Stay on track with innovation KPIs (March 24th)

It is not surprising that many organizations aim to improve their innovation activities, but aren’t sure where to begin. How do you know whether an innovation is successful? And more importantly, how do you know whether an innovation will be successful?  In other words, how do you measure innovation performance?

Please join John Saiz in a discussion of the tools and techniques for developing innovation metrics and key performance indicators and how they can be used to improve the effectiveness an organization’s innovation system.

John, former Chief Technology Officer at NASA’s Johnson Space Center and current Principal with the Innovation360 Group, collaborates with manufacturing and technology-intensive organizations worldwide to improve their innovative capabilities.

Time: 9 am EST,  March 24, 2021

About John Saiz

John Saiz, Principal at Innovation 360 Group, is formerly the Chief Technology Officer at NASA’s Johnson Space Center. Mr. Saiz works with manufacturing and technology-intensive companies worldwide to enhance their capabilities across the core elements of innovation and technology management.

Since 2014, he has led collaborations with a number of multinational commercial organizations, including AstraZeneca, FMC Technologies, GE Global Research, GE Oil & Gas, Halliburton, Oxiteno, PepsiCo, Pfizer, Schlumberger, and Subsea 7. Mr. Saiz has also supported industry consortia and academia, including the Air Conditioning, Heating and Refrigeration Institute, BioPhorum, OrthoWorx, Purdue University, the University of California at Los Angeles, and the University of Maine.

While at NASA, Mr. Saiz directed a number of technology and flight development projects that spanned the full spectrum of technology readiness levels, from initial proof-of-concept laboratory demonstrations through long-term spaceflight operations on the Space Shuttle, Russian Mir, and International Space Station.  He managed a portfolio of nearly 200 internal research and technology development activities during his CTO tenure at the Johnson Space Center. His industry experience includes engineering and technology management roles at Halliburton, ILC Space Systems (now Oceaneering), and Honeywell Defense Systems. He also worked a brief stint as a “mud logger” with Integrated Drilling and Logging, Inc. in the Texas and Louisiana oilfields

Mr. Saiz maintains an appointment as a Principal Industrial Fellow with the Institute for Manufacturing at the University of Cambridge.