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

Fundamentals of Business Innovation Summary for Exam

Rating
4.0
(1)
Sold
1
Pages
43
Uploaded on
05-09-2025
Written in
2022/2023

Fundamentals of Business Innovation Summary for Exam with everything needed included

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
September 5, 2025
Number of pages
43
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Class notes
Professor(s)
/
Contains
All classes

Subjects

Content preview

Fundamentals of Business Innovation
Chapter 1
What is innovation and why does it matter?
 Innovation is the process of creating value from ideas
 There are differences in the novelty of the changes we introduce
 There are different levels of innovation, from changing parts to changing the way they
are arranged





 Innovation is making changes in order to create value
 Innovation can also be about creating social value
 Competition can exist between firms, or between problems and problem solvers
 Innovations are driven by a quest for opportunity or a response to a threat
 An entrepreneur is an individual or group who sees an opportunity and takes the risk
of trying to exploit it
 An important theorist of innovation is Joseph Schumpeter




1

,




 What organizations know and have learnt is a core asset which they can leverage
 Paying attention to creating, capturing, and using knowledge is critical for innovation
 William Baumol: “Virtually all of the economic growth that has occurred since the
eighteenth century is ultimately attributable to innovation”
 Innovation involves a moving target
 Individuals and organizations need to have a strategy for innovation and a plan for
implementing that strategy
 Innovation also matters to policy agents, which include:
o Governments: innovation creates economic growth
o Trade and sector bodies: stimulating innovation to make for sector health and
competitiveness
o Supply chain ‘owners’: any supply network is as strong as its weakest link, so
it makes sense for firms to try to manage their supply systems and upgrade
them
 Innovation is a multiplayer game and needs different bits of the network to work
together
 Many small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) fail because they don’t see the
need for change
 A common problem for successful companies is when their core competencies
become the things which make it hard to see or accept the need for change
 Existing players often fail to respond fast enough to the new signals coming from
outside their industry
 Innovation is not a random process, but a sequence of planned experimentation:
1. Searching for possible opportunities (generating variation)
2. Selecting a particular one (selection)

2

, 3. Implementing it (propagation)
 Success in innovation is not just about having a good idea, but also about having the
capabilities to manage them
 Innovation is about growth and survival

 Business Innovation is improving on a new product
 If you put innovators/experts near each other, they can learn from each other (Silicon
Valley)
 Concentrate producers so they won’t share their secrets or work for someone else
 Innovations lead to other innovations once their shared to the public
 Innovations lead to new demands
 Individualism is one of the strongest drivers of innovation
 Control key resources
o Internally (monopoly on your own products)
o Externally (monopoly on external goods)
 Protect your innovations from imitations (non-compete clause, patents, etc.)
 The spread of innovation has huge societal impact (private vs. public benefits of
innovation)
What is innovation
 ‘The process of creating value from ideas’ - Strategic innovation management
 Different areas to innovate in
o Product/service
o Process
o Delivery
o Market
 Different degrees of novelty (how much it has changed compared to an existing idea)
 Not about change for the sake of change, but about value creation
 “An innovation is the implementation of a new or significantly improved product (good
or service), or process, a new marketing method, or a new organizational method in
business practices, workplace organization or external relations.” - OECD
 Innovation is not the same as invention or change
 There are a lot of intermediate products, it’s hard to say when a product is new or just
an improvement on an old product
 Being able to implement the idea is a key part of innovation
 Schumpeter: Innovation is recombination. Innovation/value creation in bringing
existing products together
 Not innovating means stagnating and will result in ‘diminishing results on capital’
 Doing more of the same will not differentiate you
 Innovation is hard
 Businesses need to be organized for innovation




3

, Strategic Innovation Management – Chapter 2
Innovation strategy
 Innovation strategy can give us a framework for discussion and alignment
 Strategy is about making a clear vision for the future
 Strategic analysis begins with an exploration of innovation space – where could we
innovate and why would it be worth doing so
o Build a sense of the environment and analyze threats and opportunities
o Reflect on what resources the organization can bring to bear
o Spot where and how new markets can be created and grown
o Serve established markets in new ways
o Innovation can be mapped along four dimensions
1. Product: changes in the things which an organization offers
2. Process: changes in the way in which these offerings are created and
delivered
3. Position: changes in the context into which the products/services are
introduced
4. Paradigm: changes in the underlying mental models which frame what
the organization does
 Strategic selection is choosing out of all the things you could do, the ones you will do
o Play to your strengths
o Understand how you fit into wider systems and where we could create a
competitive advantage through innovation
o Determine your strategic posture
 Strategic implementation
o Make a simple project plan
o Think through and challenge the underlying strategic concept
 Make sure others see your strategic vision
 Clearly communicate your innovation strategy
 There is a core role for leadership to provide vision and direction

Strategy
 Strategy is what an organization does to reach it goals
 Innovation is not the end goal, but the means to get there
 According to high-school economics, a company is a rational actor whose goal is
profit maximization, but this isn’t the case in the real world
 Strategy is about making risky choices
Behavioral theory of the firm
 A firm is a coalition of participants
 Multiple actors influence what the firm can or cannot do
 The firm has no unambiguous objective function
 Each group of participants will have their own objective
 Information is not free, it has a price
 Decision makers are boundedly rational
Organizational goals
 The goals of a firm are reached through a bargaining process
 The bargaining power of different participants determines how much they can
influence goals
 The bargaining power of different participants depends upon how unique their
contribution to the company is and on their legitimacy
Contributions and inducements
 All participants have aspiration levels of how much change they want
 A participant doesn’t optimize, it searches for satisfaction

4
$9.27
Get access to the full document:

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

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
reneebox1
4.0
(1)

Reviews from verified buyers

Showing all reviews
3 weeks ago

4.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
0
Trustworthy reviews on Stuvia

All reviews are made by real Stuvia users after verified purchases.

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
reneebox1 Rijksuniversiteit Groningen
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1
Member since
3 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
10
Last sold
3 weeks ago

4.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
1
3
0
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