- TU Berlin
Transcription
- TU Berlin
Slideshow of Research Projects Kerstin Balka Hamburg University of Technology Open Design Free = revealing Collaborative Tangible + + development good Across different industries Consumer Electronics 25 20 IT Hardware Automotive 6 Machinery 6 Pharma & Healthcare 4 Telecommunication 4 Across development stages 14 Prototyping started 32 Production stable Kerstin Balka, TU Hamburg-Harburg • 16 First prototypes Mature • Planning - Ideas and digital development • Prototyping started - First physical 11 Planning 3 • • prototypes assembled, testing phase First prototypes - Working prototypes available, release to community Production stable - Fully functional product permanently available on market Mature - Final development stage reached, no further development Jennie Björk Chalmers University of Technology Managing Ideation Systems Jennie Björk Purpose: Investigate factors that influence ideation systems of large firms and explore how these systems can be fruitfully managed RQ1: How do group and network factors influence ideation performance? RQ2: What managerial actions can be undertaken to influence and support the ideation system? Key words: Ideation, innovation ideas, idea networks, innovation performance Using: Social Network Analysis, MATLAB, SPSS, Case studies Lesley C.P. Broos University of Twente Innovating legal regimes in information infrastructure markets, respecting (other) public values Type of innovation Influence on speed Improvement current infrastructure nonprevailing Introduction new infrastructure prevailing prevailing nonprevailing + Increase 0 speed of innovation - mr. drs. Lesley C.P. Broos [email protected] Nov. 2008 Daniela Cojocaru Politecnico di Milano Accessing external source of knowledge: Which challenges for firms’ organizational design In conducting their innovation processes firms increasingly need to leverage external sources of knowledge (Chesbrough, 2003) •Other firms, universities & research centers, communities of users & developers (i.e. OS communities) Which challenges for firms’ Organizational Design (OD)? (Colombo et al., 2009) •Does external sourcing ask for new organizational forms? Employees’ empowerment, delegation of decision authority, flat hierarchies, … (Foss, 2007, Foss et al., 2009) Intriguing theoretical issues to be tested empirically on relevant proper test-beds •Many theoretical contributions but few empirical ones This research project aims at contributing to this literature by analyzing OD challenges for firms doing business with Open Source (OS firms) Phd Student Daniela Cojocaru Jan-Philip Dunowski Berlin Institute of Technology OPTIMIZING COLLABORATIONS WITH PUBLIC RESEARCH OPTIMIZING COLLABORATIONS WITH PUBLIC RESEARCH HOW TO GET THE MOST FROM UNIVERSITY RELATIONSHIPS HOW TO GET THE MOST FROM UNIVERSITY RELATIONSHIPS Collaborative Research Development Commercialization General Research Questions: 1. How do companies strategically collaborate with external research partners? 2. How do they institutionalize university industry collaboration? 3. Which barriers occur during a collaboration project and how can they be overcome? 4. Which transfer instruments have been proven to be successful for the implementation of collaboration project results into new product development? Berlin Institute of Technology Technical University of Denmark Burcu Felekoglu University of Cambridge 2nd Conference Dynamic Interaction System to Manage NPD SOFT PHASE HARD PHASE BOUNDARY PEOPLE BOUNDARY OBJECTS UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE DYNAMIC INTERACTION / COMMUNICATION SYSTEM BOUNDARY ACTIVITIES Burcu Felekoglu Centre for Technology Management Daniel Holle University of Regensburg Everyday: Once in a lifetime: Product Development UC Berkeley Institute of Design Telecom, Internet & Media markets How to become a visiting scholar in the US Convergence First hand experiences and tips to share Daniel Holle (University of Regensburg) Thomas Hordern Chalmers University of Technology Context not custom. Developing Innovative Capabilities to go Green through Design. Green innovation is viewed as a particular dimension of radical innovation with the focus on how to identify and develop innovative capabilities within an organisation utilising the design function. “Make BETTER products, not make existing product better” Thomas Hordern Chalmers University of Technology Katharina Kalogerakis Hamburg University of Technology Innovative Analogies in Product Development Near Product Analogy Research questions: slide coating sports sports •Underlying principles of working with analogies •Search strategies for inventive analogies Far Product Analogy material and form sports medical technology •Factors influencing the use of analogies in product development projects •Effects of analogies: Non-Product Analogy 1. innovativeness 2. project efficiency 3. communicative effects structural characteristics of the skin nature Katharina Kalogerakis sports Hamburg University of Technology Lukasz Kawczynski Politecnico di Milano Value chain in a service industry: A study of a health care. Value within health care (proposed definition) is a relation of medical recovery progress or acknowledge of medical state, under the way the product and / or service was delivered, to the expectations, time and overall costs associated with obtaining medical products and / or services received. © Lukasz Kawczynski Jan-Niklas Keltsch University of Cambridge Managing Technology: The Link to Business Strategy and Operations The research illustrated: Managing technology in accordance with the business model 1. Analyse the business model Standard technology management systems 