The Role of Hybrid Organizations in Scaling Social Innovations in Bottom‐of‐the‐Pyramid Markets Jarrod P
The Back of the Envelope: The Science, Art, and Magic of Idea Generation Peter Duggan Originally published: 2016 (PDMA Visions Magazine • Issue 2, 2016 • Vol 40 • No 2) Read time: 3 minutes Ideas are the lifeblood of product development
To better understand this prevalent problem, this article develops a theory of diffusion that explains the reproduction (duplication) of social innovations in subsistence contexts. The theory utilizes a bottom‐up perspective that considers what attributes of innovations and capacities of actors matter to reproduction, particularly for subsistence user‐producers. Adopting an inductive, case‐based approach, the authors draw on examples of social innovations in sub‐Saharan Africa
The Transformation of the Innovation Process: How Digital Tools are Changing Work, Collaboration, and Organizations in New Product Development Tucker J
Since humanitarian problems are complex problems, with the relevant knowledge being hidden, organizational search theory advocates the application of bottom‐up and theory‐guided search processes to identify the social innovations that solve these
The Higgs boson and the Higgs field form two of the cornerstones of what is known as the “Standard Model” of physics
The human side of innovation management: Bridging the divide between the fields of innovation management and organizational behavior Matthias Weiss, Markus Baer, Martin Hoegl kHUB post date: March 18, 2024 Originally published: April 28, 2022 (PDMA JPIM • Vol. 39, Issue 3 • May 2022) Read time: 20 minutes Access the Full Article The human side of innovation management focuses on the people that are carrying out innovative endeavors in organizations
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Learn Social Networking from IBM: How to Get the Biggest Payback Ed Brill, IBM Originally presented: June 20, 2013 Watch time: 55 minutes Access the Webcast Can social networking help you build better products or be a better product manager? According to IBM executive and author Ed Brill, the answer is yes. In this webcast, Brill discusses “Opting In,” lessons in merging product management and social networking from IBM’s use and leadership over the last decade. You will learn how, where, when, and why to participate in online communities, what the payback will be, and how to justify the effort internally. What did you think of this post? Start a conversation with your peers by posting to our kHUB Discussion board!