Good and not so good practice in technology
institutes: Case studies from the ceramic tile sector
The most dynamic cluster in the global ceramic tile industry is
located around Castellón in the Valencia region, Spain. The Ceramics
Technology Institute (Instituto de Tecnologia de Cerámica, ITC) plays a
fundamental role for the competitiveness of the cluster. Many institutes
of this kind have been set up with the mission of technology transfer to
industry, and most of them struggle to come closer to companies. Why is
ITC such a huge success?
First, there is a clear mission. The ITC sees its mission in the
education of the university professionals, chemical scientists and
chemistry engineers with a focus on industrial ceramics. In the words of
the director of the ITC, "We see our students as future partners in
joint research projects with companies in the future; they will be our
links in the companies". Seeing students as future clients is not a
usual perspective, and the results seem to confirm the success of this
strategy in terms of close cooperation with local companies. About 500
university graduates (2% of sector workers) have entered the sector
since 1987; 3,100 professionals attended 107 courses delivered since
1983.
Second, ITC has its main business focus quite clear: "our
business is technology, to be developed in close cooperation with
companies". The machinery is Italian, which led ITC to focus on
process technology, development of raw material and frits/glazes. The
local industry is qualified to specify the equipment variables necessary
to adjust machines to the particularities of the Spanish production
process characteristics. And it is accepted, even among prominent
Italian manufactures, that Spanish product quality has reached world
class standards.
The main lines of action are: natural and processed raw material;
manufacturing process; finished product focused on innovations. The
increasing number of development projects with companies shows the
important role of ITC.
year
|
1991
|
1992
|
1993
|
1994
|
1995
|
1996
|
1997
|
1998
|
1999
|
number of projects
|
10
|
16
|
28
|
25
|
38
|
57
|
44
|
54
|
53
|
total project-
revenue (US$)
|
399
|
635
|
812
|
877
|
942
|
1012
|
1099
|
1281
|
1442
|
ITC responses to companies’ demands are swift. When the sector
understood that design should be subject of studying, ITC has started a
group work. As it grew, ITC spun it off, thus creating ALICER. Although
ITC offers continuous education for professionals, Castellon has its own
vocational training center, were correspondent activities are
concentrated, when necessary with support of ITC. Accordingly, there is
no destructive competition among institutional service providers.
Third, ITC has managed to overcome the different perspectives of
university and companies regarding time, deadlines, practical relevance
of results and need of confidentiality. With the creation AICE, a non
profit organization, it was possible to manage the cooperation with
companies in a more "business oriented" way. ITC’s focus on
cooperation with companies is paramount, and often the academic output
of the center has to be put in second place when confidentiality
conditions of contracts make publication of results impossible.
Credibility is achieved with hard work and remarkable results,
recognized by companies.
Were there no conflicts or shortage of budgets? Yes, plenty of the
very normal conflics between the academic and the "real" world
of technology in companies. This is the "everyday conflicts we have
to manage", considered in right perspective when compared with the
challenges the real world of companies face them with. In other words,
ITC has an adequate, rather than a romantic, concept of
university-industry interaction.
Another ceramic tile cluster is located in Santa Catarina, Brazil. In
the mid-1990s, a Center for Ceramics Technology (CTC) was founded. It
was modeled after ITC in Castellón and was supposed to offer testing
and certification services to firms as well as conduct research projects
with firms. One of the rationales of firms in demanding the foundation
of the CTC was to achieve economies of scale in testing of inputs, and
to have a local institution for technical certification of final
products, thus saving time and money.
Even though this institution today is up and running, the effect is
falling short of the expectations. This has to do with two conflicts
which erupted or materialized in the creation of these offers. It is an
experience which shows how a good idea can go badly wrong.
First, there is the way CTC was organized. It is administrated by
SENAI. SENAI is the main organization in vocational training in Brazil,
and it is administrated by the private sector, being part of the system
of the state-level Federation of Industries. Yet it has a high degree of
independence, and it is often perceived as a governmental institution by
firms, a perception that reflects, among other things, the fact that
SENAI schools are rarely run in a business-like manner. SENAI is
financed via a levy paid by each industrial firm (1 % of the wage sum).
But as formal employment is constantly decreasing, SENAI’s income is
decreasing as well, and therefore the organization has been involved in
efforts to secure survival for quite some time. In the case of Santa
Catarina, this took the shape of upgrading. SENAI is phasing out what
used to be its main task, namely apprenticeship training, and is
creating course offers for short- and long-term courses at secondary and
tertiary level which it is selling to firms. Furthermore, SENAI is
setting-up technology centers in each of the main clusters, something
that is even further away from its traditional mission. Managing these
centers is pretty much based on learning-by-doing, and thus depends to a
high degree on the individual characteristics of the director. Since it
is not sure that a director of a SENAI school has frequently set his
foot into a firm or worked there, it is a challenge for a director of a
technology center to have a clear and updated notion of business
management and the kind of demands a firm may have.
To make bad things worse, the CTC was not just run by SENAI but
involved a partnership with the Materials Laboratory of the Federal
University of Santa Catarina (UFSC) in Florianópolis. While the
engineering departments of UFSC have an excellent record in quality of
training, their record in terms of cooperation with the private sector
is anything but. So the CTC ended up with a double directorship - a
SENAI person with no industry background, and an UFSC professor with no
industry background, either, but strong academic aspirations. So rather
than emulating the experience of Castellón’s ITC, the actors in the
cluster managed to create exactly the opposite. Up to this day CTC
suffers from lack of credibility with the firms. One element, which is
not at all helpful, is the fact that there are hardly any full-time
employees; even the current director is another person on loan from UFSC
who spends at best three days per week at CTC. Most of the researchers
are postgraduate and doctoral students financed with postgraduate
scholarships, and for their personal career perspectives it is essential
to achieve academic excellence, rather than selling services to firms or
helping them in solving their everyday problems. Accordingly,
interaction between ITC researchers and firms is complicated; just one
of the minor problems involved in technological development work is the
fact that what a CTC researcher perceives as a prototype appears as a
rough sketch of a possible idea to a firm person.
Second, there is the position of the regional university, UNESC, and
its relationship with CTC. It is important to know that UNESC is a
private university, deriving its income mainly from the fees paid by
students, so that offering courses which are locally in high demand is
essential for the economic viability of the university. The curriculum
of the ceramics technology course, which UNESC has offered since 1996,
had originally been developed by SENAI, only to be transferred to UNESC
after the intervention of one of the main cluster actors. One needs
little creativity to imagine the kind of feelings SENAI/CTC had for the
university afterwards, and it is not surprising that the relationship
has been somewhat cool ever since.
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