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UNDERSTANDING BUSINESS FUNCTIONS B202 PART B

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Title: UNDERSTANDING BUSINESS FUNCTIONS B202 PART B


1
UNDERSTANDING BUSINESS FUNCTIONSB202PART B
2
Block 4 The nature of innovation
  • The Resources Associated With This Section Are
  • Marketing text book, Chapters 6 and 8
  • Technology cycles, innovation streams and
    ambidextrous organizations Reading.
    (p.106-p.125)

3
Block 4 The nature of innovationFour types of
innovation
  • Organizations require at least two broad types
    of capability to succeed as product manufactures
    (Henderson and Clark, 1990)
  • Market Capabilities which use market knowledge to
    meet customer demand.
  • Technological Capabilities which use
    technological knowledge to develop and
    manufacture the product.

4
Block 4 The nature of innovationFour types of
innovation
  • Types of technological knowledge
  • Component knowledge knowledge of the components
    required to assemble a product or deliver a
    service.
  • Architectural knowledge knowledge of how the
    components are connected.

5
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation Four
types of innovation
  • There are four types of innovation
  • Incremental innovation
  • Radical/ discontinuous innovation
  • Architectural innovation, and
  • Modular innovation

6
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation Four
types of innovation
  • Incremental innovation builds on existing
    products.(e.g. thinner mechanical watches).
  • Radical/ discontinuous innovation destroys
    existing products sets product development onto
    a new trajectory (line, path). (e.g. Seikos
    quartz movement substituting for mechanical
    movements)
  • Architectural innovation links existing
    technology in novel (new) ways. (e.g. Starkey
    was able to move beyond behind-the-ear (BTE)
    hearing aids to in-the-ear (ITE) hearing aids by
    simply reconfiguring existing hearing aid
    components.i.e. It took extant hearing aid
    technology, repackaged this technology into
    smaller space, and created the (ITE) hearing aid)
  • Modular innovation destroys some part of an
    organizations component knowledge but leads to
    architectural innovation. (e.g. batteries
    replacing springs as the energy source in watches)

7
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation four
types of innovation
  • Henderson and Clark see four types of innovation
    emerging from the use of at least two types of
    technological knowledge (table 2.1, page 18)

8
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation Four
types of innovation
  • Note that table 2.1 is designed to suggest that a
    given innovation may be less radical or more
    architectural, not to suggest that the world can
    be neatly divided into four quadrants.
  • The concept of Dominant Design
  • What are dominant designs?
  • Dominant designs Are the new industry
    standards that emerge from the breakthrough
    of a new product or service.
  • Previous studies show that product
    technologies do not emerge fully developed
    at the outset of their commercial lives.
  • Technical evolution (development) is usually
    characterized by periods of great
    experimentation followed by the acceptance of
    a dominant design.

9
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation Four
types of innovation
  • Cont. the concept of Dominant Design
  • The emergence of a new technology is usually a
    period of considerable confusion. There is little
    agreement about what the major subsystems of the
    product should be or how they should be put
    together. There is a great deal of
    experimentation.
  • For example, in the early days of the automobile
    industry, cars were built with gasoline,
    electric, or steam engines, with steering wheels
    or tillers, and with wooden or metal
    bodies.These periods of experimentation are
    brought to an end by the emergence of a dominant
    design. A dominant design is characterized both
    by a set of core design concepts that correspond
    to the major functions performed by the product
    and that are embodied in components and by a
    product architecture that defines the ways in
    which these components are integrated.Once the
    dominant automobile design had been accepted,
    engineers did not reevaluate the decision to use
    a gasoline engine each time they developed a new
    design.

10
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation Four
types of innovation
Activities 2.2 2.3 (p.19-20) Using Henderson
and Clarks matrix, Which type of innovation does
the approach of Chapters bookstore
represent? Why do you think architectural
innovation may be more difficult to achieve than
incremental innovation?
11
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation
Innovation and organizational performance
  • Organizations are able to offer differentiated
    and/ or low costproducts and services when they
    carry out particular activities especially well.
  • In competitive environments, this means
    performing key activities better than
    competitors.
  • In a co-operative environment, it means serving
    beneficiaries better.
  • Over time, organizations develop capabilities
    for performing particular activities and
    competencies in performing groups of related
    activities which enable them to make especially
    good use of their resources.

