SciTransfer
Organization

INNOSKART VALLALKOZASFEJLESZTESI NONPROFIT KORLATOLT FELELOSSEGU TARSASAG

Hungarian nonprofit SME cluster facilitating food tech and silver economy innovation across Central European business networks.

NGO / AssociationfoodHUSMENo active H2020 projectsThin data (2/5)
H2020 projects
2
As coordinator
0
Total EC funding
€523K
Unique partners
20
What they do

Their core work

INNOSKART Digital Cluster is a Hungarian nonprofit innovation intermediary based in Székesfehérvár that supports SME development through cluster cooperation and EU-funded innovation projects. Their core work involves connecting regional businesses with research networks, facilitating access to new technologies, and helping companies navigate collaborative innovation programs. In practice, they serve as a bridge organization — not conducting primary research themselves, but enabling SMEs to absorb and apply innovations in areas like food technology, digital manufacturing, and the silver economy. Their participation in Innovation Actions (IA-type projects) confirms they focus on market-ready technology transfer rather than basic research.

Core expertise

What they specialise in

SME cluster facilitation and business developmentprimary
2 projects

Both INCluSilver and S3FOOD involve cluster-based cooperation models, consistent with INNOSKART's core mandate as a business development nonprofit.

Food technology and food safety innovationemerging
1 project

S3FOOD (2019-2022) focused on smart sensor systems for food safety and quality control in food processing, introducing food technology as a domain.

Silver economy and personalised nutritionsecondary
1 project

INCluSilver (2017-2020) addressed personalised nutrition for the ageing population through cluster cooperation, representing their earliest documented domain focus.

Industry 4.0 and smart sensor integration for SMEsemerging
1 project

S3FOOD keywords include I4 (Industry 4.0) and S3 (Smart Sensor System), indicating growing engagement with digital manufacturing and IoT applications.

Evolution & trajectory

How they've shifted over time

Early focus
Silver economy, cluster cooperation
Recent focus
Food technology, smart sensors, Industry 4.0

In their earlier H2020 engagement (2017), INNOSKART focused on cluster-driven cooperation within the silver economy — specifically personalised nutrition, a sector driven by demographic trends in aging Europe. By 2019, their project portfolio shifted toward food technology, smart sensors, and Industry 4.0 applications in food processing. This is a meaningful evolution: from people-centered aging innovation toward technology-centered manufacturing efficiency, both still within food and SME contexts. The trajectory suggests increasing alignment with digital transformation of the food and agri-food supply chain.

INNOSKART appears to be moving toward digital food industry applications — smart sensors, food safety, and Industry 4.0 for SMEs — which positions them as a potential cluster partner for agri-food tech projects targeting Central European manufacturers.

Collaboration profile

How they like to work

Role: active_partnerReach: European12 countries collaborated

INNOSKART has participated exclusively as a consortium partner, never as a project coordinator — consistent with their role as a facilitating intermediary rather than a research leader. With 20 unique partners across 12 countries from just two projects, they demonstrate active engagement in diverse European networks rather than narrow bilateral relationships. This breadth suggests they are skilled at bringing together varied actors but rely on stronger research partners to anchor the project leadership.

Despite only two projects, INNOSKART has built a notably wide network of 20 unique partners spanning 12 countries, suggesting strong connections to Central and Eastern European innovation ecosystems. Their geographic reach appears primarily European, with likely emphasis on the Visegrad and Danube region given their Hungarian base.

Why partner with them

What sets them apart

INNOSKART occupies a niche as a Hungarian nonprofit cluster organization that bridges regional SMEs and European innovation consortia — a type of partner that is often scarce and highly valued in H2020 consortia requiring SME outreach and Central European market access. Their non-profit, business-development mandate makes them a credible neutral facilitator rather than a commercial competitor to other consortium members. For project coordinators needing a Hungarian SME-network gateway with food tech or silver economy connections, they are a targeted fit.

Notable projects

Highlights from their portfolio

  • INCluSilver
    Their largest project by funding (€368,117), addressing personalised nutrition for the ageing population through cross-cluster collaboration — a commercially relevant topic with strong EU policy tailwinds.
  • S3FOOD
    Marks their pivot into food safety technology and Industry 4.0, involving smart sensor systems for food processing — a direction with strong market demand and SME adoption potential.
Cross-sector capabilities
Silver economy and healthy ageingSME digital transformation and Industry 4.0 adoptionRegional innovation cluster managementCentral/Eastern European market access and dissemination
Analysis note: Only 2 projects with limited keyword metadata, and no website or additional public data available. The organizational profile is inferred largely from project titles, the "Digital Cluster" short name, and the Hungarian "vallalkozasfejlesztesi" (business development) descriptor. Core role as cluster facilitator is well-supported; specific technical depth is unclear. Treat expertise claims as directional, not definitive.