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November 14, 2006

All roads lead to Palo Alto

Stanford University Over the past weekend, I trekked down Highway 101 to Palo Alto to attend the “Roads to Innovation” conference at Stanford Graduate School of Business. The conference is the main annual event organized by NOVA, the Italian Association of American MBAs. This year also marked a major public milestone for Urania, Italian Association for Life Sciences, which co-hosted the event.

The official announcement recites:

“Hosted in the heart of Silicon Valley at Stanford University, the Conference aims to disentangle the drivers of innovation in the economy and the role of universities, venture capitalists, entrepreneurs and corporations in promoting new ideas and technologies.
Open to MBA students, PhD students, GSB alumni, Stanford students and alumni, and professionals, the event engages distinctive policy makers, businesspersons, and scholars in the debate on the enablers of innovation in both technology-intensive and traditional sectors.”

Overall, the promise was kept. The organizers put together a great series of panels (5) and, with only some exceptions, panelists and moderators were able to keep the conversation lively throughout two long weekend days. Speakers included Guerrino de Luca, CEO of Logitech, Enzo Torresi, venture capitalist, serial entrepreneur and 30-year veteran of the high-tech industry, Paul Romer, the leading US economist, Jeff Jordan of Paypal pedigree, Diego Piacentini, SVP at Amazon, Marco Milani, CEO of Indesit, Roberto Crea, biotech pioneer and serial entrepreneur, and as the keynote speaker, Eric Schmidt of Google.

I have to admit I was a tad underwhelmed by Mr. Schmidt’s address, though it touched upon some very interesting trends such as reputation systems and personal data portability. I found the talk engaging but certainly not earth-shattering, especially the Q&A that followed. You have the top man from what is arguably the most influential and powerful company in technology today and 50% of the questions focus on the mechanics of one M&A deal? Sure, the YouTube acquisition is important, but is it as important as issues such net neutrality or the inadequacy of copyright law on the web, or government regulation of access to information?

While day 1 was mostly centered on software and internet innovation, day 2 switched to innovation in “traditional” industries and biotech. The two Sunday panels were probably the most interesting. Kudos to organizers and the panelists for taking a non-obvious angle on innovation.

A few random tidbits from the two days of conversations:

  • “Don’t bet against the internet”, Eric Schmidt, CEO, Google
  • “Entrepreneurship can be taught”, Tom Byers, Professor, Stanford
  • “Entrepreneurs are born”, Enzo Torresi, VC
  • “I am the most unemployable person here”, Greg Waldorf, CEO, eHarmony
  • “Innovation is how to maintain margins with a 5% year-on-year price erosion”, Marco Milani, CEO, Indesit

See you next year.

Matteo Fabiano

November 04, 2006

Upcoming Events

nova logo After the frenetic activity of the last few days, we will slow down a bit for a couple of weeks. We were able to attract several people and to deliver very high quality events with top notch speakers in prestigious locations. BAIA is establishing itself as the reference point for the Italian and non-Italian business community and for everybody interested in exploring business opportunities with and from Italy including all businesses related to the Italian traditions and culture.
Urania logoFor all our members and friends attending those events, it has been an incredible occasion to meet other business people and to expand everybody's network. I’ve seen members and guests having a discussion about VC while tasting Valpolicella wine, or explaining the strategy behind a new startup and sipping delicious Italian coffee, or exchanging business cards with the speakers and enjoying Italian beer.

If you didn’t have a chance to join us for the last events, we are not going to let you down: we will have two more in the next few days. For the upcoming events BAIA will be involved as co-organizer or sponsor.

One small request: if you have any feedback regarding the past activities or any suggestion for the future you can contact one of the BAIA board members or simply post a comment here, on this blog.

Franco Folini