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Business and management approaches to innovation tend to focus on
incremental changes to existing products and processes, such as new
product development, design-thinking, and business model
innovation. In contrast, Radical Innovation Challenges focusses on
radical and breakthrough innovation, and identifies its distinct
sources, organization, processes, and outcomes. This book
illustrates conceptual models and practical methods to better
understand and manage radical innovation, and provides an argument
for an iterative coupling process, between knowledge-push and
demand-pull challenges and opportunities.The book draws upon a
distinct interdisciplinary body of knowledge to provide a crucial
insight into the latest research and experience, and demonstrates
how radical innovation practices and policies can be applied to
fundamental corporate and social challenges such as climate change.
Elgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful
introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and
law, expertly written by the world's leading scholars. Designed to
be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of
the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject
areas. Focussing on radical and breakthrough innovation, Joe Tidd
provides a crucial insight into over 50 years of research and
experience, and illustrates how the pioneering work on innovation
dynamics can offer a deeper understanding of radical innovation to
inform future research, policy and practice. The book also
identifies the distinct sources, organization, processes and
outcomes of radical innovation, in contrast to conventional
incremental business and management approaches. Key Features: draws
upon a distinct interdisciplinary body of knowledge on radical
innovation illustrates conceptual models and practical methods to
better understand and manage radical innovation goes beyond
business school incremental approaches to innovation, such as
marketing and design-thinking provides an argument for an iterative
coupling process, between knowledge-push and demand-pull challenges
and opportunities The practical approach in this Advanced
Introduction will provide an excellent resource for scholars and
researchers in innovation management and policy, as well as
managers responsible for creating, resourcing and managing radical
innovations.
Knowledge Management focuses on identifying, sharing, storing, and
exploiting internal knowledge, whereas Open Innovation is more
concerned with sources of external knowledge. However, this simple
dichotomy between open and closed approaches is unhelpful and not
realistic. Instead, it is the interaction between internal and
external knowledge that creates dynamic capabilities and the
ability to innovate. In particular, we need to better understand
the interactions between internal and external knowledge, and how
these influence innovation outcomes under different conditions.
This edited volume, Managing Knowledge, Absorptive Capacity, and
Innovation, provides an opportunity to combine contemporary
interests in Open Innovation with the classic notion of absorptive
capacity, to better understand how organisations can manage the
absorption and exploitation of inbound external sources of
knowledge in order to innovate.
Elgar Advanced Introductions are stimulating and thoughtful
introductions to major fields in the social sciences, business and
law, expertly written by the world's leading scholars. Designed to
be accessible yet rigorous, they offer concise and lucid surveys of
the substantive and policy issues associated with discrete subject
areas. Focussing on radical and breakthrough innovation, Joe Tidd
provides a crucial insight into over 50 years of research and
experience, and illustrates how the pioneering work on innovation
dynamics can offer a deeper understanding of radical innovation to
inform future research, policy and practice. The book also
identifies the distinct sources, organization, processes and
outcomes of radical innovation, in contrast to conventional
incremental business and management approaches. Key Features: draws
upon a distinct interdisciplinary body of knowledge on radical
innovation illustrates conceptual models and practical methods to
better understand and manage radical innovation goes beyond
business school incremental approaches to innovation, such as
marketing and design-thinking provides an argument for an iterative
coupling process, between knowledge-push and demand-pull challenges
and opportunities The practical approach in this Advanced
Introduction will provide an excellent resource for scholars and
researchers in innovation management and policy, as well as
managers responsible for creating, resourcing and managing radical
innovations.
Successful entrepreneurship requires a specialized mix of
innovation, drive, business acumen, and communication; an
entrepreneur sees the potential and pitfalls in any idea, and
understands the product, the market, and the business climate well
enough to make smart decisions for the venture. This book is
designed to go beyond the nuts and bolts of entrepreneurship and
help students develop the critical foundation referred to as
"entrepreneurial thinking." Organized to align with the typical
flow of development, the text allows students to develop their own
ideas alongside each lesson. Coverage of goals, opportunities, and
resources includes detailed discussion of venture funding,
financial resources, and the relationships needed to get an idea
off of the ground; subsequent chapters include clear guidance on
keeping the momentum going through product development, enterprise
growth, value creation, and the evolution of the business model.
Based on the latest research and providing a truly global
perspective, this book gives students a comprehensive, real-world
foundation in entrepreneurship today.
This book provides the knowledge necessary for succeeding in a
world where companies increasingly work side-by-side with customers
to create new products and services. It is a pivotal navigation
tool that helps cruise the ocean of customer integration methods
and explains how the methods work, when to choose which, and how to
seize advantages while avoiding pitfalls.This title is an essential
read for research and development managers, marketing
professionals, and other practitioners who are involved in new
product development to apply customer integration methods
effectively and efficiently to drive new product development
success. While the application of methods is no guarantee of
success, knowledge of the correct selection and appropriate
application increases the probability of new product and service
development success. Rich in theoretical frameworks, research
findings, and practical information about customer integration
methods, Innovation Heroes will help the reader appreciate the
value of customers as an innovation resource and ways to profit
from them.
This book provides the knowledge necessary for succeeding in a
world where companies increasingly work side-by-side with customers
to create new products and services. It is a pivotal navigation
tool that helps cruise the ocean of customer integration methods
and explains how the methods work, when to choose which, and how to
seize advantages while avoiding pitfalls.This title is an essential
read for research and development managers, marketing
professionals, and other practitioners who are involved in new
product development to apply customer integration methods
effectively and efficiently to drive new product development
success. While the application of methods is no guarantee of
success, knowledge of the correct selection and appropriate
application increases the probability of new product and service
development success. Rich in theoretical frameworks, research
findings, and practical information about customer integration
methods, Innovation Heroes will help the reader appreciate the
value of customers as an innovation resource and ways to profit
from them.
There are two traditional views of the role of intellectual
property (IP) within the field of innovation management: in
innovation management research, as an indicator or proxy for
innovation inputs or outputs, e.g. patents or licensing income; or
in innovation management practice, as a means of protecting
knowledge. Exploiting Intellectual Property to Promote Innovation
and Create Value argues that whilst both of these perspectives are
useful, neither capture the full potential contribution of
intellectual property in innovation management research and
practice.The management of IP has become a central challenge in
current strategies of Open Innovation and Business Model
Innovation, but there is relatively little empirical work
available. Theoretical arguments and empirical research suggest
that from both an innovation policy and management perspective, the
challenge is to use IP to encourage risk-taking and innovation, and
that a broader repertoire of strategies is necessary to create and
capture the economic and social benefits of innovation. This book
identifies how intellectual property can be harnessed to create and
capture value through exploiting new opportunities for innovation.
It is organized around three related themes: public policies for
IP; firm strategies for IP; and creating value from IP, and offers
insights from the latest research on IP strategies and practices to
create and capture the economic and social benefits of innovation.
Since the pioneering work scholars such as Joseph Schumpeter and
Peter Drucker, the fields of innovation and entrepreneurship have
evolved to become two separate and distinct disciplines. Schumpeter
1 focused on the contributions of entrepreneurial startups and
smaller firms, whereas Schumpeter 2 emphasized the role of formal
research, development and industrial innovation in larger firms.
Unfortunately, the study and practice of each field has suffered as
a result: entrepreneurship has become preoccupied with individual
entrepreneurs and small business creation, and innovation is
dominated by corporate R&D and new product
development.Promoting Innovation in New Ventures and Small and
Medium Sized Enterprises (SMEs) aims to bridge these two fields by
examining innovation in new ventures and SMEs. This book identifies
themes which can reunite the study and practice of entrepreneurship
and innovation by examining a potentially bridging phenomenon. The
focus here is on high growth, innovative SMEs, and the interactions
between SMEs and larger organizations, private and public. It is
organized around three overlapping themes: SME innovation
performance, practices and networks.
The concept of open innovation has become increasingly popular in
the management and policy literature on technology and innovation.
However, despite the large volume of empirical work, many of the
prescriptions being proposed are fairly general and not specific to
particular contexts and contingencies. The proponents of open
innovation are universally positive but research suggests that the
specific mechanisms and outcomes of open innovation models are very
sensitive to context and contingency. This is not surprising
because the open or closed nature of innovation is historically
contingent and does not entail a simple shift from closed to open
as often suggested in the literature. Research has shown that
patterns of innovation differ fundamentally by sector, firm and
strategy. Therefore, there is a need to examine the mechanisms that
help to generate successful open innovation. In this book, the
authors contribute to a shift in the debate from potentially
misleading general prescriptions, and provide conceptual and
empirical insights into the precise mechanisms and potential
limitations of open innovation research and management practice.
Hardly anybody outside a company knows its products and processes
better than its suppliers. Research confirms that intensive
integration of suppliers in the value creation process positively
influences the success of the company, particularly in highly
competitive industries. This is a result of the progressing
reduction in the depth of value creation of manufacturers and the
increasing transferof know-how towards suppliers. In multilevel
business-to-business relationships, suppliers often have the best
or the only access and comprehensive knowledge about the end users.
Therefore, suppliers determine the scope of possible innovations,
which most companies do not actively use. This unique volume
provides a comprehensive overview of theories, concepts and
especially empirical results on open innovation and the integration
of suppliers. For this, authors from all over the world present
their latest research results offering fascinating insights into
collaborative approaches with suppliers.
