Profiting from Innovation

The Report of the Three-Year Study from the National Academy of Engineering

Description

American industry is renowned for its scientific and technical breakthroughs -- and equally famous for its visible failures in commercializing its own technology. Drawing on many examples of successful innovation management, an elite panel of the nation's most accomplished technical managers demonstrates how companies can transform new ideas into products efficiently and systematically by removing the barriers that surround innovative technology.

This book reveals how technical innovation occurs in distinct patterns, and explains how pure technological advance relates to the organizations and markets it affects. Early in the life of a new technology, value lies in the search for applications and means, and the benefits come from being early to market. Later, value comes from executing product, process, quality, or service improvements sooner than others do. Finally, value comes from correctly managing mature products. The authors emphasize that recognizing and understanding these patterns enable managers to structure and prosecute commercialization activities, and relate internal capabilities to external opportunities. Since goals and techniques must vary with the characteristics and maturity of the technology, the requirements of production, and the parameters of competition in each industry, management must be flexible in the methods and strategies it selects.

This nuts-and-bolts handbook demonstrates how managing technical resources is as important to the paper clip business as it is to microelectronics, and describes and illustrates tools and techniques to help managers keep commercialization efforts in any business on track.

Reviews

Morris Tanenbaum Former Vice-Chairman and Chief Financial Officer, AT&T Provides both a pragmatic overall description of the innovation process, and examples of its actual operation. It will be useful in the general education of current or future managers and as a source of encouragement to first time leaders of innovation as they travel the challenging path of converting discovery into practical application.

Arden Bement, Jr. Vice-President, Science & Technology, TRW, Inc. A "must read" for any executive concerned about competing thorough technology in the globle marketplace. The "rules of thumb" have been tested by companies that bring to market a sustained stream of new, successful, high quality products and services for competitive advantage.

Donald N. Frey Northwestern University Former CEO, Bell & Howell Company The U.S. has lost too much market share to foreign manufacturers of high quality, technologically superior products. This book will help recreate or reinvent our companies through educating a new generation of managers.

Roland W. Schmitt President Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute This book will improve your thinking about innovation and technological competitiveness -- and your skill in the art of managing it. It presents and excellent conceptual framework and fills it with sound, practical advice.

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