12
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation
Innovation and organizational performance
  • Resources, capabilities and competencies
  • Resources are inputs into organizational
    processes.
  • Grant (1995) identifies 3 types of resources
  • Tangible - e.g. buildings, equipment, process
    machinery, raw materials.
  • Intangible - e.g. knowledge, organizational
    routines.
  • Human - e.g. individual in the labor force,
    external individuals in network relationships.

13
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation
Innovation and organizational performance
  • Capabilities are strengths in managing and
    performing particular types of activity.
  • (e.g. an organization may be especially good at
    knowledge creation)
  • Competencies are strengths in managing and
    performing groups of activities and the
    interdependencies between them.
  • (e.g. an organization good at knowledge creation,
    the application of new knowledge to the
    development of new products and the marketing of
    the new products it develops)
  • Activity 2.4 page 21
  • From your reading so far including the section in
    the article by Tushman et al., why do you think
    innovation is important to the organization?

14
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation
Innovation and organizational performance
  • Competence-enhancing and Competence-destroying
    innovations
  • Competence-enhancing innovations innovations
    with the potential to deep and strength existing
    competencies.
  • Competence-enhancing innovations are ones that
    either develop new products or make improvements
    to existing products that build on existing
    competences and strengthen the position of the
    current leaders.
  • Note that these are often made by established
    organizations which have the resources,
    capabilities and competencies to be successful in
    this activity.

15
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation
Innovation and organizational performance
  • Cont. Competence-enhancing and Competence-destroyi
    ng innovations
  • Features of competence-enhancing innovations
  • Introduce path-dependence into the system (enable
    a firm that is leading the industry to increase
    its lead even further)
  • Cause the market structure to become more
    concentrated and stable, and less friendly to new
    firms.

16
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation
Innovation and organizational performance
  • Cont. Competence-enhancing and Competence-destroyi
    ng innovations
  • Competence-destroying innovations innovations
    with the potential to render obsolete the
    competencies on which success in the
    organization, industry or sector has hitherto
    (till now) been built (e.g. from mechanical to
    quartz watches).
  • Competence-destroying innovations are ones that
    develop new products or make changes to existing
    products that require completely new skills and
    knowledge to be developed.
  • Note that these are often made by new entrants.

17
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation
Innovation and organizational performance
  • Cont. Competence-enhancing and Competence-destroyi
    ng innovations
  • Features of competence-destroying innovations
  • Do not enhance the position of the existing
    leaders because they render their current
    capabilities obsolete.
  • Allow entry into the market by flexible firms,
    thus, making the market structure more
    competitive.

18
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation
Innovation and organizational performance
  • Why are competence-destroying innovations often
    made by
  • new entrants, while competence-enhancing
    innovations are
  • often made by established organizations?
  • Existing capabilities and competencies can be an
    obstacle to the development of new ones. How?
  • There is inertia in many organizations when it
    comes to making the kinds of major changes which
    are required to radically change what they do
    and/ or how they do it.
  • Therefore competence-destroying innovations are
    often made by new entrants, while competence
    enhancing innovations are often made by
    established organizations which have the
    resources, capabilities and competencies to be
    successful in this activity.
  • Activity 2.5 (p.22)

19
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation process
  • The challenge that organizations face is how to
    create the
  • conditions that encourage and facilitate
    innovation. Some of
  • these conditions are
  • Money invested in research
  • appropriate political and economic climate at the
    national level, and
  • a company culture that does not discourage
    unconventional thinking among its staff.
  • However, there is a conflict between maintaining
    a steady
  • Revenue stream and creating the conditions that
    promote
  • more radical Innovations. Why?

20
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation processLinear development
  • Activity 2.7 (page23)
  • Describe the conventional approach to new
    product development
  • It consists of a logical sequence of actions,
    starting with the identification of a gap in the
    marketplace or the companys portfolio.
  • It ensures that the new product is well matched
    to the needs of both the customer and the
    company.
  • It is designed to reduce risk to minimize
    wasted resources.

21
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation process Cont. linear development
  • Activity 2.8 (page 24)
  • The main advantages of a linear approach to new
    product
  • development are low risk and efficient resource
    usage.
  • Suggest what disadvantages of this approach might
    be.
  • It is likely to be slow
  • It may fail to anticipate future trends and
    needs.
  • It assumes that your customers know what they
    want, and that you know what they know.
  • It is With its emphasis on analysis and
    rationalization, it is unlikely to identify
    radical innovation.

