Open Innovation. Pascal Latouche

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Open Innovation - Pascal Latouche


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Quiet schooling

      Elodie had a quiet schooling. “I never had any pressure from my mother to succeed. She certainly wanted me to obtain the Baccalaureate, but above all she wanted me to blossom”. A gifted student, she went to a private junior school which she didn’t like because it was too communitarian. There she was able to acquire a very good level which paved the way to a high school far from home where she was able to combine studies for a while with her passion for the theater. “I wanted to be in the theater and I fought to get into this school”.

      This didn’t last, because finally came the time for the final orientation towards her option for the BAC and after some procrastination, it was finally mathematics that she opted for.

      Applied mathematics in university was supposed to be easy to study. Yes, but for Elodie, who until then hadn’t gone to much trouble to succeed in passing her exams, the surprise was great. You really had to work! “I didn’t have my first year and I didn’t really know what I wanted to do”.

      No problem though. Caught by the passion of writing, Elodie launched herself into a Journalism DUT1. “I really loved it”. But was it going to last?

      Not really yet. Indeed, after this DUT, she had some experience in journalism. It didn’t take long for the interest in journalism to wear off. Doing breaking news stressed her somewhat, doing current affairs bored her. So it was time to do something else…. She then worked in a media consulting agency on the design of projects, communication supports and events animation. This new experience, which lasted a little over two years, gave her a taste for project processes. And again, there was an end, a weariness … What to do? She chose to stop the experience there and start a business with her mother, while restarting her studies.

      At this stage of Elodie’s journey, I really wondered what I could still discover. So many very rapid changes, not surprisingly, left me somewhat perplexed. But what did Elodie want? What was she looking for after all?

      3.2.1. A student entrepreneur

      The essence of the project was to evaluate retirement homes. This project developed with her mother was not an easy one. Elodie’s mother hadn’t given up her job and therefore had time on her hands. As for Elodie, although she was involved in the latter, she nevertheless conducted parallel studies. Elodie, passionate about history, did a bachelor’s degree in history, then a master’s degree in the same field, then a second year master’s, broadening her field of knowledge towards Ethics, organization, CSR, in short, a more sociological field of knowledge.

      But the two ladies, maybe they had different goals. “My mother was interested in retirement homes, and I was interested in project management”. The business was dropped after about three years and Elodie returned to the workforce. “My mother understood it very well, my studies in addition to this company, I was just washed out…”.

      3.2.2. Back to employment

      After a very short experience at the Revue Fiduciaire, a fiduciary magazine, unsatisfied, she was recruited at the Caisse Nationale d’Assurance Vieillesse on the difficult project at work. “That was real”. This mission seems to me to be one of Elodie’s many experiences, the one that really fascinated her. “I had responsibilities and the atmosphere was excellent”. On this experience, she seemed to have found her way. An alchemy between project management and a sense of what it did. I then imagined, listening to her, that this experience had continued for a few years anyway, at least for more than three years. Indeed, her missions were broad and exciting for a profile as open as hers. Setting up a Tough Prevention Account system, deploying it in the network of regional old-age funds and understanding all of its businesses, their development, the laws associated with them, useful training, etc. are all challenges that Elodie took care to describe to me. I admit I learned a lot.

      But she still changed after a year and a half… “It was clear that I was going all the way, I was not saving myself”. Elodie gave everything and I sometimes think that time passed before her. In fact, another reason beyond having mastered her position motivated her departure: the restructuring of the department. “I didn’t like this restructuring. I didn’t fit in”.

      And here’s our Elodie now consulting for a new company in the Défense region of Paris. “Being hired as a consultant in a company without having gone to business school was a confirmation for me”. The result: a new social status rewarding her studies, and a much higher salary. “I approached my spouse’s social level and that made me happy for a while. But I quickly remembered that the priority for me wasn’t there”.

      3.2.3. Getting started

      Elodie launched everything in 2017 while being pregnant and made sure from the outset to acquire legitimacy in her sector (HR) through corporate proof of concept. The company is called People In.

      Elodie’s solution: “People In offers an innovative and relevant recruitment method. It pre-selects candidates via a digital tool that tests a key skill associated with the position. The tool allows us to check candidates’ aptitudes before the interview while opening the search to different but relevant profiles. Better adapted to new recruitment issues. More reliable. More efficient”.

      Why: “Knowledge is quite readable in a CV, but not know-how or interpersonal skills”. Elodie works very closely with the corporate client. The latter expresses a need, and Elodie assesses what the soft skills useful for the position should be. By prioritizing the most important skills, a practical case study can be developed which candidates will be asked to complete during the recruitment process.

      Provocative as I am, I couldn’t help but ask her if her solution might not lead to the reinforcement of the well-known corporate molding. Indeed, from the moment a candidate wishing to fill the position does not pass the internal analysis such as it is a case of defining the know-how and skill, then according to me, there can be a risk of reinforcing a certain “mental consanguinity”. I confess I was very amused to ask her this question, I was almost wearing the hat of a start-up accelerator, trying not to evaluate flaws, but to understand the value proposition. I didn’t wait very long to get the answer…. And I felt very amused by this question and eager to give an answer….

      In essence, there is no direct artificial algorithmic intelligence in this solution. Based on the candidates’ answers (written or oral), there is an anonymous evaluation by the recruiter who has access to the platform. If the recruiter evaluates a candidate positively, he will find it difficult, unless there is a bad reason, not to welcome


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