1 / 27

Open Innovation: A Case Study within the Chemical Industry

Open Innovation: A Case Study within the Chemical Industry. Rob Munro Opening Innovation: Succeeding within an Established Technology Company, 2012 rob_munro@yahoo.co.uk +44 7896 128 878 . Contents. What? Key Open Innovation Ideas Why? Benefits, Risks and Success Factors

brody
Download Presentation

Open Innovation: A Case Study within the Chemical Industry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Open Innovation: A Case Study within the Chemical Industry Rob Munro Opening Innovation: Succeeding within an Established Technology Company, 2012 rob_munro@yahoo.co.uk +44 7896 128 878

  2. Contents • What? Key Open Innovation Ideas • Why? Benefits, Risks and Success Factors • How? Design of an Open Innovation System • Implementation of The OI System • High Innovation Performance: The “X Factor” • Summary and Conclusions

  3. Preconceptions? • What do you understand Open Innovation to be? • What would you like to know/understand about OI?

  4. Many Examples

  5. Key Ideas: The Origins of Open Innovation

  6. Key OI Ideas: Origins

  7. Key OI Ideas: Definitions The knowledge-basedview… “Open innovation is the use of purposive inflows and outflows of knowledge to accelerate internal innovation and expand the markets for external use of innovation respectively.” Vanhaverbeke, West, & Chesbrough, (2006) The knowledge management angle… “Systematically exploring knowledge exploration, retention and exploitation inside and outside an organizations boundary throughout the innovation process.” U. Lichtenthaler, (2011) Capabilities focus… “…systematically encouraging and exploring a wide range of internal and external sources for innovation opportunities, consciously integrating that within the firm’s capabilities…” West & Gallagher, (2004)

  8. Key OI Ideas: Closed v Open Innovation as a Continuum? Specifications Contracts Go to Market Vertical Integration Equity Alliance Relation-Based Alliance The Era of Open Innovation, (Chesbrough, 2003b)

  9. Key OI Ideas: Porous Boundaries “Coupled” Inside-Out Outside-In Representation of OI, (Herzog 2011:23)

  10. Why Open Innovation? Drivers • Ubiquity of Information – porosity and availability. • Mobility of Skilled Employees. • New sources of investment capital - e.g. VC • Globalization of Innovation – Locations, Cost, Quality. • Trend to R&D outsourcing – Cost, Quality. • Integration of users and suppliers into the innovation process. • To access resources, knowledge, facilities, market access. • To dominate an industry product standard.

  11. Key ideas: Benefits, Risks and Success Factors

  12. Why Open Innovation? Benefits • Innovation Performance: • To increase product, process and service innovation performance. • To discover combinations of products features that would be hard to envision under vertical integration. • Innovate faster and to self-disrupt. • Financial Performance: • Determined Open innovators outperform all others. • Out-licencing– revenue from latent IPR. • Establishing New Ventures away from the heartland markets. • Strategic Fitness: Flexibility and responsiveness to market pressures. • Societal Benefits: Ultimately, better performing firms benefit society at large through improved wealth creation. • Risk Management: OI projects share the risks and costs of uncertainty.

  13. Why Open Innovation? Risks • IP: Loss of the “crown jewels”. • Losing Revenue:Judging a fair shares of future revenues. • Management Ability:New management challenge. • Higher Costs: Transaction costs in managing contracts and opportunistic behaviours.

  14. Why Open Innovation? Success • Firm Context: Size, Sector, Strategies, Staff • Innovation Management: In-house R&D Processes • Capability: Readiness to Embark (CMM) • Leadership and Governance • When to do OI • To access skills, knowledge, resources, markets • When firms can appropriate their fair share • Particularly for modular systems

  15. Key idea: The Open Innovation Ecosystem

  16. The OI Ecosystem: Key Ideas • Systems Thinking, (Peter Senge, 1990) • Elements and Activities • Foresight workshops, Executive Forums, Customer integration, Endowed chairs, Consortia projects, Internet platforms, Joint development, Strategic alliances, Spin-outs, Test Market, Corporate Venturing… “…working cooperatively and competitively with other businesses in order to co-evolve capabilities, to support new products, satisfy customer needs and incorporate a new round of innovations, the company builds a business ecosystem.” (Moore cited in Rohrbeck et al. (2009). • Ref: Methodologies for OI Management, (Rohrbeck et al., 2009)

  17. Case Study: An OI Eco-system

  18. The OI Eco-System

  19. Implementing Open Innovation: Change Management

  20. Implementing OI: The Issues • Organizational Inertia • Absence of Burning Platforms • Cultural Resistance • Perception of OI as a Fad • Not Invented Here Syndrome • Establishing new Routines • Not destroying the Good, with the Bad • Investment of resources

  21. Implementing OI: Good Practice • Top-Level Commitment • Leadership and Governance • Manage the Change • Integrating Innovation Practices • Working within the Culture • Visible, “Quick Wins”

  22. Implementing OI: Approach Ref: Summary of OI Implementation, (Chiaroni et al., 2010)

  23. Key IDEAS: OI is Necessary but not Sufficient?

  24. High Innovation Performance More-than-the-sum-of-the-parts… Ref: Components of a High Performance Innovation System, (Sommerlatte 2010:83)

  25. Summary and Conclusions

  26. Summary and Conclusions • OI has become a widespread management paradigm • Open innovation is not always superior to closed - contingent on firm-specific factors • OI is necessary, but not sufficient • A Systemic approach is required • Change Management is essential - New role for R&D

  27. Open Innovation: A Case Study within the Chemical Industry Rob Munro Opening Innovation: Succeeding within an Established Technology Company, 2012 rob_munro@yahoo.co.uk +44 7896 128 878

More Related