There continues to be much interest in the business and academic
communities in the concept of strategic competencies or core
capabilities, in other words, how organisations define and
differentiate themselves. More recently, this field has fragmented
into a number of related disciplines with subtle differences in
focus:Knowledge management - how organisations identify, share and
exploit their internal competencies, in particular the knowledge of
individuals.Organisational learning - the relationship between
individual and organisational knowledge and how organisations
'unlearn' past competencies and acquire new competencies.Strategic
management - how competencies can be assessed, and how these
contribute to performance.Innovation management - how such
competencies are translated into new processes, products and
services.This book aims to integrate strategic and knowledge
management approaches to capability building with the development
of competencies by bringing together the latest research and
practices from international experts in the field. This third
edition has been fully updated with five new chapters.
There continues to be much interest in the business and academic
communities in the concept of strategic competencies or core
capabilities, in other words, how organisations define and
differentiate themselves. More recently, this field has fragmented
into a number of related disciplines with subtle differences in
focus:Knowledge management - how organisations identify, share and
exploit their internal competencies, in particular the knowledge of
individuals.Organisational learning - the relationship between
individual and organisational knowledge and how organisations
'unlearn' past competencies and acquire new competencies.Strategic
management - how competencies can be assessed, and how these
contribute to performance.Innovation management - how such
competencies are translated into new processes, products and
services.This book aims to integrate strategic and knowledge
management approaches to capability building with the development
of competencies by bringing together the latest research and
practices from international experts in the field. This third
edition has been fully updated with five new chapters.
Diffusion, or the widespread adoption of innovations, is a critical
yet under-researched topic. There is a wide gap between development
and successful adoption of an innovation. Therefore, a better
understanding of why and how an innovation is adopted can help
develop realistic management and business plans. Most books on this
topic use a single-discipline approach to explain the diffusion of
innovations. This book adopts a multi-disciplinary and managerial
process approach to understanding and promoting the adoption of
innovations, based on the latest research and practice. It will be
of interest to graduates and researchers in marketing, product
development and innovation courses.
Managing Innovation is a three-part series covering contemporary
technology and innovation management research areas. Each volume
comprises key articles from both the International Journal of
Innovation Management and the International Journal of Innovation
and Technology Management, published by World Scientific, and
provides an international, disciplinary approach across its broad
coverage of topics.Relevant for both academics and practitioners,
this volume looks at the international aspects of innovation with
case studies from China, Germany, India and Russia.Related Link(s)
Managing Innovation is a three-part series covering contemporary
technology and innovation management research areas. Each volume
comprises key articles from both the International Journal of
Innovation Management and the International Journal of Innovation
and Technology Management, published by World Scientific, and
provides an international, disciplinary approach across its broad
coverage of topics.Relevant for both academics and practitioners,
this volume answers how organisations can develop innovative
approaches from a perspective that encompasses technological
advances, changes in the market and individual
entrepreneurs.Related Link(s)
'Its focus is the major theme of digital innovation and it tries to
go beyond the hype associated with much of the discussion of this
important area ... The discussion in the book stresses the need to
move our thinking about innovation beyond the level of enterprise
to consider ecosystems and complementary assets ... Overall this is
a useful book, not least because in addition to opening up key
lines for further research enquiry the book also has a strong
international flavour with contributions from a wide and diverse
set of contexts.'International Journal of Innovation
ManagementThere is no doubt that digital technologies have the
potential for disruptive innovation in a wide range of sectors,
both in manufacturing and services, and the commercial and social
domains. However, popular commentaries on the potential of digital
innovation to disrupt have suffered from two extreme positions:
either, simplistic technological determinism, often promoted by
technology vendors, claiming that the impending widespread
automation of products and services will provide step-changes in
productivity and new products and services; or alternatively, very
high-level broad discussions of business model innovation in
traditional sectors, private and public. However, the impacts will
not be universal, and the outcomes will be highly-differentiated.
More fundamentally, neither a narrow technological perspective or
broad business view adequately captures the appropriate level of
granularity necessary to understand the potential and challenges
presented by digital innovation. In this book, Digital Disruptive
Innovation, we apply innovation concepts, models and research to
provide greater insights into strategies for, and management of,
digital innovation.
Managing Innovation is a three-part series covering contemporary
technology and innovation management research areas. Each volume
comprises key articles from both the International Journal of
Innovation Management and the International Journal of Innovation
and Technology Management, published by World Scientific, and
provides an international, disciplinary approach across its broad
coverage of topics.Relevant for both academics and practitioners,
this volume focuses on key aspects of crowd innovation including
motivations, challenges and benefits of this approach.Related
Link(s)
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