2014/2015 KAN-CSIEO2002U Creating Innovations
English Title | |
Creating Innovations |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Mandatory |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Quarter |
Course period | Second Quarter |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc of Social Science
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Course coordinator | |
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Main academic disciplines | |
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Last updated on 14-08-2014 |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The student should be able to :
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Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content and structure | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Innovation increasingly takes place through
communities and platforms driven by “crowds” of developers and
problem solvers. At the same time their outputs and products of the
crowd contexts have come to shape the daily life of many of the
world’s inhabitants. In some of the most dynamic sectors of the
modern economy, such as, apps for smartphones, video games, media
content, scientific and technical problems solving, companies’
overall performance already rely on individuals located outside the
organization to become crucial sources of modules, ideas, tasks,
and procedures. In their attempts to access and leverage these
sources of innovation it is now quite common for companies employ
more open forms of innovation, and try to “orchestrate” innovative
communities. While these “open approaches” have rapidly diffused,
creating a wealth of opportunities, it is obviously crucial how
companies manage to access and leverage these distributed sources
of innovation. From this point of departure, the course will
develop the conceptual foundations, frameworks and methods for
analyzing the relationships between communities and firms.
The course will first give an introduction to distributed sources of innovation (inside and outside organizational boundaries), their characteristics and good-practice examples. An aspect that will particularly be highlighted is the role of users as a source of innovation. The phenomenon of user innovation will be analyzed on the individual (e.g. lead user approach) and the network level (innovation communities). It will be discussed what the interplay between innovation, exploration, exploitation, and search, and the growing importance of efficient search approaches across external sources of innovation is. More specifically, the concepts of local vs. distant search and related search methods for accessing and leveraging innovation-related knowledge in distributed sources (e.g. crowdsourcing) will be introduced. Finally, open vs. closed innovation models focusing on outside-in processes will be introduced and discussed. Then focus will be on firm responses to outside communities’ development activities, inside community processes and dynamics, how to access and leverage innovation communities, how to manage and strategize in this context, and how to foster communities as well as create related fitting business models. |
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Teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Lecture-style inputs, case-work and discussions, mini-exercises |
Last updated on
14-08-2014