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Copyright © 2012 BSI. All rights reserved.
The role of Standards as enablers todrive Governance and Innovationin business and industry
Scott Steedman CBE Director of Standards
IFAN, London, 15 October 2013
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Standards for Products, Standards for Services
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Total staff 300
Subscribing members 14,900
Committee members >10,000
Technical and Subcommittees 1,200
Live projects (ISO/IEC/CEN/CLC and
national standards)7,000
International/European secretariats 190
International and European Standards work 93%
BSI – a Global Standards Development Organisation
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.
Int’l Standards (ISO IEC)
Regional Standards (e.g. EN)
National Standards, e.g. British Standards (BS)
Sponsored standards – BSI PAS
Private and Consortia Standards
Corporate Technical Specifications
Professional Codes, Guidance, Best Practice
BSI – a Global Standards Development Organisation
Private & professional standards, codes and guidance
PAS route to national and international standards
BSI as NSB manages BS, EN & ISO, IEC standards
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Confusion over the relationship between standards and regulations undermines
their true potential for business
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Copyright © 2012 BSI. All rights reserved.
Standards are knowledge of ‘what good looks like’.
Standards are a tool to share information with other stakeholders.
Standards can be seen as the flip side of IP tools, used to protect information.
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Mass production and electricity triggered the first requirement for technical Standards
Antwerp 1903, same year that BS 1 was published
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BS1
A standard for interoperability
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The importance of process was recognised in the 1950s
“Create constancy of purpose toward improvement of product and service”, W. Edwards Deming, 1950
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The Honda CB 750Faster, more reliable, higher quality than any British motorcycle
1969
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New ways of working, new concepts, new drivers
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PeopleEmployeesCustomersShareholdersDirectorsCitizens
New understanding of risk and values in Society, the Economy and Environment
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Research Feasibility Prototype Launch Take Up Maturity
Fundamentally, organisations need:
Knowledge to increase the probability of success
Knowledge to accelerate the innovation cycle
The requirement for structured knowledge applies from research through all life stages
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The Standards Landscape – structured knowledge
Products
• Technical Specifications
• Better Products
Processes
• Management Systems
• Better business Processes
Frameworks
• Set out Values and Principles
• Better business Potential
We see three types of consensus Standards providing knowledge for business and industry in different forms
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Industry needs all three types of Standards to deliver products and services for the rapidly changing world market
1950 2000
Products
Processes
Potential
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It’s about better business
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Top BSI standards used worldwide
1979 Quality Management BS 5750 ISO 9001
1992 Environmental Managem’t BS 7750 ISO 14001
1995 Information Security BS 7799 ISO 27001
1996 Occupational Health & SafetyBS 8800OHSAS 18001
ISO 45001
2002 IT Service Management BS 15000 ISO 20000
2006 Integrated Management PAS 99
2007 Business Continuity Managem’tPAS 56BS 25999
ISO 22301
2008 Risk Management BS 31100 ISO 31000
2008 Asset Management PAS 55 ISO 55001
2008 ICT Continuity BS 25777 ISO 27031
2009 Energy Management BS EN 16001 ISO 50000
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ISO 31000 – the Risk Management Standard“the effect of uncertainty on objectives”.
•A new generation principles driven standard, not suitable for
certification – is ideal for Boards to build their understanding.
• ISO 31000 presents risk not simply as a negative but as the
management of business opportunity.
Framework Standards for business potential
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PAS 1192-2: 2012Building Information Modelling
Standards that transform industry performance
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Emerging areas 2013
• Healthcare
• Governance
• Financial Services
• Emerging technologies
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Standards as knowledge for
governance and innovation
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Security risks – Information & Data
Strategic risks - Brand, Business & Direction
Sustainability – Material efficiency, Energy, Water
Operational risks – Performance & Cost
Compliance risks – Legal & Ethical
Corporate Governance – Reputational risk
Opportunities for sharing best practice in business
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BS 10500
BS 13500
BS ISO 22301BS ISO 22313
BS 11000
BS ISO 26000BS 8900
GovernanceStandards
Anti-BriberyOrganisational Governance
Business Continuity
Management
Collaborative Business
Relationships
Corporate Social
Responsibility
Demonstrate legal compliance,Manage risk throughout
A system that integrates fundamental principles of direction, accountability and control
Assess and provide assurance of meeting regulatory and customer requirements
Efficiency, innovation, growth and customer satisfaction
Increase confidence in the integrity of the business, provide a sustainable procurement strategy for supply-chain risk
Using Standards to stimulate innovation
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• Accessing best practice standards and prior art,• Supporting more efficient organisational processes,• Developing new codes, guidance and standards:
• to increase confidence in the research outputs,• to inform the supply chain,• to accelerate routes to market,
• Bringing contact with the expert communities,• Achieving first mover advantage.
