TY - BOOK
T1 - Managing Global Innovation
T2 - Uncovering the Secrets of Future Competitiveness
AU - Boutellier, Roman
AU - Gassmann, Oliver
AU - Von Zedtwitz, Maximilian
PY - 2000
Y1 - 2000
N2 - Globalization has changed the face of R&D. Local knowledge clusters
are not only tapped by multinationals but increasingly by small and
medium-sized companies as weIl. Global R&D networks speed up the
evolution of technology and ask for new management concepts. Modern
communication technologies create the global village, but customers
become more fastidious and request their own specific products, weIl
localized, weIl tuned into their present business. Integrated technology
is required to cope with these needs. The danger of over-engineering
has never been as great as today. The question is frequently not whether
some new features are technically feasible but whether customers are
willing to accept and pay for it. The first edition of Managing Global
Innovation was sold out after few months, clearly indicating the search
for solutions to these challenges. This second edition has been revised
for clarity and actuality. We have taken care to work in recent research
findings as weIl as updating the case studies where appropriate. This
book is based on the growing importance of industrial global innovation
and the lack of concepts to manage it. For this book we conducted 320
interviews in 40 technology-based, highly internationalized companies,
including additional interviews in 1998 and 1999 for the second edition.
Dur interview partners were R&D managers and research directors
from companies in Europe, USA and Japan.
AB - Globalization has changed the face of R&D. Local knowledge clusters
are not only tapped by multinationals but increasingly by small and
medium-sized companies as weIl. Global R&D networks speed up the
evolution of technology and ask for new management concepts. Modern
communication technologies create the global village, but customers
become more fastidious and request their own specific products, weIl
localized, weIl tuned into their present business. Integrated technology
is required to cope with these needs. The danger of over-engineering
has never been as great as today. The question is frequently not whether
some new features are technically feasible but whether customers are
willing to accept and pay for it. The first edition of Managing Global
Innovation was sold out after few months, clearly indicating the search
for solutions to these challenges. This second edition has been revised
for clarity and actuality. We have taken care to work in recent research
findings as weIl as updating the case studies where appropriate. This
book is based on the growing importance of industrial global innovation
and the lack of concepts to manage it. For this book we conducted 320
interviews in 40 technology-based, highly internationalized companies,
including additional interviews in 1998 and 1999 for the second edition.
Dur interview partners were R&D managers and research directors
from companies in Europe, USA and Japan.
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-662-04250-2
DO - 10.1007/978-3-662-04250-2
M3 - Book
SN - 9783662042526
BT - Managing Global Innovation
PB - Springer
CY - Berlin, Heidelberg
ER -