• About
    • About GoNano
    • Partners
    • GoNano Advisory Panel
    • Project material
  • Tools & Information
    • GoNano co-creation approach
    • The GoNano project in 90 seconds
    • Citizens: join the nanodebate
    • Materials for Researchers and Engineers
    • Supporting Civil Society Organisations
    • Recommendations for Policy Makers
    • The role of industry
    • Knowledge database
    • GoNano Youtube Channel
    • Deliverables
  • The GoNano Online Conference
  • Activities
    • GoNano Webinars
    • Public Consultation for the GoNano White Papers
    • GoNano winter school
    • Second Stakeholder workshop on energy
    • Second Stakeholder workshop on food
    • Second Stakeholder workshop on health
    • Online consultation
    • Stakeholder workshop on energy
    • Stakeholder workshop on food
    • Stakeholder workshop on health
    • Citizen workshop on health
    • Citizen workshop on energy
    • Citizen workshop on food
  • News & Events
  • Contact
  • enEnglish
    • nlNederlands
    • esEspañol
    • csČeština

Home » Deliverables » D5.4 – Is there a business case for co-creation in nanotechnology research and innovation?

D5.4 – Is there a business case for co-creation in nanotechnology research and innovation?

This report explores the potential for a ‘business case’ for co-creation in nanotechnology research and innovation, building on the findings of the co-creation activities in the European project GoNano (Governing Nanotechnologies through Societal Engagement). The overall objective of the GoNano project was to improve the responsiveness of research and innovation processes to public values and concerns. GoNano brought together citizens, researchers, professional users, civil society organisations, industry and policy makers in a process of deliberative workshops and online consultations around three nanotechnology application areas (health, energy and food) to co-create concrete suggestions for future nanotechnologies. This final GoNano report reviews to what extent GoNano has inspired and encouraged innovation actors to adopt co-creation in research and innovation, working in an inclusive way to align product development to societal values needs and expectations.

The report explores the business case for co-creation both in the narrow and in the broader sense of the term, where, at its narrowest, the business case would be the monetary value it offers to commercial companies, and, in the broader sense, the business case would include non-monetary value (such as reputation, innovation potential, or access to markets) to innovation actors (i.e. including researchers, funding organisations, etc. as well) as adopters of co-creation processes. It reviews the GoNano experiences, considering feedback received from companies and other innovation actors on the GoNano co-creation activities, and reflects on the findings of a workshop with external stakeholders in October 2020 which aimed to explore the business case for co-creation in the context of three EU-projects funded under the NMBP-13-2018 call on risk governance in nanotechnology: NANORIGO, GOV4NANO and RISKGONE.

The report concludes that there may well be a business case for co-creation, both in the narrow and broader sense of the term. The GoNano experience in itself does not provide sufficient evidence to suggest that there is a business case for co-creation in the narrow sense. To argue for co-creation as a purely commercial activity for companies, more straightforward and convincing examples are needed that demonstrate the commercial benefit of co-creation. Still, co-creation may offer opportunities to operationalise the commitment of companies towards their stakeholders. There are some indications from other initiatives like PRISMA and LIVING INNOVATION that companies may adopt co-creation as part of their Corporate Social Responsibility strategies. However, the successful adoption of co-creation does seem to be limited to those cases where ‘doing good’ and ‘doing well’ coincide.

The business case for co-creation seems to look stronger if it is interpreted broadly, as the potential to realise value in the broader sense for all innovation actors. For researchers, co-creation could help to define new inroads for research, gain access to future technology users and attract new sources of funding. For policy makers, co-creation could offer solutions to wicked problems that carry broader stakeholder support. The GoNano experiences provides some initial clues to the potential added value for producers, researchers and policy makers. However, to make a convincing business case for co-creation, many more compelling examples are needed of the added value of adopting iterative, product-focused, transdisciplinary collaborations as part of innovation processes in research, innovation and policy making. As the GoNano project draws to a close, the search for the business case for co-creation continues.

Downlaod the report here: GoNano D5.4 – The business case for co-creation. 

D1.1- Building on the State-of-the-art: ex-post evaluation on mutual learning

D1.2- Understanding the role of culture, gender and communication traditions, and their implications for GoNano engagement methodologies

D1.3- Nanotech in food, energy and health: what areas and issues for a dialogue?

D2.1- Towards a GoNano co-creation approach

D2.2- Co-creation platform

D3.1- Information material for citizens’ workshops

D3.2- Briefing report on citizen needs and values in relation to nanotechnology in food, energy and health

D3.3- Briefing report on the outcomes of the online consultation

D4.1- Background material for stakeholder workshops

D4.2- Working paper on GoNano stakeholder workshops

D4.2B- Outcomes of co-creation workshops round 2*

D4.3- Evaluation report on the outcomes of the Mobilisation and Mutual Learning platform*

D4.4- Insights and lessons from the engagement activities*

D4.5- Concrete product suggestions for future nanotechnologies*

D5.1- Risk governance and research & innovation priorities in Nanotechnologies

D5.2 – Second briefing report on the nanotechnology RI policy context as input to developing the GoNano white papers

D5.3- Collection of the GoNano White papers

D5.4 – Is there a business case for co-creation in Nanotechnology research and innovation?

D5.5 – Policy Briefs

D6.1 – A collection of training material for researchers and engineers

D6.2- Online guidelines and easy-to-understand information for publics and stakeholders groups wanting to be involved with nanotechnology R&I

D6.3- Report collecting the materials and participant list from the Winter School*

D6.4 – The GoNano Online Conference

D7.1- GoNano communication and branding plan

D7.3- Info package 1

D7.4- Info package 2

D7.5 – Info package 3

D7.6 – Report on all the audiovisual vignettes from throughout the project

D8.3- External evaluation to monitor and support the project

D8.4 – Final external evaluation report: Assessment of the co-creation process

Contact Details

The Danish Board of Technology Foundation
Arnold Nielsens Boulevard 68E
2650 Hvidovre, Denmark
info@gonano-project.eu

About GoNano
  • About GoNano
  • Partners
  • GoNano Advisory Panel
  • The GoNano Youtube Channel
Three topics
  • Energy
  • Food
  • Health

©2020, Design by Hannie van den Bergh, DPF | Development by The Danish Board of Technology Foundation

EU Logo

GoNano is a Coordination and Support Action funded by the European Union under the NMBP Programme of Horizon 2020, Grant Agreement n° 768622.