Robohub.org
 

A3 Business Forum: Our takeaways


by
23 January 2017



share this:
A3-business-forum

by Karine Simard

A few insights from the 2016 A3 Business Forum. As always, a short and sweet event packed with insightful speakers, attendees and A3’s tried-and-true event success recipe. Here’s what captured our attention this year.

Alan Beaulieu’s prediction: A great depression… in 2030

Beaulieu’s predictions are always on the dot, and his public speaking skills are unparalleled. He has a knack for turning graphs into actionable knowledge that applies to our industry. Beaulieu is breaking economist stereotypes everywhere he goes.

Regardless of where you stand on the political spectrum, Beaulieu confirmed that statistic analysis has shown no correlation between business confidence or stock market performance and which party is in power. Even the impact of policy is not immediate: Beaulieu claims it takes a minimum of 18 months for big decisions to take effect in the market.

When it comes to the manufacturing industry, it is showing signs of growth, with US’s industrial production index at 3.5% growth year-over-year, and GDP growth is at a 10-year growth high of 1.9%.

What do those numbers mean for manufacturing in the US? It means the market is growing and it’s time to leverage this growth, take risks and invest in our business. Essentially prepare and build for the great depression, which Beaulieu is predicting for 2030-ish.

Beaulieu expects the main driver of this depression to be the health care for aging baby boomers, who will be in their 70s and 80s by then. Paying for those health care costs will come down to the taxpayer, a heavy burden for gen X and millennials. As Beaulieu explained, “The best thing we can hope for is the rapid death of baby boomers.” Cheerful.

Until then, time to build, time to grow and solidify our businesses. Beaulieu expects the USA to become the most competitive nation for manufacturing, projected to beat China in 2020. Manufacturing is already the 4th largest employer in the USA with 12.3 million employees.

Source: Global CEO survey: 2016 Global manufacturing competitiveness index rankings by country, Deloitte

Source: Global CEO survey: 2016 Global manufacturing competitiveness index rankings by country, Deloitte

Right now, manufacturers have a hard time filling their open jobs. Job openings in the manufacturing sector are at their highest volume in 8.5 years.

But what is the impact of robotics on those jobs?

Looking at employment forecasts, Beaulieu observed that robotics moves up with employment. Robotics is not destroying jobs, but making the manufacturing industry more competitive.

Beaulieu summed it well: “Your technology does not hurt a thing. Yes it disrupts, it’s advancing technology. The people who don’t want to keep up with tech, that’s on them. Robotics is the hero in this story. They are creating jobs and making our economy stronger and more competitive.”

The complexity of simplicity

Savioke’s Steve Cousins opened with this: “It’s hard enough to make something work, but then it’s 10 times harder to make it work easily.”

Savioke Relay Dash Guest Hallway-2

Cousins related the experience of designing human interaction with their mobile service robot. He reminded us of a very important fact: most people have never interacted with a robot before. We all know about robots because of movies and other media showcasing them, but for the great majority of people, they have no experience with robots in their daily lives.

What Cousins has seen with Savioke’s room service delivery robot, is that the value created by the robot is more than the labor savings that were expected. The robot becomes a feature of the hotel, showing up on Trip Advisor and attracting more guests.

In order to get to that effect, though, Cousins insists in making the robot simple by design. “People don’t read user’s manuals. You can’t depend on instructions to be followed, no matter how clear. You need to make this thing usable even by people who have never seen it before.”

Trust at the center of adoption

Robotics Hub’s Eric Daimler’s talk was quite complimentary with Cousins, focusing on adoption.

Daimler expanded on the importance of trust in the adoption of a technology. Trust comes from perceiving the technology as safe and non-threatening to one’s way of life.

Daimler used the introduction of the cotton gin, which led to a 25x increase in productivity. Contrary to what we might think: workers were not laid off. The productivity increased and drove price reductions, which stimulated demand for cotton and in the end employment in cotton production increased.

If we look at the more modern example, as plane accidents decreased, airline passengers have increased. This is how trust can be measured in an industry.

Daimler believes trust must be designed in the robot:

  • People feel safer is the robot is smaller
  • People will be more forgiving of robots with personality

The irresistible Lou Holtz’s game plan for success

If you even get a chance to attend a talk by the legendary coach, take it. Even if you know nothing about football and think Notre Dame is a church in Paris. Lou gave an entertaining talk full of stories from his life. Here are my note, unabridged.

Learn to work with the hand you’re dealt.

Give yourself time to grieve, then move on and look ahead.

Make sure everyone in the organization understands your core values.

Managers keep everything organized. Leaders sell a vision.

Understand where you are and where you want to go.

  • What sacrifice are you really willing to make to achieve that?
  • What skills and talent do you have to acquire to achieve that?
  • Who do you have to work with?
  • What’s your plan to get there?

4 things we need in life

  • Stuff to do
  • Someone to love
  • Someone to believe in
  • Something to hope for

WIN: what’s important now?

3 rules to build a winner:

  • Do what’s right
  • Do everything to the very best of your abilities
  • Show people you care

3 questions people ask about you:

  • Can I trust you?
  • Are you committed to excellence?
  • Do you care about me?


tags:


Robotiq Inc. Robotiq's mission is to free human hands from tedious tasks so companies and workers can focus where they truly create value.
Robotiq Inc. Robotiq's mission is to free human hands from tedious tasks so companies and workers can focus where they truly create value.





Related posts :



Social media round-up from #IROS2025

  27 Oct 2025
Take a look at what participants got up to at the IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems.

Using generative AI to diversify virtual training grounds for robots

  24 Oct 2025
New tool from MIT CSAIL creates realistic virtual kitchens and living rooms where simulated robots can interact with models of real-world objects, scaling up training data for robot foundation models.

Robot Talk Episode 130 – Robots learning from humans, with Chad Jenkins

  24 Oct 2025
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Chad Jenkins from University of Michigan about how robots can learn from people and assist us in our daily lives.

Robot Talk at the Smart City Robotics Competition

  22 Oct 2025
In a special bonus episode of the podcast, Claire chatted to competitors, exhibitors, and attendees at the Smart City Robotics Competition in Milton Keynes.

Robot Talk Episode 129 – Automating museum experiments, with Yuen Ting Chan

  17 Oct 2025
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Yuen Ting Chan from Natural History Museum about using robots to automate molecular biology experiments.

What’s coming up at #IROS2025?

  15 Oct 2025
Find out what the International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems has in store.

From sea to space, this robot is on a roll

  13 Oct 2025
Graduate students in the aptly named "RAD Lab" are working to improve RoboBall, the robot in an airbag.

Robot Talk Episode 128 – Making microrobots move, with Ali K. Hoshiar

  10 Oct 2025
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Ali K. Hoshiar from University of Essex about how microrobots move and work together.



 

Robohub is supported by:




Would you like to learn how to tell impactful stories about your robot or AI system?


scicomm
training the next generation of science communicators in robotics & AI


 












©2025.05 - Association for the Understanding of Artificial Intelligence