Research Feasibility Prototype Launch Take Up Maturity
24Copyright © 2012 BSI. All rights reserved.
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Experience at Plastic
Logic demonstrated that
earlier engagement with
standards would have
significantly accelerated
their route to market.
Standards for innovation and new industries
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Standards for innovation, jobs and growth
“The UK should exercise leadership in the development of
standards that support all areas of technological research,
development and innovation to drive growth in UK
industry.” Heseltine Review, 2012
BSI is working with UK Government on new industries
and emerging technologies:
• Synthetic biology,
• Offshore wind,
• Assisted living,
• Regenerative medicine.
Synthetic BiologyA rapidly developing industry with global potential
Need new PAS standards are needed for responsible innovation, specification of bio building blocks, terminology
Biosensors, Personalised medicines, Waste treatment and bioremediation,Renewable chemicals, materials and fuel, Artificial photosynthesis
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Standards for innovation in the energy industry
Offshore wind
Improving collaborative
working in large consortia
Improving performance,
avoid rework and redesign
Reducing cost, risks and time
Improving modularity and
health and safety issues
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• How can Smart Cities create a shared
understanding of their aspirations?
• How will Smart Cities set objectives and
measure progress?
• How will the devices and systems
communicate?
• How can Smart Cities manage the risks
and protect people?
Challenges for Smart Cities
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1) Developed a national strategy for a coherent, consistent suite of standards covering the full range of needs from decision making to terminology and interoperability.
2) Mapped existing standards, identifying gaps.
3) Now working with the UK Technology Strategy Board, the four UK demonstrator projects (Glasgow, London, Peterborough, Bristol) and with industry to draft standards.
Standards for Smart Cities: BSI’s strategy for the UK
PAS 180: due 2014PAS 181: due 2014PAS 182: scoping stage
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BSI’s Standards framework plan for Smart Cities
City Level
Systems and Services
Components and Devices
Smart Cities
Overview
PAS 181 Decision making
framework
PAS 180Smart City Vocabulary
2013 startCurrent workTC268
Sustainable Communities
Global City Indicators
Infrastructure metrics
Business models
and funding
Smart City Planning
Guidelines
Performance Assessment
Smart City Data Concept
Model
Risk management•Privacy•Security•Accessibility Interoperability
• Framework standards
•Open Data
2014 start
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PAS 55BS ISO 55001
PAS 555BS EN ISO 27000
PAS 180PAS 181PAS 182
BS EN 16212BS EN 16247
BS EN ISO 50001
BS 8550BS 8554
BS ISO 14046Innovation
Asset Management
Cybersecurity
Smart Cities
Energy Management
Water Management
Carbon measurement
Community sustainable development
Data protection
Commercialisation and new product development
• Drive up efficiency• Define terminology• Provide confidence in
performance and safety
PAS 2070:2012PAS 2060:2010PAS 2050:2011
BS 8904:2011
BS 10012
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BSI working for international trade
BSI is working with the
US, China and other
countries to improve
understanding of the
role of Standards and
Regulations in trade.
BSI is coordinating the
European position on
Standards in support of
trade negotiations.
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IFAN, London, 15 October 2013
• Traditional approaches to Standards as specifications or
quasi-regulation ignores their potential and value to business.
• Standards are not Regulation but can be used effectively
alongside Regulation to deliver a policy outcome.
• Standards, Codes and Guidance are knowledge for industry
that can drive a collaborative approach to innovation.
• Our goal is to see Standards driving innovation, trade and
growth – making a real difference to business and industry.
Standards as enablers for business and industry