Archive

Archive for February, 2009

Crafting Organizational Innovation Processes to appear in Innovation: Management, Policy & Practice

February 27th, 2009 No comments

We have a new paper accepted for SSCI-indexed publication. This paper represents the core artifact from the Ideas4Innovation (i4i) research project which was funded by the Institute for Innovation in Information Management (I3M) at the University of Washington

Crafting Organizational Innovation Processes
Innovation is a crucial component of business strategy, but the process of innovation may seem difficult to manage. To plan organizational initiatives around innovation or to bolster innovation requires a firm grasp of the innovation process. Few organizations have transparently defined such a process. Based on the findings of an exploratory study of over 30 US and European companies that have robust innovation processes, this paper breaks down the innovation process into discrete stages: idea generation and mobilization, screening and advocacy, experimentation, commercialization, and diffusion and implementation. For each stage, context, outputs and critical ingredients are discussed. There are several common tensions and concerns at each stage, which are enumerated; industry examples are also given. Finally, strategies for and indicators of organizational success around innovation are discussed for each stage. Successful organizations will use an outlined innovation process to create a common framework for discussion and initiatives around the innovation process, and to establish metrics and goals for each stage of the innovation process.
 
Authors: Kevin C. Desouza, Caroline Dombrowski, Yukika Awazu, Peter Baloh, Sridhar Papagari, Sanjeev Jha, Jeffrey Y. Kim
 
The paper will appear in Innovation: Management, Policy & Practice [SSCI indexed International Journal for Innovation Research, Commercialization, Policy Analysis and Best Practice].

Invited talk at Nat Univ of Singapore

February 12th, 2009 No comments

I was privileged to be invited and hold a research seminar at School of Computing (IS) of National University of Singapore.

NUS is Asian and one of the worlds’ leading and foremost universities, with commited faculty, awesome campus, and great professional and academic placement records. Recently, their MBA programme was ranked 35th in the world by Financial Times.

I presented on the topic of rigor and relevance in information systems research to staff and graduate research students.

Thanks to Prof Shan Ling Pan, Prof Atreyi Kankanhalli, and Prof Swee Lin Tan, for invitation and for making my visit a great experience.