
How innovative is your city? McKinsey Digital has released a new innovation study of the world's leading cities, grouping them into one of four different categories -- "hot springs," "dynamic oceans," "silent lakes," and "shrinking pools."
The most innovative cities are "dynamic oceans," while the "hot springs" are the types of cities with a lot of economic momentum, but in need of a little Creative Class infusion to make them even more vibrant and diverse. In the chart above, Silicon Valley stands alone as the dominant innovation cluster in the world.
While it's not a real stretch to see Silicon Valley as the dominant "dynamic ocean" of innovation in the world, who knew that Kiel, Germany and Miyazaki, Japan are among the hottest up-and-coming innovation clusters in the world? (In fact, there's a whole handful of Japanese cities that made the cut as "hot springs" of innovation) And, conversely, that New York, Chicago and Philadelphia are "silent lakes" of innovation? By some measures, even the Twin Cities are more vibrant than their East Coast counterparts.
via FutureLab and Endless Innovation
Comments
Thanks. Is there any way to list the cities?
It's a sexy way to label the data, but I'm not convinced that patents (average growth 1997 - 2007, number in 2006 and number of companies with patents) is an accurate reflection of "innovation".
And if it is, I think it's reflecting innovation in bio-medics and technology more than it is in design.
=) Marc
I doesn't surprise me to see New York in the "Silent Lakes" sector and not really up there with the more innovative cities. New York is more of a money place. It's where you go to get funding for or sell your ideas.