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English
Oxford University Press
15 March 2017
Companies have to innovate to stay competitive, and they have to collaborate with other organizations to innovate effectively. Although the benefits of open innovation have been described in detail before, underlying mechanisms how companies can be successful open innovators have not be understood well. A growing community of innovation management researchers started to develop different frameworks to understand open innovation in a more systematic way.

This book provides a thorough examination of research conducted to date on open innovation, as well as a comprehensive overview of what will be the most important, most promising and most relevant research topics in this area during the next decade. Open Innovation: Researching a new paradigm (OUP 2006) was the first initiative to bring open innovation closer to the academic community. Open innovation research has since then been growing in an exponential way and research has evolved in different and unexpected directions. As the research field is growing, it becomes increasingly difficult for young (and even experienced scholars) to keep an overview of the most important trends in open innovation research, of the research topics that are most promising for the coming years, and of the most interesting management challenges that are emerging in organizations practicing open innovation. In the spirit of an open approach to innovation, the editors have engaged other scholars and practitioners to contribute some of their interesting insights in this book.

Companies have to innovate to stay competitive, and they have to collaborate with other organizations to innovate effectively. Although the benefits of open innovation have been described in detail before, mechanisms underlying how companies can be successful open innovators have not be understood well. A growing community of innovation management researchers started to develop different frameworks to understand open innovation in a more systematic way.

Edited by:   , , , ,
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm,  Spine: 20mm
Weight:   558g
ISBN:   9780198803997
ISBN 10:   0198803990
Pages:   368
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Part I: Open Innovation: Ten Years Later 1: Henry Chesbrough, Marcel Bogers: Explicating Open Innovation: Clarifying an Emerging Paradigm for Understanding Innovation 2: Frank Piller, Joel West: Firms, Users, and Innovation: An Interactive Model of Coupled Open Innovation 3: Wim Vanhaverbeke, Henry Chesbrough: A Classification of Open Innovation and Open Business Models Part II: Analyzing Open Innovation at Different Levels of Analysis 4: Joel West: Challenges of Funding Open Innovation Platforms: Lessons from Symbian Ltd 5: Jens Froslev Christensen: Open Innovation and Industrial Dynamics - Towards a Framework of Business Convergence 6: Wim Vanhaverbeke, Jingshu Du, Bart Leten, Ferrie Aalders: Exploring Open Innovation at the Level of R&D Projects Part III: New Application Fields for Open Innovation 7: Sabine Brunswicker, Vareska van de Vrande: Exploring Open Innovation in Small and Medium - sized Enterprises 8: Kazuhiro Asakawa, Jaeyong Song, Sang-Ji Kim: Open Innovation in Multinational Corporations: New Insights from the Global R&D Research Stream 9: Henry Chesbrough, Alberto Di Minin: Open Social Innovation Part IV: Managing and Organizing Open Innovation 10: Henry Chesbrough, Roya Ghafele: Open Innovation and Intellectual Property: A Two--?Sided Market Perspective 11: Henry Chesbrough, Chris Winter: Managing Inside - Out Open Innovation: The Case of Complex Ventures 12: Letizia Mortara, Tim Minshall: Patterns of Implementation of OI in MNCs 13: Nadine Roijakkers, Andy Zynga, Caroline Bishop: Getting Help from Innomediaries: What Can Innovators do to Increase Value in External Knowledge Searches? 14: Wim Vanhaverbeke, Myriam Cloodt: Theories of the Firm and Open Innovation Part V: Conclusions 15: Wim Vanhaverbeke, Henry Chesbrough, Joel West: Surfing the New Wave of Open Innovation Research

Henry Chesbrough is Faculty Director of the Garwood Center for Corporate Innovation at the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley. He holds a Ph.D. in Business Administration from the University of California-Berkeley, an MBA from Stanford University, and a BA from Yale University, summa cum laude. His research focuses on managing technology and innovation. His book, Open Innovation (2003), articulates a new paradigm for organizing and managing R&D. His second book, Open Business Models (2006), extends his analysis of innovation to business models, intellectual property management, and markets for innovation. His third book, Open Services Innovation (2011), explores open innovation in services businesses. Wim Vanhaverbeke is professor at the University of Hasselt. He is also visiting professor at ESADE Business School and the National University of Singapore. He published in several international journals such as Organization Science, Research Policy, California Management Review, Journal of Management Studies, Small Business Economics, Journal of Business Venturing, Technovation. He was co-editor with Henry Chesbrough and Joel West of the book Open Innovation: Researching a New Paradigm (OUP, 2006). He is a dedicated open innovation researcher collaborating with different partners in universities and companies around the globe. His current research is focusing on open innovation in SMEs, innovation ecosystems and on the implementation of open innovation practices. Joel West is professor of innovation & entrepreneurship at the Keck Graduate Institute School of Applied Life Sciences, after holding a similar position at the San Jose State University College of Business. His research on open innovation includes co-editing both Open Innovation: Researching a New Paradigm (Oxford, 2006) and a 2014 special issue of Research Policy; he also created and edits the Open Innovation blog (blog.openinnovation.net ). Other research has examined firm platform strategies in open source software and mobile telecommunications. He has published articles in Industry & Innovation, Information Systems Research, Journal of Management Studies, Journal of Product Innovation Management, Journal of Technology Transfer, R&D Management, Research Policy and Telecommunications Policy, among other journals.

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