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Innovation begreber, processer og strategier

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Title: Innovation begreber, processer og strategier


1
Innovation begreber, processer og strategier
  • Jens Frøslev Christensen
  • Professor in Management of Innovation
  • Department of Innovation and Organizational
    Economics
  • Copenhagen Business School
  • PhD course, Hillerød, March 2009

2
Agenda
  • Typer af innovationer
  • Innovationscycluser på brancheniveau
  • Innovationsprocessen på mikro-niveau
  • Typer af innovative virksomheder og deres aktiver
  • Kommercialisering af teknologisk innovation
  • Ufordringer ved Åben Innovation og bæredygtig
    innovation.

3
Hvad er innovation?
  • Kvalitativ forandring (ikke al forandring)
  • Skabelsen af noget nyt (ikke blot anvendelse af
    andres nyheder)
  • Innovationsprocessen inkluderer invention og
    succesrig implementering eller lancering
    (kommercialisering)
  • Et målrettet forsøg på at forbedre brugerværdi
    eller produktivitet.

4
Forskellige typer af innovation
  • Produkt/service innovation
  • Proces innovation
  • Teknologisk innovation
  • Organisatorisk innovation
  • Forretningsmodel innovation
  • ....
  • Ofte stærkt forbundne

5
Schumpeter The Grand Old man in Innovation theory
industrial mutation incessantly
revolutionizes the economic structure from
within, incessantly destroying the old one,
incessantly creating a new one. This process of
Creative Destruction is the essential fact about
capitalism Schumpeter, 1942
6
Innovationstypology I
Teknologisk viden
Skabelse af ny viden
Forbedring af eksisterende viden
Skabelse af nye markeder/ segmenter
Markeds- innovation
Basis- innovation
Markedseffekter
Inkrementel innovation
Teknologisk substitution
Fastholdelse af eksisterende markeder
7
Innovationtypologi II
  • Autonom innovation
  • Kan implementeres uden større ændringer i det
    tekniske, hvori det skal bruges
  • Systemisk innovation
  • Kræver markante ændringer i andre dele af
    brugersystemet måske komplementære innovationer
    eller ændringer i infrastruktur

8
Innovationscycluser for produkter/brancher
  • Inkrementel fase
  • Forbedringer inden for Dominerende Design

Dominerende Design
(Anderson Tushman, 1990)
9
Skiftende mønstre af innovation henover et
produkts eller en branches livscyklus
Dominerende design
Frekvensen af innovation
Produkt innovation
Procesinnovation
Gæringsfase/ radikal produktinnovation
Inkrementel fase/radikal process- innovation
(Abernathy Utterback)
10
Den lineære forståelse af innovations- processen

Grund-forskning
Anvendt forskning
Marketing/ salg
Produk- tion
Udvikling/ prototype
Invention
  • Forskningsinitieret
  • Ingen feed-back loops

11
Kædemodellen (Chain-link model)
Distribu-tion and marketing
Invention and/or analytical design
Re-design and production
Detailed design and testing
Kline and Rosenberg
12
Drivkræfter bag innovation
  • Forsknings/teknologi-drevet
  • Kunde/bruger-drevet
  • Leverandør-drevet
  • Produktionsdrevet
  • Design-drevet
  • regulerings-drevet
  • CSR/miljø-drevet
  • ...
  • Ikke gensidigt udelukkende!

