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STRATEGIC INNOVATION MANAGEMENT By TIDD, BESSANT - TEST BANK

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Testbank questions Chapter 02 & 03 Innovation Strategy and Identifying Strategic Capabilities Correct answers are indicated with a * 1. Four factors have a major influence on the ability of a firm to develop and create value through innovation. Which of the following is not one of these factors? a) Its ability to identify and exploit external sources of innovation, especially international networks. *b) Its ability to invest in basic science and technology. c) Its power and market position within the international value chain, which in part defines the innovation-based opportunities and threats that it faces. d) The national system of innovation in which the firm is embedded, and which in part defines its range of choices in dealing with opportunities and threats. 2. In his popular book, The World is Flat: The globalized world in the 21st century (Penguin, 2006), Thomas Friedman argues that developments in technology and trade, in particular information and communications technologies (ICTs), are spreading the benefits of globalization to the merging economies, promoting their development and growth. Which of the following is not true? *a) Technology and innovation are evenly distributed globally. b) Technology and innovation are not easily transferred across regions or firms. c) Different national contexts influence the ability of firms to absorb such technology and innovation. d) The position of firms in international value chains can constrain their ability to exploit innovation. 3. Deciding where to locate and perform R&D depends on a number of factors. Which of the following is not a significant influence? a) R&D supporting overseas production should be located close to that of overseas production. b) R&D supporting existing businesses (i.e. products, processes, divisions) should be located in established divisions. *c) R&D supporting global products and services should be located overseas. d) R&D supporting new businesses should initially be located in central laboratories, then transferred to divisions for exploitation. 4. Which of the following is not one of the main factors influencing the decision where to locate R&D globally? a) The importance of external sources of technical and market knowledge, e.g. sources of technology, suppliers, and customers. *b) The quality of the science and technology base. c) The importance and costs of internal transactions, e.g. between engineering and production. d) The cost and disruption of relocating key personnel to the chosen site. 5. Firms have many reasons for monitoring and learning from the development of technological, production and organizational competencies of systems of innovation in other countries, and especially from those that are growing and strong. Which of the following is not a significant reason? *a) Understanding and imitating foreign systems of innovation. b) Firms can benefit more specifically from the technology generated in foreign systems of innovation. c) Potential sources of improvement in the corporate management of innovation. d) Identify and plan for firms with a potential capacity to compete through innovation. 6. Which of the following is the least common method used by firms to learn about competitors’ innovations? a) Licensing. b) Reverse engineering. *c) Patent analysis. d) Publications. 7. The national system of innovation in which a firm is embedded matters greatly, since it strongly influences both the direction and the vigour of its own innovative activities. This includes national market incentives and pressures to which firms have to respond. Which of the following is not a significant incentive? a) Local production input prices, where international differences can help generate very different pressures for innovation. b) Local (private and public) investment activities, which create innovative opportunities for local suppliers. *c) Local skills and knowledge. d) Local natural resources, which create opportunities for innovation in both upstream extraction and downstream processing. 8. Firms’ innovative behaviours are strongly influenced by the competencies of their managers and the ways in which their performance is judged and rewarded (and punished). Methods of judgement and reward vary considerably amongst countries, according to their national systems of corporate governance: in other words, the systems for exercising and changing corporate ownership and control. Which of the following is not generally true? a) In the Anglo-Saxon system corporate ownership (shareholders) is separated from corporate control (managers). *b) In the Anglo-Saxon system investors are slow to deal with poor investment choices. c)In the Nippon–Rhineland system a higher priority is given to investment than to returns to shareholders. d) In the Nippon–Rhineland system banks, suppliers and customers are more heavily locked into the firms in which they invest. 9. Technological leadership in firms does not necessarily translate itself into economic benefits. The capacity of the firm to appropriate the benefits of its investment in technology depends on its position. Which of the following is not relevant? *a) Innovation ‘leadership’—where firms aim at being first to market, based on technological leadership. b) Complementary assets or capabilities in marketing and distribution. c) Capacity to defend its advantage against imitators, for example, through standards or intellectual property. d) The learning curve in production generates both lower costs, and a particular and powerful form of accumulated and largely tacit knowledge. 10. Firms in emerging economies may pursue different routes to upgrading through innovation. Which of the following is not a common pathway? a) Capability upgrading – improving the range of functions undertaken, or changing the mix of functions, for example, production versus development or marketing. b) Process upgrading – incremental process improvements to adapt to local inputs, reduce costs or to improve quality. *c) Competitiveness upgrading - adopting best-practice methods from developed economies. d) Inter-sectoral upgrading - moving to different sectors, for example, to those with higher value-added. 11. Prahalad and Hamel argue that the capacity to open up new product markets requires distinctive core competencies, coupled with methods of corporate organization and evaluation that explicitly recognize the importance of these competencies. Which of the following is not true of core competencies? a) Contribute to more than one core product, and to more than one business unit. *b) Suggests that large and multidivisional firms should be viewed as a collection of strategic business units. c) Require focus: companies are likely to lead in more than five or six core competencies. d) Are supported by organizational competencies such communication, involvement, and a commitment to working across organisational boundaries. 12. David Teece and Gary Pisano integrate the various dimensions of innovation strategy into what they call the ‘dynamic capabilities’ approach. This emphasizes the need to: *a) Manage strategically to adapt and re-configure capabilities. b) Make significant investments in emerging technological trajectories. c) Adopt a strategic position as market leader. d) Strategically anticipate future technologies and markets. 13. The notions of core competence and dynamic capabilities are useful as they emphasize the importance of developing firm-level resources. However, there are a number of limitations to these approaches. Which of the following is not a significant limitation of the concepts? a) Industries face differing potentials for technology-based diversification. b) Recommendations that firms should concentrate resources on a few distinctive world-beating technological competencies are misleading. *c) Emphasizes the difficulty of capturing and transferring knowledge due to its tacit nature and context-specificity. d) More general enabling competencies for the co-ordination of changes in supply, production and distribution systems are necessary. 14. A strategic goal is to get the right balance between exploitation of existing competencies and the exploitation and development of new competencies. Which of the following is not a critical issue in this respect? a) The breadth and limits of management cognition which influence decision-making. b) The skills and experience of employees and other human capital. c) The internal and external relationships that influence access to information and knowledge. *d) The vision, control and power of senior managers. 15. There is no widely accepted definition or method of measurement of competencies. Which of the following statements is not true? a) Functional measures might include capabilities in design, development or production. b) Need to identify the range of disciplines or fields that contribute to a technology. c) Need to be based on specific strategic technological targets. d) Need to identify the new competencies that must be developed. strategic innovation management test banks Keyword Tool Pro Do you need this information? 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,Tidd & Bessant, Strategic Innovation Management


