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El. knyga: Innovation Engines: Entrepreneurs and Enterprises in a Turbulent World [Wiley Online]

Edited by (University of Lille, France), Edited by
  • Formatas: 224 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-May-2017
  • Leidėjas: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1119427533
  • ISBN-13: 9781119427537
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Wiley Online
  • Kaina: 174,45 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Formatas: 224 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 23-May-2017
  • Leidėjas: ISTE Ltd and John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1119427533
  • ISBN-13: 9781119427537
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
In an uncertain economy where business risk is high, innovation is at the heart of business. To understand the process of innovation, from the design and development of new products to the price of the creative dimension of the individual, studying the company and the organization is essential. In new approaches to innovation, the entrepreneur and the company are defined by their skills. The innovative organization is presented in this book as a dynamic system composed of specific and diversified skills.By acquiring, combining and mobilizing these skills, the innovative agent can create technological resources and develop relationships within their environment. Managing the design, application and protection of intellectual property is an important aspect of this, as is the development of new goods, services and technology models, businesses and organizations. Dimitri Uzunidis is Professor in Political Economy. He is currently President of the Research Network on Innovation in Paris, France. Book jacket.

In an uncertain economy where business risk is significant, the company tends to rely more on its environment than to invest, for example, in all steps of technological creation; This can be explained by the fact that investments in the acquisition (ownership) of production resources are less expensive than those implied in the formation of these resources; which also explains the attractiveness (in an open economy) of regions with abundant scientific and technical resources. To understand and analyze the innovation process in order to better design and launch new goods, services and technologies, one has to consider the creative dimension of the individual, the business and the organization in general. In new approaches to innovation, the entrepreneur and the company are analyzed through their skills, and their function of resource generation; Innovation thus becomes endogenous, gradual or radical, integrated in a complex process with many feedbacks and interactions. The innovative organization (small or large) is presented in this book as a dynamic system composed of specific and diverse skills (including those of the contractor, engineers or managers). By acquiring, combining and mobilizing these skills, the innovative agent (entrepreneur or company) can create technological resources and develop relations with its environment. Hence the importance of management in design, implementation, protection of intellectual property as well as of the development of new goods, services and technology, commercial and organizational models.

