Why
Engineering Companies Must Establish Thought Leadership by Research
Dr.
Amartya Kumar Bhattacharya
BCE
(Hons.) ( Jadavpur ), MTech ( Civil ) ( IIT Kharagpur ), PhD ( Civil
) ( IIT Kharagpur ), Cert.MTERM ( AIT Bangkok ), CEng(I), FIE,
FACCE(I), FISH, FIWRS, FIPHE, FIAH, FAE, MIGS, MIGS – Kolkata
Chapter, MIGS – Chennai Chapter, MISTE, MAHI, MISCA, MIAHS, MISTAM,
MNSFMFP, MIIBE, MICI, MIEES, MCITP, MISRS, MISRMTT, MAGGS, MCSI,
MIAENG, MMBSI, MBMSM
Chairman
and Managing Director,
MultiSpectra
Consultants,
23,
Biplabi Ambika Chakraborty Sarani,
Kolkata
– 700029, West Bengal, INDIA.
E-mail:
dramartyakumar@gmail.com
Website:
https://multispectraconsultants.com
It
is imperative that engineering companies establish thought leadership
by their research. What are the reasons? Firstly, thought leadership
positions an engineering company as a leader in its field. Secondly,
with educational institutions doing very little innovative research,
the burden of doing innovative research leading to patents has
shifted to engineering companies in the last quarter century.
Why
do so few patents result from research conducted at educational
institutions? It is because much of the research conducted at
academic institutions are mere permutations and combinations of
previous published research, often differentiated from previous
research by variation of just one engineering parameter. Needless to
say, patents cannot result from this kind of often useless research
having no practical utility and value.
As
a result, quite unlike the situation prevailing when I was pursuing
my three engineering degrees, the burden of doing research
eventuating in patents has shifted to engineering companies.
Engineering companies that aspire to dominate their market must set
up a research division immediately if they have not done so already.
They must do practical research resulting in patentable outcomes.
Clients are drawn towards engineering companies that have
demonstrated thought leadership in the form of published journal and
conference papers and patents.
An
innovation is made with a view to penetrating a market, capturing a
market and dominating a market. An engineering company that does not
take the trouble to innovate runs the risk of becoming outdated and
losing clients and marketshare. Even if such a company had a
significant marketshare previously, it will find that its marketshare
is eroding and clients are shifting away from the company to more
modern companies.
In
the future, research and innovation are going to become even more
important for engineering companies. Companies that are laggards when
it comes to research can hardly be expected to succeed while
companies that do good research are bound to be successful.
©
MultiSpectra Consultants, 2020.
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