13
Keith Pavitt Den mest markante
innovationsforsker i vor tid
14
Pavitts typologi for innovative virksomheder
  • Technologi/forskningsbasede virksomheder (fx
    medicinal, biotek)
  • Skala-intensive virksomheder (fx bilindustri,
    stålindustri, kunsumentelektronik)
  • Specialiserede leverandører (fx medical devices)
  • Leverandør-dominerede virksomheder (fx
    byggesektor, beklædning, møbler, kreative
    brancher)
  • Informations-intensive virksomheder (fx banker,
    retail chains)

15
Innovative Aktiver -involveret i teknologisk
innovation
  • Forskningsbaserede aktiver (skabelse af ny
    videnskabelig viden, anvendelse af ekisterende
    videnskabelig viden)
  • Processinnovative aktiver (udvikling af nyt
    procesudstyr, produktionssystemer, logistik,
    kvalitetskontrol, etc.)
  • Produktinnovative aktiver (produktudvikling via
    teknisk eller bruger-funktionel
    applikation/design)
  • Æstetisk/industriel/virtuel design
    (design/formgivning af produkter og emballage
    samkobler tekniske, funktionelle og marketing
    features)
  • (Christensensen, 1995)

16
Kravene til succesrig kommercialisering af
teknologisk innovation
  • Stærkt approprieringsregime Når inventioner er
    vanskelige at imitere/substituere eller
    effektivt beskyttet af IPR - og/eller
  • Stærke komplementære aktiver og en
  • Effektiv forretningsmodel

(Teece, 86)
17
Innovative assets and complementary assets
required for commercializing innovation
Complementary assets
Innovative assets
Production
Distribu- tion
Marke- ting
Science
Process
Product
Design
Service
Compl. technologies
Others
18
En forretningsmodels funktioner relateret til
innovation
  • Specificer value proposition (for kunder/brugere)
  • Identificer markedssegment
  • Definer strukturen af værdikæden/systemet og din
    position
  • Specificer behovet for komplementære aktiver og
    din position
  • Specificer indtægtsmekanismen (omkostningsstruktur
    og mål for indtjening)

19
EMI CT-scanner case
  • Computerized tomography (CT) scanning a
    breakthrough innovation in medical devices
  • CT-scanner innovation involved linking X-ray,
    data processing and cathode ray tube display
    technologies in a new and complex manner
  • The innovation was an outcome of EMIs RD labs
    by early 1970s.

20
EMIs strategic clarification 1972
  • Opponents against a direct CT-engagement
  • No experience with medical products
  • Production of CT deviates strongly from other
    EMI-production
  • Lack of knowledge concerning the US-market
  • Strong potential competitors
  • Supporters.
  • Access to a profitable, global growth market
  • Part of a general diversification strategy into
    the medical equipment business
  • EMI has a strong technology base for this
    diversification

21
EMIs CT-strategy 1972
  • 1. Production strategy
  • - Significant focus on outsourcing
  • - intention to minimize capital risk
  • - rapid mobilization of production capacity
  • 2. Marketing strategy
  • Primary focus on the US-market
  • - establish a sales organization in the US
  • - focus efforts at prestigous hospitals
  • 3. Technology strategy
  • - a wall of patents upfront RD efforts

22
Milestones for EMI CT (1972-76)
  • April 72 - go-decision
  • - implementation of production plan
  • June 73 - establishment of small sales office in
    U.S.
  • - first CT installed in Mayo Clinic
  • June 74 - 35 CTs delivered, orders for another
    60
  • Ult. 74 - first competitor (full-body, lower
    price)
  • May 75 - EMI launches 2. Generation
  • Dec. 75 - 6 new competitors, incl. GE (launching
    third
  • generation)
  • 1976 - General status EMIs CT a success,
    strong technological position. 450 CTs
    sold, orders for another 300.

23
Milestones after 1976
  • 1976 - 16 competitors, incl. Siemens, Philips
    and Hitachi
  • 1978 - EMI loses its market leadership, first
    to Technicare, then to GE
  • 1979 - Thorn Electric Industries acquires EMIs
    CT-business
  • - GE acquires the CT-business from Thorn

24
Spørgsmål
  • Hvorfor fejlede EMI til trods for at de var først
    med en radikal innovation?
  • Hvad kunne EMI have gjort anderledes for at opnå
    kommerciel suces?

