Smart Communities Connect, Share, and Drive from Data
At the risk of making this post feel like an ad, I embedded “The Way We Work” above. The video clearly explains (from an enterprise perspective) the same theory of change we’re trying to advance from a community perspective – how connecting us to each and to the information we need unleashes talent, innovation, and gives us a shot at prosperity.
Last week, IBM convened a Smarter Cities Summit in NYC. Adam Christensen summed up the first day’s themes:
1. The use of data and analytics to make improvements in a city.
2. The need for new kinds of public-private partnerships. Every speaker and panelist – from Melody Barnes to Tom Brokaw – touched on how creative public-private partnerships were the key to solving these complex metropolitan issues.
3. The need for “systems thinking” to solve big macro issues. Dr. Cortese captured it best when he discussed how addressing the challenges nations and cities face with health care requires first a holistic systems thought. Health care, like public safety, transportation or education, requires long-term thinking to understand the broader issues and all the highly complex interdependencies with other systems. Basically, Dr. Cortese said, the health system could use systems engineers.
Again, the same issues we are working on from a community perspective. (Day 2 comprised break-out sessions and was a little trickier to summarize).