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El. knyga: Open Innovation Research, Management And Practice

Edited by (Spru, Univ Of Sussex, Uk)
  • Formatas: 456 pages
  • Serija: Series on Technology Management 23
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Oct-2013
  • Leidėjas: Imperial College Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781783262823
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  • Formatas: 456 pages
  • Serija: Series on Technology Management 23
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Oct-2013
  • Leidėjas: Imperial College Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781783262823
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In 15 essays, business and management researchers from Europe, the US, Asia, New Zealand, and Australia examine the mechanisms that generate successful open innovation, noting that patterns of innovation differ by sector, firm, and strategy. They discuss taxonomies and modes of innovation, including ways to collaborate, open innovation strategies, and the links between open innovation and strategy; contexts and contingencies, including the impact of open innovation on new product success and the moderating role of environmental dynamics, the project level, approaches to service development, process innovations, and the international dimension of external technology sourcing; sector and industry studies of the effects of openness on the different stages of the innovation process and on performance at the firm level, the mobile phone industry, open innovation strategies data from the Dutch Community Innovation Survey, and differences in industries; and limitations and constraints, including the false dichotomy of closed and open approaches, a contingency model of inbound open innovation, and the limitations of practical application. Distributed by World Scientific. Annotation ©2014 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

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.
Taxonomies and Modes: Different Modes of Open Innovation: A Theoretical
Framework and an Empirical Study (Valentina Lazzarotti and Raffaella
Manzini); Advancing a Typology of Open Innovation (Peter T Gianiodis, S C
Ellis and E Secchi); How to Balance Open and Closed Innovation: Strategy and
Culture as Influencing Factors (Ellen Enkel and Karoline Bader); Context and
Contingencies: The Role of Open Innovation in Dynamic Environments (Fiona
Schweitzer, Oliver Gassmann and Kurt Gaubinger); A Conceptual Model of Open
Innovation for New Product Development Projects: Towards a Contingency Theory
(Hanna Bahemia and Brian Squire); Open Service Innovation: The Influence of
Project Novelty (Joe Tidd and Kuo-Nan Hsieh); Exploring the Use of Open
Innovation in Processes, Products and Services (Fang Huang and John Rice);
Managing Open Innovation in Multinational Enterprises: Combining Open
Innovation and R&D Globalization Literature (Wim Vanhaverbeke, Jingshu Du and
Maximilian von Zedtwitz); Sector and Industry Studies: Measuring the Impact
of Inbound Open Innovation Practices on Performance in Services (Anne-Laure
Mention and Anna-Leena Asikainen); Generativity and Innovation in Smartphone
Ecosystems (Bjorn Remneland-Wikhamn, Jan Ljungberg, Magnus Bergquist and
Jonas Kuschel); Toward a Dynamic Perspective on Open Innovation: A
Longitudinal Assessment of the Adoption of Internal and External Innovation
Strategies (Tom Poot, Dries Faems, and Wim Vanhaverbeke); Investigating
Inter-Industry Differences in the Implementation of Open Innovation (Tommaso
Buganza, Davide Chiaroni, Gabriele Colombo and Federico Frattini);
Limitations and Constraints: Open Innovation: Old Ideas in a Fancy Tuxedo
Remedy a False Dichotomy (Paul Trott and Dap Hartmann); Not for Everybody:
Why Some Organisations Benefit More from Open Innovation than Others (Torsten
Oliver Salge, Thomas Marc Bohne, Tomas Farchi and Erk Peter Piening);
Positive and Negative Dynamics of Open Innovation (Mike Hopkins, Joe Tidd and
Paul Nightingale).