Introduction xi
Dimitri Uzunidis
Pierre Saulais
Chapter 1 Innovation Strategies and Entrepreneurial Dynamics
1(24)
Michel Marchesnay
1.1 The entrepreneur: the key player in innovation
2(1)
1.1.1 By their very nature, every entrepreneur takes a risk dependent on innovation
2(1)
1.1.2 Innovation restores a range of logical structures and practices in entrepreneurial action
3(1)
1.2 Industrial analysis of innovation
3(2)
1.2.1 The analytical approach: the SCP model
4(1)
1.2.2 The institutional approach: mesosystems
4(1)
1.3 The three eras of industrial capitalism
5(2)
1.3.1 The origins of industrial capitalism
5(1)
1.3.2 The development of industrial capitalism: the concept of generations
6(1)
1.4 Extensive and intensive stages
7(1)
1.4.1 The extensive stage
7(1)
1.4.2 The intensive stage
8(1)
1.5 Innovation: between order and progress
8(3)
1.5.1 The role of ideologies
9(1)
1.5.2 The role of the "Zeitgeist", the spirit of the age
10(1)
1.6 Innovation and the "technical age": a Pandora's box?
11(4)
1.6.1 The innovative entrepreneur: is there an ideal type?
12(1)
1.6.2 Types of innovative entrepreneur
13(2)
1.6.3 The capabilities of the innovative entrepreneur
15(1)
1.7 The major strategic choices
15(3)
1.7.1 Breakthrough innovation or adaptive development?
15(1)
1.7.2 Dependence or individuality? ("One of a kind")
16(2)
1.8 The spread of innovation
18(3)
1.8.1 The transfer: the basis of national technological policy
18(1)
1.8.2 The subsidiary: an instrument of the industrial strategy of groups
19(1)
1.8.3 The region: a hub of technological development
20(1)
1.9 Conclusion
21(1)
1.10 Bibliography
22(3)
Chapter 2 Innovative Milieus and Innovative Entrepreneurship
25(18)
Corinne Tanguy
Dimitri Uzunidis
2.1 The innovative milieu and proximities
27(5)
2.1.1 The concept of the innovative milieu
27(2)
2.1.2 Proximity: from space to organization
29(3)
2.2 The innovative milieu and entrepreneurs
32(5)
2.2.1 The innovative entrepreneur: networks and resources
33(2)
2.2.2 Policies for creating innovative milieus and the emergence of an innovative entrepreneurship
35(2)
2.3 Conclusion
37(1)
2.4 Bibliography
38(5)
Chapter 3 Start-up Founders and Support for Technology Entrepreneurs
43(30)
Gerard A. Kokou Dokou
3.1 Putting entrepreneurial identity into theoretical perspective
45(6)
3.1.1 The needs for existence, knowledge and ability at the heart of entrepreneurial identity
45(2)
3.1.2 Expanding towards a resource-based approach
47(4)
3.2 Demonstration of the components of the identity of a start-up entrepreneur
51(11)
3.2.1 Creating the body of research and operational tool used
51(2)
3.2.2 Revealing the main identity components
53(4)
3.2.3 Three main identity components to be considered when supporting the technology entrepreneur
57(5)
3.3 Conclusion
62(1)
3.4 Bibliography
63(10)
Chapter 4 The Importance of Entrepreneurial Creativity
73(18)
Marc Jaillot
4.1 Creativity, innovation and entrepreneurial context
74(6)
4.1.1 Entrepreneurial creativity
74(1)
4.1.2 The entrepreneurial context of small businesses
75(3)
4.1.3 The reality of innovation in small businesses
78(2)
4.2 What does the economic reality teach us?
80(3)
4.3 Discussion
83(3)
4.4 Conclusion
86(1)
4.5 Bibliography
87(4)
Chapter 5 From Ideation to Product Launch
91(20)
Maggy Perrier
Audrey Depeige
5.1 The quest for continuous renewal: collaborative innovation within business strategy
92(6)
5.2 An internal environment supporting innovation
98(3)
5.3 Managing invention through innovation: building a strong intellectual property management process to maintain a competitive advantage
101(3)
5.4 Conclusion
104(1)
5.5 Bibliography
105(6)
Chapter 6 The Patent: A "Swiss Army Knife" for Invention and Innovation Ill
111(22)
Yann de Kermadec
6.1 Invention, innovation and intellectual property: some references
112(4)
6.1.1 Definitions
112(1)
6.1.2 Links between innovation, inventions and patents
113(3)
6.2 The means tree: a language for innovation and good use of patents
116(8)
6.2.1 Is the "language of patents" accessible to all?
116(1)
6.2.2 The means tree: the "language of patents" translated into graphic patterns
117(3)
6.2.3 The means tree and its varied uses
120(2)
6.2.4 The means tree: a "turbocharger" for the "innovate thanks to patents" approach
122(2)
6.3 The patent system: a model for the management of knowledge for innovation
124(5)
6.4 Conclusion
129(2)
6.5 Bibliography
131(2)
Chapter 7 Invention, Innovation and Intellectual Property Rights
133(32)
Pierre Saulais
7.1 Innovation
134(7)
7.1.1 The multidimensional aspect of innovation
134(1)
7.1.2 Innovation procedures and processes
135(4)
7.1.3 The intense knowledge stages of the innovation process
139(2)
7.2 Invention and the ability to invent
141(2)
7.2.1 The concept of inventiveness
141(1)
7.2.2 Combining creativity and inventiveness
141(1)
7.2.3 Overview of some standard methods
142(1)
7.3 The inventive intellectual corpus
143(8)
7.3.1 Intellectual works and intellectual corpus
144(3)
7.3.2 Intellectual works and intangible capital
147(2)
7.3.3 Traces in the inventive intellectual corpus
149(2)
7.3.4 Synthesis of the inventive intellectual corpus
151(1)
7.4 Analysis of the links between invention, innovation and the inventive intellectual heritage
151(6)
7.4.1 Links between industrial property rights and innovation
151(1)
7.4.2 Links between industrial property rights and invention
152(2)
7.4.3 Links between invention and industrial property rights
154(1)
7.4.4 Links between innovation and industrial property rights
155(1)
7.4.5 Links between invention and innovation
155(1)
7.4.6 Links between innovation and invention
155(1)
7.4.7 Reciprocal links between inventive activity and the inventive intellectual corpus
155(2)
7.5 The nature of bridges between knowledge areas
157(2)
7.5.1 The perspective of economists
157(1)
7.5.2 The knowledge management perspective on innovation
158(1)
7.5.3 The perspective of KBI (Knowledge-Based Innovation)
158(1)
7.5.4 The perspective of knowledge-based ideation
159(1)
7.6 Conclusion
159(1)
7.7 Bibliography
160(5)
Chapter 8 Commitment to an Industrial Evolution
165(28)
Theodor Felezeu
8.1 Findings, shared feelings and risks incurred
166(6)
8.2 Focus on the new industrial order
172(14)
8.2.1 Beyond industry 4.0
173(6)
8.2.2 Towards a rebirth, but without actually having to the first (or at least without suffering too much)
179(5)
8.2.3 Economic alternatives: look left and right before crossing
184(2)
8.3 Corollaries: impacts on innovation
186(2)
8.3.1 Cultures
186(1)
8.3.2 Visions and strategies
187(1)
8.3.3 Processes
187(1)
8.3.4 Tools
187(1)
8.4 Conclusion
188(1)
8.5 Bibliography
188(5)
List of Authors 193(2)
Index 195
Dimitri Uzunidis, University of Lille, France. Pierre Saulais, Consultant, France.