Calgary Herald

Companies, countries mined for insights

- DAVID AKIN National Post dakin@ postmedia. com Twitter. com/davidakin

OTTAWA • When Canadian Business magazine named Canadian Tire as the country’s most innovative company in 2016, John Knubley had to find out why.

Knubley is the deputy minister to Navdeep Bains, the federal minister for innovation, science, and economic developmen­t. Since the Trudeau government took office in 2015, Bains has pretty much talked non-stop about how it is his mission to make the Canadian economy a more innovative one.

And since Knubley is Bains’ top bureaucrat, it has been Knubley’s job to figure out just what government policies can be put in place to help Bains and his government achieve that objective.

Knubley, a career bureaucrat who was promoted in 2012 by the Harper Conservati­ves to become deputy minister of what was then known as Industry Canada, was by Bains’ side for recent visits to the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit and the Consumer Electronic­s Show in Las Vegas. The theme for both men at both shows was innovation.

But the theme of innovation has dominated Knubley’s profession­al life since the Liberals took over government.

Hundreds of pages of documents obtained by the National Post using federal access to informatio­n laws show that Knubley has hardly left a stone unturned over the last year searching for ways to flesh out the federal government’s so- called Innovation Agenda.

Late last summer, Knubley wanted to meet with someone from Canadian Tire because the company had been “investing heavily in its digital strategy to help compete with emerging disruptive retailers, at home and abroad.” For Knubley and the bureaucrat­s that advise Bains, “This meeting could provide an opportunit­y to gain insights into Canadian Tire Corporatio­n ( CTC)’s digital technology innovation and investment plans and initiative­s,” according to a briefing note prepared for Knubley.

“(CTC) could provide important insights into ways government can create conditions that can help support the advancemen­t and adoption of next generation tech- nologies in Canada so companies like CTC can continue to compete with emerging disruptive retailers at home and abroad,” the note said.

Eric Simmons, Canadian Tire’s associate vice- president of automotive innovation, was dispatched to meet with Knubley.

We do have some hints as to what Knubley and, by extension, the government were searching for.

“The Canadian public is looking for a bold new blueprint to restore shared prosperity,” was the message pollster Frank Graves delivered to Knubley when they met on Oct. 11.

In the search for that blueprint, Knubley and deputy ministers from other government department­s took a long look at Israel.

On Aug. 30, Knubley met with Israel’s ambassador to Canada Rafael Barak. Later, a committee of deputy ministers that included Knubley, met with a delegation from Israel.

PUBLIC IS LOOKING FOR A BOLD NEW BLUEPRINT TO RESTORE SHARED PROSPERITY.

Reviewing briefing notes prepared for those exchanges, the Canadian side is clearly admiring of the fact that no country in the world spends more on research and developmen­t than Israel. Israel’s R&D spending is 4.2 per cent of its GDP. Canada spends just 1.7 per cent.

Knubley has met separately with executives form BlackBerry, Bell Canada and General Motors. He sat down with legendary Quebec entreprene­ur Charles Sirois to talk about Sirois’s latest project called NorthStar, a project that combines advanced data analytics with satellite imagery. Where, Knubley wanted to know from all of these executives, could the federal government fit in?

He probed academics and policy wonks in one-on-one meetings throughout the summer and fall of 2016.

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