Stakeholders in Open Innovation

by Tomas on April 3, 2009

There is this understanding in policy making that as much as the decision making process is structured and encrypted in vast amounts of documents, the outcome of the debate is always influenced by this obscure social element called informal meetings. These are understood as occasions when various stakeholders somehow end up behind closed doors that in effect magically revert the course of an official debate.

Actors and Networks

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In anything tech related, this implicit aspect is usually downplayed in exchange for news-breaking analysis of vague corporate releases filtered through a number of media channels. Therefore I thought it might be useful to explicitly name all the stakeholders in open innovation and consequently look at ways to reach them directly (both offline and online).

In the course of the next couple of month, I will attempt to go around all these actors and come back with their individual perspectives on the concepts of open innovation. Feel free to suggest questions these stakeholders should be asked.

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Tolerable academic resources

by Tomas on April 3, 2009

However flawed and rigid might be the perspective down from the ivory tower, academic research composes an intergral part of any serious discussion on what is eventually considered as the best practice. This list was built to represent the most relevant and useful academic journals in the fiels of management, organisation science, media and communication and information systems.

Right now, these journals hold about 736 articles on “open innovation”.

Paradigm Shift

Management and Organisation Science

Administrative Science Quarterly regularly publishes the best theoretical and empirical papers based on dissertations and on the evolving and new work of more established scholars; publishes organizational theory papers from a number of disciplines, including organizational behavior and theory, sociology, psychology and social psychology, strategic management, economics, public administration, and industrial relations.

Harvard Business Review Posh version of McKinsey Quarterly.

Management Science includes articles that address management issues with tools from foundational fields such as computer science, economics, mathematics, operations research, political science, psychology, sociology, and statistics, as well as cross-functional, multidisciplinary research that reflects the diversity of the management science professions.

McKinsey Quarterly serious version of Harvard Business Review.

Organisation Science provides one umbrella for the publication of research from all over the world in fields such as organization theory, strategic management, sociology, economics, political science, history, information science, communication theory, and psychology.

Organisation Studies published in collaboration with the European Group of Organization Studies (EGOS), aims to promote the understanding of organizations, organizing, and the organized in and between societies, through the publication of double-blind peer-reviewed, top quality theoretical and empirical research. OS is a multidisciplinary journal, rooted in the social sciences, inspired by diversity, comparative in its outlook, and open to paradigmatic plurality.

Sloan Management Review geeky version of Harvard Business Review.

Media and Communications

New Media & Society engages in critical discussions of the key issues arising from the scale and speed of new media development, drawing on a wide range of disciplinary perspectives and on both theoretical and empirical research.

Information Science

Communications of the ACM (wow, relaunched in Feb 2009) a platform to present and debate various technology implications, public policies, engineering challenges, and market trends; in-depth coverage of emerging areas of computer science, new trends in information technology, and practical applications, the Communications Web site brings topical and informative news and material to computing professionals each business day.

European Journal of IS Information systems professionals in industry, commerce, government and academic departments of management, business and computing. Loads of methodological discussions and research studies.

Information and Management serves managers, professionals, database administrators and senior executives of organizations which design, implement and manage Information Systems Applications; to collect and disseminate information on new and advanced developments in the field of applied information systems.

Information Systems Research is a leading international journal of theory, research, and intellectual development, focused on information systems in organizations, institutions, the economy, and society.

Information, communication and society Drawing together the most current work upon the social, economic and cultural impact of the emerging properties of the new information and communications technologies, this journal positions itself at the centre of contemporary debates about the information age. Information, Communication & Society (iCS) transcends cultural and geographical boundaries as it explores a diverse range of issues relating to the development and application of information and communications technologies (ICTs).

MIS Quarterly the enhancement and communication of knowledge concerning the development of IT-based services, the management of IT resources, and the use, impact, and economics of IT with managerial, organizational, and societal implications.

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In my research,  one of the main advantages of corporate research is that special space it occupies between day to day news and overarching organisational theory. The research presents itself in various formats: white papers, case studies, future projections, best practices; but at the end of the day, the main purpose is to show what works and what does not for a a given company in a given market. With the more amusing ones, you get to read the next. big. plan. for world domination say in artificial meat cook books.

douglas2

Here I am putting together a list of online resources that is by no means exhaustive, but that I find useful in understanding technology innovation from the organisational perspective:

Consulting

Tech

Multi-nationals

More coming…

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How to classify online resources

by Tomas on April 1, 2009

Given the obviousness of my research questions, it comes  natural that I come across abundance of “relevant” information everywhere I look. Having in mind the sanity of myself and the people around me, I decided to fire up lovely charts and come up with an analytical distinction between the various resources and associated channels.

Online Resources (Websites, Feeds, Documents)

Innovation Resources Map

Throughout this week, I would like to provide with a list of  the most useful resources for each of these areas. Will try to keep the lists rather limited though - time/space scarcity reasons.

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Here we go!

by Tomas on March 28, 2009

I am setting up this website to log the progress of my thesis research on Non-competitive Hybrid Open Source Projects.

Given the fair amount of obscure buzzwords, I aim make sense out of the overwhelming amount of information published on the topic in recent years.

Provisionally,

  • by non-competitive I mean cooperation on mutually non-competitive developments, e.g. cooperation of a hardware and software communities;
  • by hybrid I mean open innovation between a commercial company and external voluntary (?) community;
  • open source projects = en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open_source.

By the end of this journey, I hope to have established a set of guidelines on how to manage innovation across organisations and submit a limited, yet focused thesis to the Department of Media and Communications at the London School of Economics.

And yes, I hope to be funny here and there.

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