Introduction Flashcards
Why does innovation matter?
- innovation and capitalism linked -> competition makes innovation mandatory
- economic growth since 18th century is attributable to innovation
Why are innovation and capitalism linked so tighly?
- innovation can be hugely profitable
- good inventions might be low-tech
- good invention takes time
Definition of innovation
-“Innovations are qualitatively new products/processes that differ significantly from what existed before” Hauschildt
- Innovation management is the creation of processes that aim at creating and exploiting new things
Innovation is also a process, not only the output (Hauschildt)
Combination of solutions and needs
Different types of innovation
- product or service innovation
- process innovation
(product and process innovation often go hand in hand) - business model innovation
R&D as source of innovation
Huge economic and societal importance (10-20% of business R&D funded with public money)
Basic research (5-20%) usually funded by government
- applied research (15-25%)
- experimental development (65%-85%)
R&D intensity = R&D expenditures / revenues
Principal agent problem
The principal agent problem infers the situation where the principal and agent are in a conflict emanating from differences in interests. It is solved by putting in place the right incentives that ensure agents do not act in their own interests.
The Vasa problem
The Vasa example is prototypical for innovation projects with “bad”
endings:
– When the problems start … nobody dares to voice concerns,
or those that do are not listened to or even punished
▪ Why is it that nobody is held accountable (in the Vasa case, but also
in general in innovation projects)?
➔ As in the 17th century, also today a lack of open communication
spells disaster for uncounted innovation projects.