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What We Do 

Stakeholder and user-involvement in technological innovation and implementation: Theoretical and practical aspects.

identify methodological and theoretical dilemmas and challenges regarding stakeholder and user-involvement in technological innovation and implementation

make qualified judgments regarding stakeholder and user-involvement in technological innovation and implementation

make strategies to handle conflicting interests research projects that involve stakeholders and users

choose theories and methods relevant for research applying stakeholder and user-involvement in technological innovation and implementation

present challenges and dilemmas in own Ph.D. project that regard stakeholder and user-involvement in technological innovation and implementation

We create brand strategy and visual messaging.
We are passionate about our work and we don't
rest until we deliver 
something extraordinary.

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Complete SEO Support Every Step of the way

Search Engine Optimization

Energy Markets and AnalyticsIntroduction to energy markets
1.2. Pricing and market clearing mechanisms
1.3. Competition and different type of markets
1.4. Market participants
1.5. Challenges of participation of renewable energy resources (RER) in markets
2.1. Policies for integrating RERs in markets around the world
2.2. Impact of RERs on market clearing and market outputs
2.3. Demand side management for RERs integration in energy markets
2.4. Energy storage for RERs integration in energy markets
2.5. Impact of RER on balancing market

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Strategic Consulting

Potentials and Challenges of Circular Economy as Businesses and Cities

It is increasingly acknowledged that the linear 'take-make-dispose' economic model is reaching its limits, and initiatives to develop alternative economic models are emerging. Circular economy is currently getting a lot of attention, because it promises an industrial system that is restorative by design. Both businesses and cities are developing circular economy strategies.
However, circular economy is not without shortcomings as strategy for sustainable development. It is risky promoting a circular economy, where focus merely is on closing existing material flows and not trying to understand the dynamics of the present linear economy by questioning why we produce what, the challenge to closing material flows from the globalized, outsourced cheap production, and when and why products lose value to their users and become waste.
The course introduces potentials and challenges to circular economy from a business perspective and from an urban perspective. Theoretically, the course integrates theories about product chains, value chains, social practices, user-oriented innovation and governance.

Three types of re-design processes are discussed, which are necessary to consider when developing circular economy business models within specific institutional and regulatory contexts: 1) re-designs of products and services based on considerations about necessary changes in roles of products, users, service, infrastructure, etc. 2) re-designing value chains both up-stream and down-stream and 3) internal organizational redesign of the business organization in order to integrate environmental concerns in product and strategy development.

From an urban perspective, different roles in developing and supporting circular economy are introduced: 1) Public planning, 2) Public infrastructures, 3) Public procurement, 4) Public building and construction, 5) Local business development.

SEO Web Development

Querying, Exploring and Mining Geo-textual Data

The comapany will cover advanced topics in the management of geo-textual data. Massive amounts of geo-textual data with both geo-spatial and textual elements are being generated at an unprecedented scale. Examples of such data include geo-tagged micro-blog posts, photos with both tags and geo-locations at social photo sharing websites, as well as points of interest (POIs) and check-ins in location-based social networks. Such data is often associated with temporal information. The course will cover the following topics: (1) querying static geo-textual Data, (2) querying geo-textual data streams, (3) exploring geo-textual data, (4) location extraction, (5) user mobility behavior modeling, and (6) location recommendation and prediction.

It is increasingly acknowledged that the linear 'take-make-dispose' economic model is reaching its limits, and initiatives to develop alternative economic models are emerging. Circular economy is currently getting a lot of attention, because it promises an industrial system that is restorative by design. Both businesses and cities are developing circular economy strategies.
However, circular economy is not without shortcomings as strategy for sustainable development. It is risky promoting a circular economy, where focus merely is on closing existing material flows and not trying to understand the dynamics of the present linear economy by questioning why we produce what, the challenge to closing material flows from the globalized, outsourced cheap production, and when and why products lose value to their users and become waste.
The course introduces potentials and challenges to circular economy from a business perspective and from an urban perspective. Theoretically, the course integrates theories about product chains, value chains, social practices, user-oriented innovation and governance.

Three types of re-design processes are discussed, which are necessary to consider when developing circular economy business models within specific institutional and regulatory contexts: 1) re-designs of products and services based on considerations about necessary changes in roles of products, users, service, infrastructure, etc. 2) re-designing value chains both up-stream and down-stream and 3) internal organizational redesign of the business organization in order to integrate environmental concerns in product and strategy development.

From an urban perspective, different roles in developing and supporting circular economy are introduced: 1) Public planning, 2) Public infrastructures, 3) Public procurement, 4) Public building and construction, 5) Local business development.

Health scientific literature searching, evaluating and organising information – How to use tools like PICO to formulate structured search queries for use in bibliographic databases such as PubMed and EMBASE. How to choose the right database for your research question. Training in PubMed and Embase using structured queries with the MeSH and EMTREE tools.  How to document literature searches and create a protocol in accordance with the PRISMA statement. How reference management tools can facilitate the process of organizing search results

Research evaluation – What research evaluation entails. Citations and h-index as measures for evaluating research. How to use the most central databases in research evaluation for your subject

Publication strategy - How to increase publications’ visibility and searchability in databases through well-informed choices regarding an article’s key features (titles, keywords and abstracts) and choice of publication channel such as BFI and other relevant impact measures. How to use relevant tools and websites for choosing where to publish

Research visibility, networking and profiling - How to register research in VBN, knowledge and use of researcher identifiers, scholarly networks and Open Access

Research ethics and copyright for researchers is also a part of the company.

Social Media Consulting
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