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Summary of Innovation Management B&M (EBB649C05)

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All the weeks have been summarized, so save yourself some time and enjoy this summary. It captures everything mentioned in the lessons, even some additional notes. Hope it helps you studying! :)

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Innovation Management B&M
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Week 1: An introduction to innovation
What is an innovation?
Joseph A. Schumpeter:

Invention: an idea, a sketch or model for a new or improved device, product, process or system

Innovation: the process and outcome of creation and commercialization of something new

 Innovation includes opportunity identification, ideation or invention to development,
prototyping, production, marketing and sales
 Entrepreneurship only needs to involve commercialization (depending which definition of
entrepreneurship is applied)
o Innovation = Invention + Exploitation



Standard economics of strategy can be boring:

Analyzing…

o Existing structures
o Equilibriums

But innovation is about:

o Creation (and destruction)
o Change
o Novelty



Why is it so difficult?

 Innovation funnel
o Most innovative ideas do not become successful new products.
 Carefully crafted strategies required
 Barriers, competitors, innovation patterns,
environment, etc.

, Sources of Innovation




R&D by firms

Research refers to both basic and applied research:

 Basic research aims at increasing understanding of a topic or field without an immediate
commercial application in mind.
 Applied research aims at increasing understanding of a topic or field to meet a specific need

Development refers to activities that apply knowledge to produce useful devices, materials, or
processes.

R&D thus refers to a range of activities that extend from early exploration of a domain to specific
commercial implementations.



Demand Pull / Technology Push

Originate from linear models:

“Technology/Science push”

 Scientific discovery -> invention -> manufacturing -> marketing
 Linear model emphasizes “supply side”

“Need/Demand pull”

 Customer suggestions -> invention -> manufacturing
 Linear model emphasizes “demand side”

Innovation process likely to be non-linear

Most current research emphasizes that innovation originates from a variety of sources and follow a
variety of paths.




Supply and demand determinants

, Supply determinants of innovation:

 Technological opportunity -> state of the relevant scientific and technological
knowledge
 Cost and availability of inputs -> knowledge workers, scientific personnel, equipment
 Appropriability -> ability to capture profit from innovation

Demand determinants of innovation:

 Cost reduction potential from innovation (process innovation; new sources of supply;
organizational change)
 Consumer or producer benefit from novel product (product innovation)
 Consumer or producer benefit from improvements (incremental product innovation)



TP/DP risks

 Technology push -> develop solution for which there is no problem
 Demand pull -> missing ability to invent technology to solve problem



Development of innovation models




External sources and combinations

External sources

 Licensing, purchasing
 Externalities (technologies, pecuniary)



Combinations of external and internal sources

,  Strategic partnership
 Cross licensing
 (Networks for exchange, joint venture, collective research associations, government-
sponsored joint research programs, informal networks, …)



Innovation in Collaborative Networks

 Technology Clusters are regional clusters of firms that have a connection to a common
technology (e.g., Silicon Valley’s semiconductor firms)

Though today’s information technology enables fast, cheap and easy communication across the
globe, knowledge does not always transfer so easily.

Encompass an array of industries that are linked through relationships between suppliers, buyers and
producers of complements.



Technological spillovers / Knowledge externalities

 Technological spillovers occur when the benefits from the research activities of one entity
spill over to other entities.

Likelihood of spillovers is a function of:

 Strength of protection mechanisms (e.g., patents, copyright, trade secrets)
 Nature of underlying knowledge base (e.g., tacit, complex)
 Mobility of the labor pool



Types of Innovation (A)

Product Innovation vs. Process Innovation:

Product innovation

o Embodied in firm output (good or service)
 New product

Process innovation

o Techniques of producing output
 More efficient production

→ Appear very often in combination:

→ Product innovations can enable process innovations and vice versa

→ Product innovation for one firm may be a process innovation for another firm

Types of innovation (B)

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Hello! I provide comprehensive and detailed summaries from courses present in the Pre-Msc Business Administration - SIM from the year (). Hope they will help you with studying! :)

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