Do you have innovative or disruptive ideas in industrial automation categories such as multi-robot collaboration, VR/ AR-driven human augmentation for industrial and enterprise use cases, digital personal assistants in enterprises, human-machine / machine-human communication technologies, edge computing, and artificial intelligence and related technologies?
If yes, you should apply for the Nokia Open Innovation Challenge (NOIC).
The President of Nokia Bell Labs and Corporate CTO of Nokia, Marcus Weldon, said, “We believe that in the coming fourth industrial revolution, a convergence of operations technology (OT) and information and communication technology (ICT) will catalyze the wide-scale automation in all industries and infrastructure – and our physical world as a whole. This will usher in a new era of productivity for many sectors of the economy. As we roll out end-to-end 5G around the world to deliver high performance local and wide area connectivity services, we are excited to connect with innovative startups, to allow them to come and collaborate with our experts, and for us to be able to support them to help grow their businesses and shape the future of industrial automation.”
The competition is organized in partnership with NGP Capital, a global venture capital firm, backed by Nokia. NGP Capital has 14 years of expertise in evaluating, investing, and accelerating promising growth-stage companies from all around the world.
Partner of NGP Capital, Bo Ilsoe, said, “We have met thousands of founders, invested in over 90 companies, and helped several all the way into IPO or M&A. In the NOIC competition, we will pay attention to great founding teams, who can demonstrate their deep domain expertise and prove they have the abilities to scale their business globally.”
The annual NOIC event offers the opportunity for pioneering startup companies to showcase best-in-class products and solutions within the Industrial Automation domain.
This year marks the seventh year of this global competition; the previous year’s winner was Spark Microsystems, a Montreal-based business that manufactures low power wireless transceiver chipsets designed for the Internet of Things (IoT).
Startup businesses that want to enter need to submit their entries by June 30, 2019. The NOIC competition’s website contains the complete rules and guidelines.
Finalists will be brought to a mentoring event this autumn at Nokia Bell Labs in Murray Hill, N.J., where they will meet with leading innovators in Nokia and have access to lab resources to help refine the pitch for their innovations.
The selected finalists will then present their proposals to an international jury at an event located at Nokia’s global headquarters in Espoo, Finland. The selection jury will be chaired by Marcus Weldon and be comprised of leaders from across Nokia, Nokia Bell Labs and NGP Capital.
Apply here.