3. Implement the technology management system Jan‐Niklas Keltsch, Centre for Technology Management 2. Tailor the technology management system 20/05/2009 Björn Kijl University of Twente Björn Kijl – Research Interests Designing business models for the deployment of Internet service innovations • Projects / cases – EU IST‐FP6/NOKIA project MobiLife (4G mobile services) – EU eTEN project Myotel (eHealth service) – Own investment research boutique (information service) Alexander Kock Berlin Institute of Technology Are more innovative products more successful? Research Question: What is the impact of product innovativeness on new product success? Method: •Quantitative meta-analysis of 49 empirical studies •Longitudinal survey of 70 substantial product innovations (cross-industry, two informants, two points in time 18 months apart) Main Results: Success •Product innovativeness is multidimensional •Different dimensions of innovativeness have distinct impacts on success •Overall relationship is inverted u-shaped ÆThere is an optimal degree of innovativeness Alexander Kock Berlin Institute of Technology Degree of Innovativeness Viktor Lee Hamburg University of Technology Viktor Lee, TUHH: Open Source Innovation Technology and Innovation Management Who are OS-community-members? • What is the background of OS-community-members? (age, sex, education, profession etc.) • Are there clusters of members within the community? • Do different member clusters have different preferences regarding functional tasks? Key questions Relevance of research field Methodology How can the contribution of community-members to the project be evaluated and how could companies profit from that? • Is the contribution of members in the OS-value-chain measurable? (e.g. monetary units) • What is the role and contribution of different community clusters to the OS-prject? • Is a strategic development of the composition of a OS-community reasonable? (marketing etc.) The right composition of a OS-community as well as a thorough understanding of the members will be a key success factor in creating a prosperous OS-project. Those companies that are able to win the best talents to join their OS-community with efficient measures will succeed in market. Detailed researches on the background and contribution of OS-communities have not been executed so far. • Interviews with OS-communities (qualitative identifikation of hypothesis and preliminary clusters) • Survey of OS-community-members (quantitative measurement and avaluation of OS-communities) Prof. Dr. C. Herstatt TUHH AB Technology- and Innovation Management Marcus Linder Chalmers University of Technology Marcus Linder, Chalmers Daniela Linke Berlin Institute of Technology Technology integration - What are the key success factors for technology transfer in university-industry collaboration? Motivation Influencing factors Key Question Increasingly, firms don’t rely solely on product development through in-house approaches. Furthermore, they are turning to external resources to acquire technological knowledge they need. The full potential of this knowledge can only be deployed, if a successful transfer of research results to the operating units can be assured and appropriate management attention can be created. Cognitive proximity (absorptive capacity, level of education, area of expertise, etc.) Normative proximity (strategic fit of project topic, innovation culture, etc.) Organizational proximity (time frames, reward systems,etc.) Project complexity (degree of innovativeness, number and background of involved partners, etc.) Since, there are a certain number of factors influencing technology transfer there is not a single successful transfer approach which can apply to all project types and all kinds of R&D project results. So what are the appropriate transfer tools for which form of collaboration? Robert Lorenz Berlin Institute of Technology My research is on service innovation Hot research topics Sandor Lowik University of Twente Sandor Lowik How can cognitive distance as a barrier for radical innovations be overcome? Nooteboom et al, 2007 ? Sarah Lubik University of Cambridge Commercializing Advanced Materials from University Spin-Outs Scaled up production n Other Intermediaries Final customer Manufacturing Licensees Outside Sources (Investment, Gov’t, etc) Science Base Demonstration of Value in Specific Application Resource Building Cycle OEM Co-producer Distributor (& complementary assets) (1) Resource Base (2) Business Idea Create Value Next Cycle/Exit Value Capture Sarah Lubik ([email protected]) Centre for Technology Management Institute for Manufacturing, Cambridge University Mill Lane, Cambridge UK CB21RX Martina Mansfeld Berlin Institute of Technology Research Project Martina Mansfeld: Identification of Innovation Promotors Identification of personality traits distinguishing highly innovative employees Measuring the extend of competences distinguishing highly innovative employees Measuring the influence of the company’s culture, processes and structure on employees in R&D projects © 2009, Lehrstuhl für Innovations- und Technologiemanagement, TU Berlin 2nd EITIM Doc Conference, May 7-9 2009, Gothenburg, Sweden Christoph Mirow Berlin Institute of Technology Christoph Mirow What internal factors hinder companies in turning innovative ideas in successful products? How do employees perceive the innovation process, and what restrains them? What can companies do in order to improve the work environment for innovators and thereby increase the chances of successfully developing new products? © 2008 Lehrstuhl für Technologie- und Innovationsmanagement, TU Berlin 43 Johann Jakob Napp University of Cambridge