Testbank questions
Chapter 01 What is Innovation – and Why Does It Matter?

Correct answers are indicated with a *

1. Which of these would not normally be considered an incremental innovation?
*a) An electric car
b) A low fat hamburger
c) Faster train journeys through better signalling
d) Chicken and onion flavoured potato snacks

2. Which of these innovations is a typical example of 'technology' or 'knowledge' push? (Several
choices may be correct.)
*a) The Walkman personal hifi
*b) Radar
*c) The Pilkington Float Glass process
*d) Online banking
e) YouTube and related video sharing internet sites
f) Car safety belts

3. Innovation can only happen in the private sector because the public sector is not concerned
with making profits or competition between firms.
True
*False

4. Which of the following are factors often associated with successful innovating organizations?
(Several choices may be correct.)
a) Large size
*b) Rich external linkages and networks
*c) Supportive organizational climate with structures and incentives for innovation
*d) Mechanisms for strategic selection of innovation options
e) Large market share
f) Age of the firm - the older the better

5. Innovation can take many forms, all involving a change of some kind. Which of the following
is NOT a form of innovation?
a) Product (or service) innovation - changes in what is offered to the world
b) *Petroleum innovation - amount spent monthly by a business on its fuel costs
c) Process innovation - changes in the way offerings are created and delivered
d) Position innovation - changes in the context in which innovations are launched

6. Which of the following would you class as a radical innovation? (Several choices may be
correct.)
a) The fibre tip pen
*b) The electric light bulb
*c) The laser

www.innovation-portal.info
©2014 John Wiley and Sons ltd

,Tidd & Bessant, Strategic Innovation Management


*d) The photocopier
e) Wide-bodied jet airliners

7. Which of the following is NOT a source of strategic advantage through innovation?
a) Complexity - offering something which others find it difficult to master
b) Legal protection of intellectual property - offering something which others cannot do
unless they pay a licence or other fee
*c) Scale of investment in R&D
d) Novelty in product or service offering - offering something no one else can

8. Peer-to-peer networking of the kind pioneered by Napster and now forming the basis of
internet file sharing is an example of radical innovation.
*True
False

9. Haagen Daz ice cream was created to open up a new market amongst adults for what had
traditionally been seen as a children's food. This is an example of position innovation.
*True
False

10. Innovation can take many forms. Running a hospital booking system which reduces patient
waiting time is an example of which kind of innovation?
*Process

11. Which of the following is NOT an example of product innovation?
a) A new toothpaste
b) A new car design
c) A new version of the iPod
*d) Computer-control of manufacturing operations

12. Successful innovation depends on having patent protection for the core idea.
True
*False

13. Innovation always requires a radical flash of insight - a 'eureka!' moment.
True
*False

14. Innovation success is directly linked to the size of investment in Research and Development
(R&D).
True
*False

15. Which of the following would not normally be considered a radical innovation?
a) The jet turbine engine
b) Integrated circuits

www.innovation-portal.info
©2014 John Wiley and Sons ltd

, Tidd & Bessant, Strategic Innovation Management


*c) Increased colour choice on the Volkswagen 'Beetle' car
d) Antibiotic drugs

16. Social entrepreneurship does not concern itself with commercial questions.
True
*False

17. There is no way to resolve the conflict between commercial business goals and those of social
innovation.
True
*False

18. The triple bottom line is ....
a) markings on a ship to show how heavily laden it is
b) a book-keeping convention to minimise accounting mistakes
c) an accounting system suitable for joint ventures between firms
*d) a company reporting framework designed to take into account not just financial outcomes
but also environmental and social performance

19. Which of the following statements about the 'bottom of the pyramid' market is not open to
challenge?
*a) The poor - 4 billion of them - earn less than $2/day
b) The poor have no purchasing power and do not represent a viable market
c) The poor are not brand-conscious
d) The poor are unable to use and not interested in advanced technology

20. Social innovation follows a different process to more commercial forms of innovation.
True
*False

21. Which of the following is NOT a question for managing social entrepreneurship?
a) How do we find opportunities which deliver social as well as economic benefits?
b) How do we identify and engage a wide range of stakeholders – and understand and meet
their very diverse expectations?
c) How do we mobilise resources across networks, how do we build coalitions of support for
socially valuable ideas?
*d) How do we patent and exploit emerging ideas?

22. Which of the following would NOT be considered a social entrepreneur?
a) Florence Nightingale
b) Muhammed Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank
*c) Kenneth Lay, founder of Enron
d) Trevor Bayliss, inventor of the wind-up radio

23. Which of these is NOT a difference between social entrepreneurs and commercial
entrepreneurs?

www.innovation-portal.info
©2014 John Wiley and Sons ltd

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