NASCAR Executive To Talk Innovation At Influential Global Conferences
Steve O’Donnell to Tell Sport’s Technology Story at Harvard, Cannes Events
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (Oct. 29, 2013)
– Two of the world’s leading
innovation conferences have invited NASCAR Senior Vice President of
Racing Operations Steve O’Donnell to serve as a panelist. O’Donnell will
participate in a discussion at Harvard Business School’s Cyberposium on
Nov. 2 about how technology will help transform
sports and other industries over the next several years.
On
Nov. 20, he will join a panel focused on ways to create and nurture
sustainable innovation at the World Innovation Convention in Cannes,
France.
“From
the track to the office, for our fans and partners, we’re injecting
technology and interactivity into nearly every facet of the NASCAR
experience,”
said NASCAR President Mike Helton. “With innovations such as the Air
Titan track drying technology, continued safety improvements, and the
state-of-the-art Fan & Media Engagement Center, NASCAR has become a
great place where technologies are validated. We
also feel the best is yet to come, as we’re excited with the progress
we’re making on our officiating technology project, which will inject
exciting new elements into our competition in 2014 and beyond.”
Cyberposium,
now in its 19th year, is billed as the largest MBA technology
conference in the world. The conference facilitates an interactive
network
of current and future business leaders to engage in provocative
dialogue about technology. For more information, visit
www.cyberposium.com.
The
World Innovation Convention at Cannes is a platform for global
innovators who join to collaborate with industry peers and experts. The
direct
mission of the conference is to learn, share and discover how
innovation happens faster and better within their organizations. For
more information, visit
www.winovc.com.
NASCAR’s
high-tech R&D Center in Concord, N.C. continues to serve as a model
for innovation throughout all of motorsports. Earlier this year, NASCAR
announced the addition of Gene Stefanyshyn as Vice President of
Innovation and Racing Development to oversee that facility. Stefanyshyn
brings more than 30 years of engineering and innovation leadership from
General Motors to NASCAR. The R&D Center has generated
nine U.S. patents.
The
Air Titan was developed in-house at the R&D Center. Following
testing in the summer and fall of 2012, Phase 1 of the technology was
on-site
at Daytona International Speedway in February. Earlier this month,
NASCAR announced Air Titan will be available during every NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series race in 2014. As part of its research and development, NASCAR
also identified a track conditioning value from
the use of Air Titan whereas the technology cleans dirt, grime and
other materials found in a track’s surface.
With
safety enhancements that range from safer cars to the enforcement of
the HANS device to the installation of SAFER barriers, as well as
ongoing
innovation each year, NASCAR has continued to put a premium on driver
and fan safety. Its work in that space has significantly elevated the
safety across all motorsports. NASCAR’s research, specifically in crash
analysis, has been recognized in partnerships
with NASA, Toyota’s Total Human Model for Safety (THUMS) and the U.S.
Air Force. Leaders in the sanctioning body’s critical safety engineering
group have authored several research papers in peer review journals.
NASCAR,
the No. 1 recycler in sports, just celebrated the fifth anniversary of
its heralded NASCAR Green platform. Through strategic partnerships
with teams, tracks and Official Partners, NASCAR Green continues to set
new benchmarks. NASCAR features the world’s largest solar-powered
sports facility, a tree planting program capturing 100 percent of the
emissions produced by on-track racing, and the largest
recycling program in sports that includes such partners as Coca-Cola,
Coors Light, Creative Recycling, Goodyear, Safety Kleen, Liberty Tire
and Sprint. Additionally, NASCAR has put nearly five million tough,
competition miles on Sunoco Green, a biofuel comprised
of 15 percent ethanol made from American-grown corn, which has reduced
emissions in all its racing series by 20 percent.
The
NASCAR Fan and Media Engagement Center (FMEC) is a revolutionary
resource that allows NASCAR to analyze what’s discussed and written
about the
sport in social, traditional, and broadcast media. The system
aggregates digital content that is relevant to the NASCAR industry, and
allows NASCAR to analyze and respond to trends in real time. The FMEC
facility is part “broadcast control room,” part “NASA
Command Center,” powered by a sophisticated media monitoring and
measurement system custom-built by HP.
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