Techweek KC addition: Smart City Innovation Workshop builds bottom-up brainstorming

August 30, 2018  |  Elyssa Bezner

A technician works on the Smart City's digital kiosk.

Kansas City residents, entrepreneurs, corporate partners, and city officials plan to come together during the Smart City Innovation Workshop at Techweek KC to brainstorm solutions to day-to-day challenges using smart technology.

The workshop pulls into Union Station Oct. 8 — the first day of Techweek KC, which runs through Oct. 12 and is presented by Techweek, a Chicago-based media and events company.

Herb Sih

Herb Sih, Think Big Partners

“We go through very specific design thinking-driven exercises to get into the lives of the citizens and get into the minutia of how these technologies can impact their lives and the challenges that need to be addressed,” said Sih, managing partner of Think Big Partners.

Think Big, a consulting firm focused on the smart city concept, is bringing the workshop home to Kansas City for the first time after four years positioning it in cities across North America, said Sih.

“What we’re finding across the country — and more and more cities and organizations are finding this — is that you really have to do more than just go top-down with the mission and vision and goals of the city,” he said. “You really have to go bottoms-up from the citizens too.”

Earlier workshops in such cities as Toronto have focused on topics like transportation, digital inclusion, public safety, and affordable housing through exercises with rapid-fire questions and exploration of complex issues, said Sih.

The exercises allow residents to explore overall issues to neighborhoods’ individual challenges, he said, going through each aspect of their day to look for technological solutions.

After gaining input from Kansas Citians, entrepreneurs, officials, and corporate partners, organizers plan to conduct innovation campfires using a facilitator to bring ideas to fruition, Sih added.

Everyone involved will benefit from the experience, he said, with entrepreneurs and larger companies gaining validation or new ideas for projects, city officials reaffirming what residents face day-to-day, and Kansas Citians gaining a better understanding of what a smart city means to them.

“[Residents] can understand the ways they can participate in the creation of new products and services that impact our lives,” Sih said. “Frankly, they can get a better understanding of how government and entrepreneurs and large companies work together; They can either be more patient as these very complex solutions are being developed or sometimes it can even lead to them becoming an entrepreneur or an innovator themselves or wanting to get involved in a more meaningful way to be able to help drive these solutions in the city.”

The workshop, or similar events, should be replicated at least once or twice a year, he added.

“This is really an opportunity to be able to bring them together — citizens, entrepreneurs, large companies, even funders and supporters — to be able to work together under the watchful eye and the partnership with the city,” Sih said. “This is a great way to kick off Techweek.”

To buy tickets for Techweek KC, click here.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2018 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Bryan Azorsky, Tiki Bar T-Shirt Club

        Tiki Bar T-Shirt Club revives now-closed beachy haunts, celebrates era of the side hustle  

        By Tommy Felts | November 14, 2019

        Tiki Bar culture is a quirky niche for a Kansas City-based side hustle, admitted Bryan Azorsky, but rapidly evolving online tools that eliminate middlemen help make such passions profitable and scalable. “I think the future is really people having more than one job in a way. They may have their main job and then they…

        Kaitlin Doyle, TheraWe Connect

        Launch Health check-up: TheraWe Connect bridging gap between parents, pediatric therapy

        By Tommy Felts | November 13, 2019

        Editor’s note: The following is part of a series of stories on the six cohort companies of the Launch Health Accelerator, powered by Nueterra Capital and sponsored by LaunchKC. Click here to read all the stories published in this series. Opportunity unlocked, it’s full steam ahead for TheraWe Connect as the startup prepares to check out…

        Mike Sobek, medZERO

        Launch Health check-up: medZERO simplifies medical bill pay with zero interest, zero fees

        By Tommy Felts | November 13, 2019

        Editor’s note: The following is part of a series of stories on the six cohort companies of the Launch Health Accelerator, powered by Nueterra Capital and sponsored by LaunchKC. Click here to read all the stories published in this series. Paying medical bills should be as simple as making a car payment, said Mike Sobek.  “We…

        KCSF STARTLAND

        KCSF rebrands to ‘STARTLAND’ and bolsters board, reflecting maturation of organization, ecosystem, leaders say

        By Tommy Felts | November 13, 2019

        A rebranding and name change for the Kansas City Startup Foundation will see the entrepreneurial community-building organization build on the legacy of Startland News while continuing to grow its education and talent programming. Now operating as STARTLAND, the organization still boasts its most-widely recognized programs — Startland News, MECA Challenge and Back2KC — which also have…