A recent study tour to Manizales, Colombia has provided Trinidad and Tobago with a strategic blueprint for developing a robust national innovation ecosystem. Led by Vashti Guyadeen of the Trinidad and Tobago Chamber of Industry and Commerce, the delegation examined Colombia’s successful Triple Helix model that integrates academia, industry, and government collaboration to accelerate entrepreneurship and economic growth.
The research identified five foundational pillars essential for innovation ecosystem development: coordinated national governance to align ministerial initiatives, integrated programming across accelerator programs and university initiatives, accessible infrastructure including prototyping labs and research facilities, capacity development through entrepreneurship training, and data-driven decision making using systematic innovation metrics.
Educational alignment emerged as a critical success factor, with recommendations for cross-disciplinary entrepreneurship education, enhanced research commercialization pathways through innovation vouchers and matching grants, strengthened internship programs, and shared infrastructure agreements among tertiary institutions modeled after Colombia’s SUMA alliance.
The proposed institutional architecture calls for a National Innovation Partnership comprising senior leaders from public, private, academic, financial, and civil society sectors to set strategic priorities and oversee funding allocations. This co-ownership model reduces government dependency while increasing sustainability.
Priority sectors identified for diversification include technology (fintech, cybersecurity, energy tech), advanced manufacturing utilizing Industry 4.0 technologies, agriculture technology with climate-smart farming approaches, and creative industries leveraging global demand for music and digital content.
Strategic infrastructure requirements encompass enhanced accessibility to Cariri’s existing facilities, purpose-built innovation hubs, structured national mentorship networks, and continuously coordinated accelerator programs. Financing mechanisms should include a National Innovation Fund, private sector venture arms, diaspora engagement for investment and technical capacity, and risk mitigation instruments like credit guarantee schemes.
Accountability measures propose transparent tracking through key indicators: new firm creation, SME scale-up performance, research commercialization outputs, non-energy job creation, venture capital investment levels, and Global Innovation Index performance, with annual Innovation Report Cards to monitor national progress.
The Manizales case study demonstrates that formalized governance, integrated programming, and shared accountability create successful innovation ecosystems, offering Trinidad and Tobago a proven framework for economic diversification and resilience building.