25
When the owner of complementary assets is a
potential rival (and big)
  • the technology entrepreneur
  • will face an opportunistic partner
  • will have to share the rents from its innovation
    with a rival
  • Will have to engage in difficult bargaining for a
    fair licensing agreement or an attractive
    acquisition offer
  • The case of Toccata and Texas Instruments

26
From big box to small module or chip
Tripath 120W amplifier chip compared to a US cent
Amplifier box
27
Division of labour in radical innovation
Performance/ Market volume
Large firms domain
Technology entrepreneurs domain
Time
28
Spørgsmål til innovation i jeres virksomheder
  • Hvilken type innovation er I involveret i?
  • Hvad er den centrale driver bag denne innovation?
  • Hvilken type virksomhed sår bag?
  • Hvilke innovative aktiver skal integreres i
    innovationsprocessen?
  • Hvilke komplementære aktiver er vigtige for at
    kommercialisere innovationen?

29
Two major challenges Open Innovation and
Sustainable Innovation
30
From closed towards Open Innovation
31
Open Innovation
  • Open Innovation means that companies should (or
    have to) make much greater use of external ideas
    and technologies in their own business, while
    letting their unused ideas be used by other
    companies.
  • With a more open business model, Open Innovation
    offers the prospects of lower costs for
    innovation, higher quality innovation, faster
    times to market, the chance to share risks with
    others.
  • (Chesbrough, 2006, p. xiii)

32
The Closed Paradigm for Managing Innovation
Research
Development
Boundary of the firm
Research projects
The market
33
Closed innovation
Other firms market
Our new market
Our current market
Stolen with pride from Henry Chesbrough UC
Berkeley.
34
Open Innovation implies
  • Voluntarily revealing some of your knowledge to
    others
  • Increasingly sourcing innovative ideas, solutions
    or technologies outside your organization
  • Increasingly engaging with external
    agents/communities for co-development and
    knowledge-sharing.

35
Open Innovation may relate to
  • Suppliers of parts and components
  • Suppliers of knowledge and ideas which again may
    be
  • Users (user-centred innovation)
  • Institutions, communities

36
User-centered innovation
  • Lead-user strategy
  • Firm-hosted online user communities
  • User communities of practice

37
(No Transcript)
38
Innocentive
  • Market place for innovation seekers and
    innovation solvers
  • Broadcasting firms RD questions to global
    Web-network of specialists, inventors, etc.
  • Offering prizes to solvers with solutions
    selected by seekers

39
Institutional drivers for Open Innovation since
1980s
  • Global expansion of large new markets (BRIC,
    Eastern Europe, Asian tigers, etc)
  • Expansion of the global science-technology base
    of knowledge
  • Shaping of improved market institutions (IPR,
    venture capital and, standards institutions)
  • Digitization/the Internet makes large-scale
    global knowledge exchange possible

40
Exponentially expanding global RD and
constrained corporate RD budgets
Constant RD funding
Pressures for expanding the technology base
Number of technical fields
Depth/funding pr technical field (specialization)
41
Implications for industrial dynamics
  • Improved markets for specialized
    knowledge/technology Small companies
    increasingly pioneer specialized niches in
    technologies, components and services
  • Vertical disintegration of large companies due to
    1) outsourcing of production, distribution, etc.,
    2) external sourcing of innovative and
    technological assets (Open Innovation)
  • Increasing inter-weaving of products/components/co
    mplements and services.
  • Implying increaing focus on external networking,
    knowledge-sharing, co-development, systems
    integration, and platform leadership for large
    firms.

42
The movement towards Open Innovation
  • Is a long-term trend at global markets,
  • Is driven by necessity not necessarily with
    enthusiasm (colliding with NIHS),
  • Is a difficult, costly and failure-prone route
    often characterized by trial-and-error.

