Tidd / Bessant | Strategic Innovation Management | Buch | 978-1-118-45723-8 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 448 Seiten, Format (B × H): 184 mm x 233 mm, Gewicht: 786 g

Tidd / Bessant

Strategic Innovation Management


1. Auflage 2014
ISBN: 978-1-118-45723-8
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons Inc

Buch, Englisch, 448 Seiten, Format (B × H): 184 mm x 233 mm, Gewicht: 786 g

ISBN: 978-1-118-45723-8
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons Inc


Innovative organizations grow twice as fast, both in employment and sales, as those that fail to innovate. The social benefits of innovation are even greater.

This first edition of Strategic Innovation Management is an exciting new addition to the established bestselling texts Managing Innovation and Innovation and Entrepreneurship written by Joe Tidd and John Bessant. Aimed at students taking courses in business studies and management, as well as non-specialist courses in other disciplines, this book provides a practical and accessible evidence-based approach to managing innovation in a wide range of contexts, including: manufacturing, services, small to large organizations and the private, public and third sectors.

The text has been designed to be fully integrated with the Innovation Portal at www.innovation-portal.info, which contains an extensive collection of additional resources for both lecturers and students including teaching resources, case studies, media clips, innovation tools, seminar and assessment activities and over 300 test-bank questions.

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Autoren/Hrsg.


Weitere Infos & Material


About the Authors xi
Preface xiii
Acknowledgements xv
How to Use This Book xvii

Part I Foundations of Managing Innovation 1

Chapter 1 What Is Innovation – And Why Does It Matter? 3

What Is Innovation? 3
Why Does Innovation Matter? 9
To Whom? 10
Innovation Isn't Easy! 10
Can We Manage Innovation? 12
The Case for Strategic Innovation Management 13

Chapter 2 Innovation Strategy 21

Why Strategy? 21
What's in an Innovation Strategy? 22
Strategy at Different Levels 33
Dynamic Capability 35

Chapter 3 Identifying Strategic Capabilities 41

The Resource-Based View 41
Distinguishing Capabilities from Resources 42
Assessing Capabilities 46
Creating and Capturing Value 53
Beware of Core Rigidities 55Summary 57

Chapter 4 Leadership and Organization of Innovation 61

The Innovative Organization 61
Innovation Leadership 62
Collective and Social 65
Context and Climate 72

Chapter 5 Innovation as a Process 81

Beyond Spengler 81
A Map of the Process 82
Managing the Process 86
Learning to Manage Innovation 90
The Problem of Partial Models 91

Chapter 6 Sources of Innovation 97

Where Do Innovations Come From? 97
Knowledge Push 98
Need Pull. 99
Making Processes Better 101
Whose Needs? Working at the Edge 103
Crisis Driven Innovation 105
Towards Mass Customization 107
Users as Innovators 107
Watching Others – and Learning from Them 110Recombinant Innovation 111
Regulation 111
Futures and Forecasting 112
Design-driven Innovation 113
Accidents 114

Chapter 7 Search Strategies for Innovation 119

Making Sense of the Sources 119
The Innovation Treasure Hunt 122
Innovation Search Strategies 127
Strategies for Searching 131
Innovation Networks 133
Knowledge Management 134
Learning to Search 135

Chapter 8 Forecasting Emerging Opportunities for Innovation 141

Forecasting 141
Customer or Market Surveys 143
Internal: Brainstorming 144
External: Benchmarking 145
Scenario Development 149

Chapter 9 Selecting Innovation Projects 159

Why is Selection a Challenge? 159
Choosing between Projects 162

Chapter 10 Developing New Products and Services 181

The New Product/Service Development Process 181
Success Factors 186
Service Development 188
Tools to Support New Product Development 193

Chapter 11 Developing Business and Talent through Corporate Venturing 203

Internal Venturing and Entrepreneurship 203
Why Do It? 205
Managing Corporate Ventures 211
Strategic Impact of Ventures 219

Chapter 12 Commercialization and Diffusion of Innovations 223

Why Adopt Innovations? 223
Models of Diffusion 227
Factors Influencing Adoption 230
Applying Diffusion to Innovation Strategy 237

Chapter 13 Exploiting Knowledge and Intellectual Property 243

Innovation and Knowledge 243

Chapter 14 Business Models and Capturing Value 263

What's a Business Model? 263
Generic and Specific Business Models 267
Why Use Business Models? 268
Building a Business Model 269
Business Model Innovation 273

Chapter 15 Capture Value: Learning to Manage Innovation 277

The Story So Far. 277
Making Innovation Happen 278
Learning in Organizations 280
Innovation Auditing 281
Innovation Auditing in Practice 288
Dynamic Capability and Changing Our Routines 291

Part II The Innovation Frontier 295

Chapter 16 Users as Innovators 297

Users Aren't Passive 297
Lead Users 300
Extreme Users 303
Co-development 304
Democratic Innovation and Crowdsourcing 305

Chapter 17 Exploiting Open Innovation and Strategic Alliances 311

Open Innovation 311
Benefits and Limits of Open Innovation 315
Joint Ventures and Strategic Alliances 323

Chapter 18 Exploiting Discontinuous Innovation 331

Beyond the Steady State 332
The Problem – and the Opportunity – in Discontinuous Innovation 333
Innovation Lifecycles: From Discontinuity to Steady State 335
Discontinuous Can Be Disruptive 337
Managing Discontinuous Innovation 343
Dealing with Discontinuity 344

Chapter 19 Social Innovation 351

What Is 'Social Innovation'? 352
Definitions and Exploration of the Core Idea 355
The Challenge of Social Entrepreneurship 358
Enabling Social Innovation 359
Why Social Innovation? 361

Chapter 20 Innovation in Developing and Emerging Economies 371

Globalization and Innovation 371
Looking Back 373
Building BRICs: The Rise of New Players on the Innovation Stage 374
Developing Countries 383

Chapter 21 Sustainability 389

The Challenge of Sustainability-led Innovation 389
We've Seen This Before 391
Sustainability-led Innovation 392
Managing the Innovation Process for Sustainability 399
Responsible Innovation 402
Summary 404

Further Resources 404
References 405
Index 409


Joe Tidd is Professor of Technology and Innovation Management at SPRU (Science and Technology Policy Research), University of Sussex, UK and visiting Professor at University College London.

John Bessant holds the Chair in Innovation and Entrepreneurship at Exeter University where he is also Research Director.



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