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We’re joined by Professor Tim Minshall, a leading authority on innovation and industrial strategy, and one of the most influential voices shaping how ideas move from labs into the real economy.
Tim is a Professor of Innovation at the University of Cambridge and head of the Institute of Manufacturing there, where he has spent decades working at the intersection of research, manufacturing, entrepreneurship, and policy. His work focuses on one deceptively simple question: why do so many great ideas fail to scale—and what does it actually take to turn innovation into impact?
In this episode we unpack on why advanced manufacturing still matters deeply for economic resilience, why the UK and Europe struggle to scale technologies they invent, and what policymakers, founders, and institutions consistently misunderstand about innovation systems.
We dive into:
-Why innovation fails at the scaling stage—not the idea stage
-The missing link between research, startups, and manufacturing
-Why advanced manufacturing is a strategic asset, not a legacy industry
-University spinouts: what works, what doesn’t, and why most fail
-The difference between invention, innovation, and impact
-Why “more startups” is the wrong innovation metric
-The role of systems thinking in national competitiveness
-What policymakers get wrong about industrial strategy
-How to build innovation ecosystems that actually deliver outcomes
-Lessons from Cambridge’s innovation model—and its limits
Key Takeaways from the Episode:
1. Innovation Is a System, Not a Moment:
2. Scaling Is Harder Than Inventing:
3. Manufacturing Is Where Value Is Locked In:
4. Universities Are Necessary but Not Sufficient:
5. Startups Are Not the Whole Story:
6. Industrial Strategy Is About Capability, Not Picking Winners:
7. Innovation Metrics Are Often Misleading:
8. The UK and Europe’s Structural Challenge:
9. Systems Thinking Beats Silver Bullets:
10. Impact Is the Only Metric That Matters:
Timestamps:
(00:00) – Introduction to Tim Minshall and innovation systems
This episode is a grounded, systems-level look at how innovation really works—beyond buzzwords, hype cycles, and startup mythology.
Follow (@iwaheedo) for more conversations on innovation, industry, and the future of economic progress.
By Waheed Nabeel4.3
33 ratings
We’re joined by Professor Tim Minshall, a leading authority on innovation and industrial strategy, and one of the most influential voices shaping how ideas move from labs into the real economy.
Tim is a Professor of Innovation at the University of Cambridge and head of the Institute of Manufacturing there, where he has spent decades working at the intersection of research, manufacturing, entrepreneurship, and policy. His work focuses on one deceptively simple question: why do so many great ideas fail to scale—and what does it actually take to turn innovation into impact?
In this episode we unpack on why advanced manufacturing still matters deeply for economic resilience, why the UK and Europe struggle to scale technologies they invent, and what policymakers, founders, and institutions consistently misunderstand about innovation systems.
We dive into:
-Why innovation fails at the scaling stage—not the idea stage
-The missing link between research, startups, and manufacturing
-Why advanced manufacturing is a strategic asset, not a legacy industry
-University spinouts: what works, what doesn’t, and why most fail
-The difference between invention, innovation, and impact
-Why “more startups” is the wrong innovation metric
-The role of systems thinking in national competitiveness
-What policymakers get wrong about industrial strategy
-How to build innovation ecosystems that actually deliver outcomes
-Lessons from Cambridge’s innovation model—and its limits
Key Takeaways from the Episode:
1. Innovation Is a System, Not a Moment:
2. Scaling Is Harder Than Inventing:
3. Manufacturing Is Where Value Is Locked In:
4. Universities Are Necessary but Not Sufficient:
5. Startups Are Not the Whole Story:
6. Industrial Strategy Is About Capability, Not Picking Winners:
7. Innovation Metrics Are Often Misleading:
8. The UK and Europe’s Structural Challenge:
9. Systems Thinking Beats Silver Bullets:
10. Impact Is the Only Metric That Matters:
Timestamps:
(00:00) – Introduction to Tim Minshall and innovation systems
This episode is a grounded, systems-level look at how innovation really works—beyond buzzwords, hype cycles, and startup mythology.
Follow (@iwaheedo) for more conversations on innovation, industry, and the future of economic progress.