43
Open Innovation challenges conventional strategy
thinking
  • A less protective/proprietary use of IPR
  • A more including perspective on customers,
    suppliers and other stakeholders (e.g.
    environmentalists, BOP communities).
  • A more external perspective on core comptencies
  • More focus on external coordination using tools
    such as modularization, standardization and
    platform development

44
Video Ipod from ApplePris 299
  • 451 parts
  • None produced by Apple
  • Assembled in Cina (not by Apple)
  • Apple earns 80 pr sold unit

45
Economic pressures on the business model of
closed innovation
Revenues
Shorter product life in the market
Own market revenue
Own market revenue
0
Internal RD costs
Internal development costs
Rising costs of innovation
Closed model - after
Closed model - before
Costs
Chesbrough, 2006
46
Pharmaceutical sales growth versus RD growth
1000
100
100
Billion (US sales)
10
Billion (RD)
10
Sales 11 CAGR
RD 15 CAGR
1
1
2005
2000
1980
1985
1995
1990
Eli Lilly/Chesbrough
47
The new business model of Open Innovation
Sales/divestiture
Revenues
New revenues
Spin-off
License
Own market revenue
Own market revenue
0
Internal development costs
Internal RD costs
Cost and time savings from leveraging external
development
Open Innovation business model
Closed model
Costs
Chesbrough, 06
48
Business models for more or less open value
creation and value capture
Value creation
Primarily internally
Community-driven
MySpace You Tube
Firm
Lego Mindstorm
Microsofts OS Google
Value capture
IBM Linux code Pirated music
Linux Kernel Wikipedia
Eco-System
(ChesbroughAppleyeard, 07)
49
Stern-review 2006
  • Climate change represents the greatest and
    widest-ranging market failure ever seen.
  • Spending large sums of money now on measures to
    reduce carbon emissions will bring dividends on a
    colossal scale. It would be wholly irrational,
    therefore, not to spend this money.
  • BBC News Oct. 2006

50
Sustainable innovation requires open strategies
  • Is often based on immature technolgies.
  • Emphasizes features (e.g. low Co2 emission) which
    are subject to low priority by customers and
    higher priority by society.
  • Has difficulties living up to traditional
    customer requirements for convenience,
    functionality and price.
  • Often not supported by existing standards and
    infrastructures.
  • Markets have to be created.

51
Comparative advantage of climate-destructive
innovation
  • Well-established markets
  • Negative externalities/costs on environment are
    not (or only partly) integrated in business
    models.
  • Narrow focus on user-friendliness.

52
A Grundfos circulator pump
  • Innovation up-hill
  • EU standards made commercialization possible
  • 90 millioner pumps in Europe 10 x Barsebäck
  • 7 million tons CO2 reduction yearly with new
    pumps

53
Wave power a technology with gigantic
opportunities
54
Closed/Open Innovation Strategies towards
sustainability
Open innovation
Closed innovation
  • Minimizing waste/
  • pollution in processes
  • Increasing resource-
  • productivity
  • Reduction of products
  • life-cycle impact
  • E.g. recycle systems

Incremental environmental innovation
Radical/ Sustainable innovation
New sustainable technologies (cleantech)
New sustainable systems
Wave power
Elecric car systems
55
Spørgsmål
  • Identificer et eksempel på bæredygtig innovation
    (eksisterende eller fremtidsmulighed)
  • Er kunderne villige til at betale særskilt for
    bæredygtighedselementet? Hvorfor (ikke)?
  • Kan miljøaspektet effektivt kommunikeres ud i
    markedet?
  • Kan innovationen effektivt beskyttes mod (hurtig)
    imitation?

56
Litteratur
  • JFC Wither Core Competency for the large
    Corporation in an Open Innovation World. IN H.
    Chesbrough et al. (2006) Open Innovation
    Researching a New Paradigm, Oxford University
    Press
  • JFC et al. (2005) The industrial dynamics of
    Open Innovation, Research Policy, December 2005.
  • JFC Produktinnovation Proces og Strategi, CBS
    Press 1995.
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