Strategic Value of External CVC Investments Leveraging own technologies Expansion of markets Parent firm Product-related value Complementary technologies Exploitational value Centre for Technology Management Complementary technologies Leveraging own technologies Start-up Access to market Facilitation of Window on technology Options CVC unit J.J. Napp | Centre for Technology Management | [email protected] Company-related value Market knowledge Explorational value value transfer Management advice Operational support Reputation Wilhelm Nehring Berlin Institute of Technology Gothenburg 2nd EITIM Doc Conference – May 8/9, 2009 Resource Allocation and Capacity Controlling in Global Engineering Networks Bid Preparation Basic Engineering Step1: Engineering Process (Mgmt) Detail Engineering Procurement Construction Supervision Germany • Project management • Basic Engineering • Procurement Step2: Std. Engineering Procedures Commissioning Services This thesis evaluates a systematic planning and controlling approach to develop interlinked global engineering networks in respect of: • Global network structures • cross functional networks Step3: Work Packages / detailed lists Step4: Allocation of capacities • Cross boundary resource management Egypt • Assembly • Commissioning • Split of work methodologies India • Detail Engineering Berlin Institute of Technology Chair of H.G. Gemünden Wilhelm Nehring • Performance measurement • Transaction costs Uwe Obermeier University College Dublin Okan Pala Sabanci University The Effect of CTO on Company Performance Human Capital Factor: Educational Level CTO Roles: Decisional Roles Informational Roles Company Performance Social Capital Factors: Hierarchical Level Extent of Netwroking Control Variables: Company Size Industry Tanja Petersen Berlin Institute of Technology Passive Upward Influence Resources Cooperation Lateral Influence Processes Goal clarity Personal Positional 2nd EITIM Doc Conference, Gothenburg 2009 ‐ Tanja Petersen, TU Berlin Lorenzo Pirelli Politenico di Milano Lorenzo Pirelli – Politecnico di Milano – [email protected] Research Topic: How to design hybrid organizations/networks 1) Building a conceptual framework through exploratory research: - to clarify the rationale for networks existence and emergence, their dynamics (catalyzing agents, strategies to lock-in commitments) - to hypothesize relations between members’ heterogeneity and network characteristics and members’ scientific/technological productivity 2) Identify key issues in designing such organizations/networks: Network/ K-transfer effectiveness ? - governance, financing and incentive system, geographical layout, formalization, role of partners and participants’ selection criteria… 3) Investigating the relative importance of key issues: - understand why some kind of networks are more effective in Members’ heterogeneity, enhancing members’ scientific and mobility, cognitive distance, technological productivity degree of formalization, governance centralization Volker Presse Berlin Institute of Technology Service Innovations within the ICT sector Investigating challenges, barriers, and actors along the innovation process 57 Diederik Rothengatter University of Twente Shuan SadreGhazi United Nations University Nurturing Innovation in the Context of Poverty Shuan Sadre Ghazi [email protected] •Promoting pro-development innovation •Inclusive business models •Platform creation 3 Feb 2009 Christian Sandström Chalmers University of Technology Tim Schweisfurth Hamburg University of Technology EITIMdoc Conference 2009 Tim Schweisfurth User Marketing Product Development Prof. Dr. C. Herstatt TUHH AB Technology- and Innovation Management Jaime E. Souto Perez University College Dublin STRATEGIC DIMENSION OF THE INNOVATION AND GROWTH FOR BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT • In a dynamic context, enterprises development process involve several factors, innovation and growth strategies work on them to achieve the proposal goals. Those two strategies must be properly interconnected to direct the learning process toward company vision, making desired firm development possible. • The development obtained through link growth and innovation strategies demolish constantly the boundaries that limit the company. This is probably the unique way to survive and grow in the long term. • Two assumptions emerge from here: one is the idea that understands innovation as a growth factor, and the second states the necessity of growth in certain direction in order to achieve some innovations. University College Dublin Jaime E. Souto Perez John Stevens University of Cambridge Frank Tietze Hamburg University of Technology Institute for Technology and Innovation Management Prof. Dr. C. Herstatt Hamburg University of Technology, Germany Exploiting Intellectual Property via Intermediaries The Case of Patent Auctions From a wide scope to a sp ecific focus 1 A holistic framework for 3 Focus on Auctions as one TMI type external technology exploitation (ETE) a) Generic auction ETE process 2 b) 4 mini case studies of sold IP assets (pate Typology of Tech. Market Intermediaries c) Quantitative analysis of auctioned patents 1 Technology Market Intermediaries 2 Technologies as traded assets 3 Seller Buyer transaction process Demand / acquisition side © Frank Tietze Supply / exploitation side Markets for technology Member of the European Institute for Technology and Innovation Management Cambridge, 7/8.11.2008 70 Rajnish Tiwari Hamburg University of Technology Globalization of Corporate Innovation The shift from “International R&D” to “Global Innovation” Rajnish Tiwari / TIM @ Hamburg University of Technology THE END Now it’s time for some coffee…