22
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation processCont. linear development
  • What are the types of innovation Strategy?
    (marketing text
  • book, page 140)
  • Note that it is the organizations ability to
    assess the benefits of introducing new
    technologies against the costs that determines
    the decision. Much of this, however, also depends
    on other systems and processes within the
    organization e.g. if the introduction of a new
    piece of equipment or process requires changes
    along the value chain (particularly within each
    of the business functions thus incurring
    additional costs) the overall cost to the
    organization may outweigh the benefits.
  • Thus, it is not only the nature of the innovation
    that is important in assessing its costs and
    benefits, but the culture, design and
    organization of work specific to individual
    organizations, and the way information is
    disseminated through an industry.
  • Note for organizations with an offensive or
    defensive strategy and those operating in a
    fast-changing environment where innovation is the
    norm, the conventional approach (linear) to
    innovation will pose problems. They need to look
    at things differently.

23
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation process Non- linearity
  • In addition to financial risks associated with
    innovation, and
  • the effects on the organization associated with
    it, the process
  • of developing discontinuous innovations
  • is hard to manage as it requires a willingness to
    experiment and to learn.
  • requires acceptance that new ideas should not be
    suffocated by continuous or premature analysis.
  • Most importantly, it requires recognition that it
    cannot be customer-driven.
  • Note that
  • conventional market research is of little value
    when the
  • customers do not know what their future needs
    may be, or the
  • organization does not know who its future
    customers may be.

24
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation processCont. Non- linearity
  • Box 2.1. Where is innovation leading? (page 26)
  • Activity 2.9 (pages 26-27)
  • In response to the need for discontinuous
    innovation, the concept of non-linearity may be
    more appropriate.
  • Note that linearity assumes a direct and
    proportionate relationship between inputs and
    outputs within a system.
  • Linear thinking may be successful in the area of
    incremental improvements. However, it is not
    sufficient to ensure the companys survival.
  • Why should we be concerned about an innovation
    policy that is based entirely on linear
    thinking?

25
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation process Cont. Non- linearity
  • We should be concerned about an innovation policy
    that is based entirely on linear thinking for the
    following reasons
  • Social systems there are diseconomies of scale
    in research, that is, productivity declines as
    scale increases.
  • The concept of directed research is hard to
    reconcile with the reality of radical innovation.
  • A rational structure is unlikely to attract or
    retain the highly inventive individual.
  • Note that Hamel (1998) argue that in a non-liner
    world, only non-linear strategies will be
    successful. According to Hamels argument, how
    should organizations think about innovation? See
    page 29.

26
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation processImplications for the
evolution of the organization
  • The punctuated equilibrium model of organization
    evolution.
  • (See figure 2.2 page 29)
  • What do you understand by the term ambidextrous
    organization?
  • (Activity 2.10 pages 29-30)
  • Why do organizations sometimes lose their
    entrepreneurial and innovative attributes as they
    evolve and grow?
  • (Activity 2.11 page 30)

27
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation processCont. implications for the
evolution of the organization
  • Figure 2.3 Greiners model of five phases of
    organizational
  • growth
  • Growth through creativityresult in crisis of
    leadership.
  • Growth through directionresult in crisis of
    autonomy.
  • Growth through delegationcrisis of control.
  • Growth through co-ordination.crisis of red
    tape.
  • Growth through collaborationcrises of ???
  • (Pages 31-32)

28
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovation The
innovation processCont. implications for the
evolution of the organization
  • Innovation Streams
  • Are patterns of innovations that simultaneously
    build on and extend prior products and destroy
    those very products that account for a firms
    historical success. These innovation streams
    shape and reshape markets. Innovation stream
    call attention to maintaining control over core
    product subsystems, and to dominant designs,
    architectural innovation, and product
    substitution as windows of opportunity where
    proactive managerial action can shape
    technological evolution and, in turn, bases of
    competition.

29
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovationMarketing
text book
  • Core ideas in chapter 6
  • Sequence of new product development (p, 139)
  • Six types of innovation strategy (p. 140)
  • Product positioning and new product clusters
  • New product development objective
  • Types of consumers
  • Diffusion of innovation

30
Cont. Block 4 The nature of innovationMarketing
text book
  • Core ideas in chapter 8
  • Logistic vs. distribution
  • Channels of distribution
  • Factors that affect how to choose a
    transportation method
  • Functions of channel members
  • Categories of channel members
  • Sources of channel power.
  • Channel management techniques
  • Efficient consumer response
  • Case study (page 204)

31
Questions?
32
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