100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Class notes

Lectures Organizing Sustainable Innovation

Rating
-
Sold
1
Pages
37
Uploaded on
12-10-2020
Written in
2019/2020

These are notes from the lectures of the course Organizing Sustainable Innovation (minor: Sustainability: Management and Innovation, given at VU Amsterdam). There are some example questions added with the answers given based on the book that is used for the course (see other summary).

Show more Read less
Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
October 12, 2020
Number of pages
37
Written in
2019/2020
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
Unknown
Contains
All classes

Subjects

Content preview

ORGANIZING SUSTAINABLE INNOVATION – Lecture 1

INTRODUCTION

Sustainability requires tradeoffs
- Investing less for soon small profits
- Instead invest more for greater profits later
Responsibility IS NOT sustainability
- Different paradigms
- Different practices
- Different outcomes

Threat of short-termism
- Bias for immediate gratification
- Reinforced by urgency and uncertainty
- Focus on operations, neglect strategic investments
- Can lead to sub-optimal outcomes
- Highly volatile outcomes, further increasing risk-taking
- Vicious circle
o A win is often followed by a loss. This perpetual cycle of wins and losses encourages
even greater risk-taking to compensate for earlier losses.

Sustainability as a driver of innovation
- Compliance as opportunity
o Laws & voluntary codes
o Smarter to comply with the most stringent rules, do so before they are enforced
 First mover advantage
o Conforming to gold standards globally saves money
 Economies of scale
o Leading the way
 HP  helped shape regulations and persuaded regulators to delay 1 year.
o These companies spot business opportunities first.
 HP learned that a recycle regulation would cost them a lot of money
 Started its own recycling program which saved them $100 million in 4 years
- Making value chains sustainable
o Supply chains
 Induce (incentives) or oblige (laws) suppliers to be environment conscious
o Operations
 Operational innovation lead to greater energy efficiency
 FedEx  new planes  reduce fuel consumption by 36% while increasing
capacity by 20%
o Workplaces
 For example, working from home  leads to reductions in travel time, travel
costs, and energy use.
o Returns
 Instead of scrapping returned products, companies at this stage try to
recapture some of the lost value by reusing them
- Designing sustainable products and services
o For example, Carlsberg’s paper bottles
o Procter&Gamble  Cold water washing
- Developing new business models

, o Successful models include novel ways of capturing revenues and delivering services
o WasteManagement  From Waste company to recycle company
o FedEx  Acquired Kinko’s print shop  printing at location, so no shipping
o Calera (start-up)  catching CO2, make cement
 Radical business model, giving away cement, charging the polluter
- Creating Next-Practice platforms
o Questioning the status quo. Next Practices change existing paradigms
o For example, smart grid

Sustainable Innovation
- Firms face opportunities and threats with sustainability by:
o Market preference shifts
o Competing and changing technologies
o Changing policies
- One size does not fit all
- Reasons for the lack of fit:
o Lack of distinguishing sustainable innovation from other types of innovation
o Invention IS NOT innovation  For example, QWERTY/DVORAK keyboards
o Misattribution of other practices/experiences

Long fuse, big bang
- Things take longer to happen than you think they will, and then they happen faster than you
thought they could.
o Electric lighting
 1810s  First electrochemical batteries, 1882  Edison power station
 What happened in these 70 years?
 Telegraph  better batteries and wiring
 Many scientists and entrepreneurs
 Long periods of calm are followed by swift changes
 Railroads, automobiles, internet, AI

Long fuse of sustainability?
- Science has evolved
o Tracking emissions, production systems, and broader changes
o Valuation and models taking into account sustainability
- New technologies have emerged and evolved
o Clean energy technologies have emerged
 Wind, solar
o Other technologies emerged
 Smart grid etc.
 Internet  more transparency  companies behave more accordingly
- Shifts in consumer preferences (individuals and firms!)
o What customers value has influence
 What markets want and are willing to pay for
 What will no longer be tolerated
o Social contract is changing
 Bolder government policies
 Investors’ preferences

,Right tools for the right job (capabilities)
- Capability
o Elements (practices, tools, people) of an organization that supports each other to
accomplish an activity as a skill (relatively better than others)
- Stable times vs. turbulent times

o Stable times  you need the right capabilities to compete effectively,

o When conditions are changing  you also need the right capabilities to innovate
effectively. These are called dynamic capabilities because they enable your company
to change.

- Best practices alone do not suffice  firms need to have specific capabilities

Watt’s Steam engine example
- Watt first pursued his innovation without thought to the capabilities he would need to bring
his idea to reality. Only after learning from his bitter experiences and adding the capabilities
he ultimately found in Boulton’s ironworks and connections did he succeed.

Lessons learned
- Idea is just the beginning
o Right capabilities are needed to bring innovation to market
- Where you want to go dictates what you need to get there (challenges are often common)
o Innovating in a context of declining (rather than expanding) resources
o Brownfield vs Greenfield
o Faster/Better/Cheaper
o Uncertainty
o Breakthrough bias
- There is a set of common capabilities in the pursuit of sustainable innovations
o Nexus work
o Science and policy
o Recombinant Innovation
o Design
o Business model innovation

, ORGANZINING SUSTAINABLE INNOVATION – Lecture 2

COMMITMENT, CAPABILITIES, AND CRAFTING AN INNOVATION STRATEGY

Commitment
- Commitment itself is also a capability
o It includes leaders, processes, and structures
o Follows new products and services from launch to support
o Requires coordination of employees and stakeholders
- Embedded in many elements (people, structure, …)
o Looks different in different types of organizations
- Commitment is key for sustainable innovation
o Slower adoption and longer development time
o New skill sets and strategies
o Compete with existing unsustainable offerings

Abernathy & Utterback, 1978




Absorptive capacity
- A firm’s ability to recognize the value of new information, assimilate it, and apply it to
commercial ends (Cohen & Levinthal, 1990)
- Based on two ideas: learning is cumulative, and learning is greatest if object of learning is
related to what is known
o Individual  Organizational level
- What you invest/learn earlier will determine what you can learn next
o Across time periods
$7.88
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached


Also available in package deal

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
snijman Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
123
Member since
7 year
Number of followers
103
Documents
3
Last sold
8 months ago

3.9

19 reviews

5
3
4
12
3
4
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions