- Business ResultsCase studies, success stories, patents
- Vertical InnovationInvested teams, blended workflow
- Our Story: About Nottingham SpirkNottingham Spirk has developed hundreds of patented products that have generated tens of billions in sales for industry leading businesses and fast-growth entrepreneurial firms.
- Our AssociatesWe attribute our success to our creative, skilled, and innovative team that can work at a fast pace and maintain flexibility when requirements change.
- The Innovation CenterAll our work, from research to product design to protoyping to testing, is conducted at our Innovation Center, ensuring efficiency, confidentiality and intellectual property protection.
- ClientsAll of our clients trust Nottingham Spirk because of our strong reputation bringing game-changing product inventions to market quickly and with proven ROI — Return On Innovation™.
- PartnershipsOur partnerships for innovation span the globe from high-tech manufacturing facilities across the world to specialized medical technicians within a mile of the Nottingham Spirk Innovation Center.
- Keep CurrentNews, product launches, thought leadership
- ContactSend email, stay in touch
From medical equipment giants to start-ups, Nottingham Spirk is a trusted open innovation partner.
The Nottingham Spirk Innovation Center, located in the world renowned University Circle area, sits at the heart of medical breakthroughs. The adjacent Cleveland Clinic and University Hospitals campuses allow us to conduct ethnographic studies on patient care and to test medical device prototypes with the most discerning medical professionals in the industry.
Our team of industrial designers and engineers developed one of the first magnetic resonance imaging scanners with patient comfort in mind, and we’ve recently built on that experience with a new generation of MRI technology. Our unrivaled history in consumer product design makes us uniquely positioned to guide our medical equipment clients through the two most prevailing trends in healthcare today — rising costs and the migration of medical technology toward end-use consumers.






