The 3rd Annual World Open Innovation Conference co-hosted with ESADE in Barcelona, Spain, brings together renowned academic scholars, leading companies and innovators in the Open Innovation space. R&D Management has agreed to provide a Special Issue comprised of the best papers submitted to the conference.
Open Innovation describes “a distributed innovation process based on purposively managed knowledge flows across organizational boundaries” (Chesbrough and Bogers, 2014). It provides insights into how firms can harness inflows and outflows of knowledge to improve their innovation success. It has become a popular (and well cited) area of innovation research.
The digital age provides new enabling factors for generating, sharing, retrieving and storing data, information or knowledge that could dramatically impact how organizations manage their boundaries. In many cases, managers need to let go of the traditional logic of managing knowledge for innovation that may reside inside or outside the organization, but instead need to find new ways of managing the entire ecosystem where complementary partners are co-innovating new solutions that they can only establish together.
The 3rd Annual World Open Innovation Conference (WOIC 2016) covers topics such as:
Pecuniary and non-pecuniary mechanisms for enabling Open Innovation
The organizational enablers and barriers for Open Innovation
How Open Innovation shapes business models (and vice versa)
The role of technologies in helping (or hindering) Open Innovation processes
Open service innovation and the impact of Open Innovation upon new service offerings
Open versus proprietary intellectual property (IP) models for Open Innovation
The role of individuals in the Open Innovation process
Communities, networks, ecosystems, and other coupled forms of Open Innovation
The effect of government policies in helping (or hindering) Open Innovation
Analyzing Open Innovation between or across multiple levels of analysis
The role of Open Innovation in entrepreneurship
The use of Open Innovation by government and other not-for-profit entities
The moderating effects and contingency factors, such as organizational or national cultures, on Open Innovation
Linking Open Innovation to broader theories of management or economics
The costs, downsides, failures, and negative effects of Open Innovation
Developing metrics (and new research designs) for measuring the impact of Open Innovation
12月15日
2016
12月16日
2016
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