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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [Place of publication not identified] : MIT Sloan Management Review
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (9 pages)
    Edition: [First edition].
    DDC: 658/.044
    Keywords: Strategic alliances (Business) ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Companies aiming to accelerate their innovation efforts can find opportunities by connecting to regional clusters of startups, researchers, and investors. The key to success is to have a well-considered strategy for engagement that is clear on what the business hopes to gain and what the business can contribute. Leaders must understand the needs and interests of the different stakeholders in the ecosystem and make a long-term commitment to building relationships with them.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [Cambridge, MA] : MIT Sloan Management Review
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (1 volume) , illustrations
    Keywords: Competition ; Technological innovations ; Electronic books ; Electronic books ; local
    Abstract: Even the most successful companies have trouble developing breakthroughs. R&D programs are effective at accelerating progress in known areas, but they aren't good at spotting new opportunities outside of a company's experience base and tend to be biased in favor of innovations that reinforce existing business models. Increasingly, however, companies are discovering that many of the best ideas lie outside their organizations, with innovators who possess wide-ranging skills and knowledge. To discover and attract these contributors, organizations are launching competitions and offering prizes. As the authors point out, innovation competitions generate numerous ideas at once. And while many of the ideas won't outperform the status quo (or the efforts of a highly focused internal team), it only takes one "outlier" to open up a new direction. As companies such as Netflix and Progressive Insurance have found, competitions have the ability to leverage the entire ecosystem of potential innovators, with the sponsoring organization paying only for the best (in other words, winning) solution. Competitions generate diversity in three critical inputs to the innovation process: motivations, participants and organizations. This diversity generates a wider variety and greater number of solutions to any given problem. Diverse Motivations In many challenges, competitors in their aggregate (and sometimes individually) spend far more money than the competition prize purse. Although the authors say that competitors systematically overestimate their chances of winning, this doesn't fully explain the over-allocation of effort in relation to expected returns. Indeed, when the authors surveyed the entrants to the 2010 Progressive Insurance Automotive X Prize about their motivations, "winning the prize" ranked only fifth, trailing behind the desire to "gain publicity," "enhance their reputation" and "address environmental concerns." Diverse Participants Different motivations attract different types of participants, many of whom might not otherwise think of devoting their skills and attention to a challenge. This dynamic is powerful because in many situations it is impossible to predict who will have the best ideas, or what combination of skills will best solve a problem. In fact, research shows that the best solutions often come from outside the field of expertise in which a solution is expected to reside. Diverse Organizations Competitions also encourage diffe...
    Note: "Reprint number 55117.". - Place of publication from publisher's website. - Includes bibliographical references. - Description based on online resource; title from title page (Safari, viewed May 7, 2015)
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (1 volume) , illustrations
    Keywords: Universities and colleges ; Business management ; Strategic alliances (Business) ; University investments ; Electronic books ; Electronic books ; local
    Abstract: Collaborations between companies and universities are critical drivers of the innovation economy. These relationships have long been a mainstay of corporate R&D - from creating the knowledge foundations for the next generation of solutions, to serving as an extended "workbench" to solve short-term, incremental problems, to providing a flow of newly minted talent. As corporations look to open innovation to augment their internal R&D efforts, many of them are turning to universities to anchor an increasingly broad set of activities, especially those grounded in engaging with regional innovation ecosystems such as Silicon Valley, Kendall Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Block 71 in Singapore. Universities are essential stakeholders in innovation communities that also include corporations, government entities, venture investors, and entrepreneurs. In addition to being sources of people and ideas for corporations, university collaborations assist corporations in opening up new avenues of engagement with a broader innovation ecosystem. While the aspirations of university-industry partnerships can be easily described, many companies are finding that establishing and running partnerships effectively can be difficult, even when key financial resources and human capital are available. A core reason for the difficulty, the authors write, "is that university culture - characterized by high autonomy and distributed governance - maps poorly to corporate culture." The authors provide a set of six questions for managers, which make up the basis of a form they call the "university partnership canvas." They designed a form (which is downloadable from the digital version of the article) to help corporations assess and develop strategic approaches to their university partnerships. By working through the six questions, companies can develop a strategic perspective on what types of partnerships are best suited to their needs. The spectrum goes from what might be seen as an ad hoc approach to a strategic and broader engagement with an innovation ecosystem.
    Note: "Reprint #59205.". - Includes bibliographical references. - Description based on online resource; title from cover (Safari, viewed February 6, 2018)
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : MIT Sloan Management Review | Boston, MA : Safari
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 online resource (9 pages)
    Edition: 1st edition
    Keywords: Electronic books ; local
    Abstract: The conditions that exist during a crisis, including a sense of urgency, a focus on fewer priorities, and more latitude for experimentation, make it easier for organizations to innovate. Leaders can build and sustain a more innovative culture by fostering similar conditions even in the absence of a crisis.
    Note: Online resource; Title from title page (viewed November 30, 2020) , Mode of access: World Wide Web.
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