Serendipitous and Strategic Innovation: A Systems Approach to Managing Science-Based InnovationBloomsbury Academic, 2006 - 267 من الصفحات Innovation is a time-consuming process that involves invention as a beginning and a marketable service or product as an end. But innovation itself, once concluded, is not necessarily a constructive act as some innovations yield positive and some negative results. The way we recognize and develop innovation—so often a serendipitous and almost invisible act in its beginning—is thus a matter of primary importance in today's world where new thoughts and products play such a crucial role in economies across the globe. Nowhere is the general support structure required for success in innovation more starkly illuminated than in the fields of science and medicine, where human well-being is so manifestly at stake. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 76
... idea ? Not all ideas give rise to successful innovation , and only some ideas lead to useful products and processes . The ideas have to be filtered and further developed . The novelty or originality of an idea challenges the element of ...
... ideas . At least in this case , new ideas have reached a plateau , and further devel- opment of premium ideas requires adjustment to markets and rethinking of the process of commercial exploitation of those ideas . Knowledge , often ...
... idea are imprecise . Each stage is divided into subsets of activities until the invention is finally realized . Not all ideas generated progress in the same manner , and it is probable that some ideas will not proceed beyond the stage ...