic venture capital can be used to drive change in organisations; the importance of taking lessons from de-clutter queen Marie Kondo, and confesses to the one thing that he needs to be creative.
Produced by Diana Squires
Executive Producer Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.soundraw.io
Links
Anthony Finkelstein website https://finkelstein.uk/
Anthony Finkelstein blog
Anthony Finkelstein Twitter @profserious
Marie Kondo https://konmari.com/
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
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Who takes their inspiration from John Cleese? Who would bin education? And you would never guess who wants to ban robots....
We kick-off series two with some of the highlights from last season. Every week, we invite some of the world's smartest thinkers in creativity and technology to have a chat with Professor Neil Maiden, the director of the Centre for Creativity enabled by AI.
At the end of every conversation we ask our guest the same three questions - What do they need be creative? What new app would they create? and What piece of tech would they bin if they had the chance?
From the godfather of user centre computer design, Ben Shneiderman, to Ted Talker and business author Margaret Heffernan, behavioural psychologist Richard Chataway, renowned digital artist and pioneer Ernest Edmonds, creative problem solving guru Scott Isaksen, and innovation expert Dr Sara Jones, we have gathered up their responses to our regular three question feature.
Produced by Diana Squires
Executive Producer and Presenter Sam Steele
Theme music generated by AI @ www.dsoundraw.io
Connect with the National Centre for Creativity enabled by AI www.linktr.ee/CebAI
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Dr Jones is a pioneer in the field of interdisciplinary creativity. A lecturer in Creative Interactive System Design at Bayes Business School, and the Director of the Centre for Creativity in Professional Practice, Sara has been instrumental in developing international collaborations and post grad business courses that focus on injecting creativity and innovation into business and MBA-level students.
In this podcast she discusses her work collaborating with businesses and academics across the world, the role of education in engendering innovation skills in students, how technology can play a part in that process, and, the one single thing that she would get rid of to make humans more creative!
Links
Dr Sara Jones
Centre for Creativity in Professional Practice
Masters, Innovation Creativity and Leadership (MICL)
Bayes Business School
Centre for Creativity Enabled by AI (CebAI)
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
City, University of London
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Ernest Edmonds distinguished career spans nearly 60 years. He is an exhibited artist in his own right and an international expert on Human-Computer Interaction (HCI), specialising in creative technologies.
Professor Neil Maiden interviews this computer art pioneer, discussing how art, computer science and cognitive psychology have converged since the 1980s and have changed the HCI journey, from the "ease of use" 80s and 90s to today's desire to "enhance creativity". They discuss the problem with Machine Learning and the trouble with artists and the one thing un today's world that Ernest would happily see disappear.
Links
Ernest Edmonds
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
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Margaret Heffernan is a hugely successful CEO, award-winning author and has given no less than four Ted Talks. With direct and incisive insights, she effortlessly explodes myths and mysteries around how businesses succeed and what type of behaviour is required to build teams that are innovative.
In this podcast Margaret talks to Professor Neil Maiden about what she considers to be the biggest communication failure of her lifetime, the one thing that she loathes with a passion above all else, and why vertically integrated projects are the way forward.
Links
Margaret Heffernan
CebAI: twitter LinkedIn Website email
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Professor Neil Maiden is talking to author and behavioural psychologist Richard Chataway. Richard heads up an international business consultancy called BVA Nudge Unit whose job is to help businesses and governments to become more successful. He uses his understanding of human behavioural psychology to come up with processes that compel positive change and successful business adaption.
Richard discusses his philosophy on how to be an effective communicator. Stay tuned to the end to learn how you can get an exclusive 25% discount off his book 'The Behaviour Business: How to Apply Behavioural Science for Business Success'
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Scott Isaksen, author of the set-text “Creative Approaches to Problem Solving: A framework for innovation and change”; founder and CEO of international business consultancy CPSB Group, and a Professor of Leadership and Organizational Behaviour in conversation with Professor Neil Maiden.
Scott discusses the need for deeper diversity of thought in business and how the Covid 19 pandemic has had a positive effect on business innovation. He also explains where the literal origins of the phrase "to debug your computer" comes from...
Links
Scott Isaksen:
CPSB Group
CebAI:
twitter
LinkedIn
Website
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Ben Shneiderman is the father of Human Computer Interaction (HCI). He created much that we take for granted in our digital world - clickable highlighted web-links, and touchscreen keyboards on mobile devices for starters. Here he talks to Professor Neil Maiden of the UK's National Centre for Creativity enabled by AI (CebAI) about the subject of creativity and technology and why our apps need to evolve to enable users to have greater control of the creative activities they are using digital tools for.
In this podcast he talks to Professor Neil Maiden of the UK's National Centre for Creativity enabled by AI (CebAI) about why apps need to evolve to enable users more control of their creative activities. He explains why metaphors like "social robots" and “intelligent computers" are unhelpful, and describes how AI can be a fundamental part of the process for developing creative self belief.
Links
Ben Shneiderman:
groups.google.com/g/human-centered-ai
twitter.com/HumanCentredAI
CebAI:
twitter.com/CebAICentre
www.linkedin.com/company/national…ty-enabled-by-ai
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