Innovando para a partir del conocimiento cambiar y generar valor

 

 

Filosofía y metodología

Philosophy and methodology

We assimilate the latest discoveries, policies and movements in innovation and research so that they form part of our leitmotif.

We firmly believe that knowledge drives innovation, and that its generation is necessary to create products, services and processes that are new for the company, or to improve those existing, and thus achieve success in the market (The Oslo Manual).

Neither are we immune to the reality of our surroundings, since innovation is taken as being a synonym for the successful production, assimilation and exploitation of novelty in the economic and social spheres. It offers new solutions to problems and thus makes it possible to meet the needs of both the individual and of society (European Commission Green Paper on Innovation).

Here at HI research we apply the most advanced innovation processes and models.

We are firm believers in open innovation.

Our channels for reaching the market are both internal and external and our projects enter and leave our department in numerous ways in order to generate value for ourselves and for society in general.

Creative thinking is the driving force of change.

We at HI research believe that it is our creativity that enables us to invent something new or relate existing elements in an innovative way, off the beaten track. That is why it has always been said that old ideas challenge the new.

At times of crisis only creativity is more important than knowledge (Albert Einstein).

... By 2020 more than three quarters of the S&P 500 will consist of companies we don't know today - new companies drawn into the maelstrom of economic activity from the periphery, springing from insights unknown today (Creative Destruction, Richard Foster and Sarah Kaplan 2001).

And, lastly, we make progress thanks to hard work and dedication.

Genius is one percent inspiration and ninety-nine percent perspiration (Thomas Alva Edison).

... ...and observing his resolved gesture, I was sure that he was satisfied, and feeling that the time had come, I ungloved my right hand and went forward to congratulate him on our 18 years of effort (Matthew Henson (writing in 1912) on the conquest of the North Pole with Robert Peary in 1909).