2014/2015 KAN-CCMVV2324U Designing Innovative Organizations
English Title | |
Designing Innovative Organizations |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Quarter |
Course period | Second Quarter |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Max. participants | 40 |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Economics and Business
Administration
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Course coordinator | |
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Administrative
contact: Karina Ravn Nielsen,
electives.mpp@cbs.dk, direct phone 3815 3782 |
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Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 02-05-2014 |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
be more adept at applying the design methods and
theories given in the course to a particular organization.
Specifically, students should be able to:
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Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Common knowledge holds that innovation is essential to
organizational health and survival, a belief recently confirmed by
large-scale, global studies that show strong causative
relationships between organizational innovation, longevity, and
long term
success[1]. Getting to
innovation requires a search for, and the incorporating of
“valuable difference”— unusual ideas, processes, markets,
operations, strategies. Yet, difference doesn’t sit well with
organizational imperatives for predictability and continuity. As
Rosabeth Moss
Kanter[2]notes:
[1]cf. Keller, S. and
Price, C. 2011. Beyond performance: How great organizations
build ultimate competitive advantage. London: Wiley.
[2]Kanter, R. M. 1988:
“When a thousand flowers bloom: Structural, collective, and
social conditions for innovations in organizations.” In B. M.
Staw and L. L. Cummings (Eds) Research in Organizational
Behavior, 1988, V10, 169-211, London: JAI
Press.
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Teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
The course is distinguished by its use of a
studio pedagogy, which stresses hands-on making, experimentation,
prototyping, demonstration, discussion, and reflection—all done
during class time and partly outside of class. Imagine a design
studio devoted to creatively solving business problems—this is the
core idea. Furthermore, the course revolves around a core design
theme. For instance, previous courses have addressed themes such as
"alien to the system" (investigating the benefits and
costs of using dedicated innovation centers within an
organization), and "how to build innovation capacity within
governments".
The course builds on practical, skills-based, in-class experiences mixed with concept-in-practice discussions and reflection. Given that the exam is heavily based on these experiences and exercises, active participation is strongly recommended for successful completion of the course. |
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Further Information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
This course is part of the minor in Design
Strategy
Changes in course schedule may occur Wednesday 13.30-18.00, week 44-50 |
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Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
(the literature below is illustrative and subject
to change)
Required Readings: Austin, R., Friis, K., Sullivan, E. 2006. Design: More than a cool chair. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing. Austin, R., Nolan, R., O’Donnell, S. 2007. Boeing Moonshine Shop. Boston: Harvard Business School Publishing. Bason, C. 2010. Innovation labs: Giving innovation a home. Excerpt from Bason, C. Leading Public Sector Innovation. Bristol: Policy Press. Boyd, B., Cook, J., and Steinberg, M. 2011. In studio: Recipes for systemic change. Helsinki: Sitra Publishing. Brown, Tim. 2008. Design thinking. Harvard Business Review, June Issue: 1-9. Dyer, J., Gregersen, H., Christensen, C. 2009. The innovator’s dna. Harvard Business Review, Dec.: 1-8. Fayard, A. and Weeks, J. 2011. Who moved my cube? Harvard Business Review, 89(7/8), Jul/Aug: 102-110. Groves, K. and Knight, W. 2010. The Clay Street Project. In I wish I worked there!: A look inside the most creative spaces in business. New York, NY: Wiley. Hargadon, A. B., & Douglas, Y. 2001. When innovation meets institutions: Edison and the design of the electric light. Administrative Science Quarterly, 46: 476–501. Hargadon, A., & Sutton, R. 2000. Building an innovation factory. Harvard Business Review, May-June: 157-166. Hipple, J., Hardy, D., Wilson, S., Michalski, J. 2001 (Nov). Can corporate innovation champions survive? Chemical Innovation, V31(11): 14-22. http://pubs.acs.org/subscribe/archive/ci/31/i11/html/11hipple.html Kanter, R. M. 1988: “When a thousand flowers bloom: Structural, collective, and social conditions for innovations in organizations.” In B. M. Staw and L. L. Cummings (Eds) Research in Organizational Behavior, 1988, V10, 169-211, London: JAI Press. Salaman, G., Storey, J. 2002. Manager’s theories about the process of innovation. Journal of Management Studies, 39(2): 0022-2380. Van de Ven, A., Polley, D., Garud, R., Venkataraman, S. 1999. The Innovation Journey (Introduction). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Verganti, R. 2006. Innovating through design. Harvard Business Review, Dec.: 114-122. Vincent, Lanny. 2005. Innovation midwives: Sustaining innovation streams in established companies. Research Technology Management, 48(1). von Stamm, B. 2004. Innovation: What’s design got to do with it? Design Management Review, 15(1): 10-19. Secondary (Optional) Readings: Austin, R., Devin, L. 2004. Successful innovation through artful process. Leader to Leader, Spring, 32: 48-55. Barry, D., Rerup, C. 2006. Going mobile: Aesthetic design considerations from Calder and the Constructivists. Organization Science 17(2): 262-276. Boland, R and Collopy, F. 2004. Managing as Designing. Stanford Univ. Press Daft, Richard. 2007. Organizational Theory and Design (Parts 1 & 2). Southwest Publishing. Goffee, R., Jones, G. 2007. Leading clever people. Harvard Business Review, March: 1-9. Laursen, K., & Salter, A. 2005. Open for innovation: The role of openness in explaining innovation performance among U.K. manufacturing firms. Strategic Management Journal, 27: 131-150. Luecke, Richard; Ralph Katz 2003. Managing Creativity and Innovation. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press. McKendrick, D., Wade, J. 2009. Frequent incremental change, organizational size, and mortality in high-technology competition. Industrial and Corporate Change, 19(3): 613-639. Perrons, R., Richards, M., Platts, K. 2005. What the hare can teach the tortoise about make-buy strategies for radical innovations. Management Decision, 43(5/6): 670-690. Peters, T. 1990. Get innovative or get dead, Part 1. California Management Review, 33(1): 9-26. Peters, T. 1991. Get innovative or get dead, Part 2. California Management Review, 33(2): 9-23. Rasmussen, J., Kramp, G., Mortensen, B. Prototyping design and business. Designing Pleasurable Products and Interfaces, June: 22-25. Sutton, R. 2001. The weird rules of creativity. Harvard Business Review. September, 79(8): 94-103. Verganti, R. 2011. Designing breakthrough products: How companies can systematically create innovations that customers don’t even know they want. Harvard Business Review, October, 89(10): 114-120. von Hippel, Eric 2005. Democratizing Innovation. Boston, MA: MIT Press. |