Remove B2B Remove Disruption Remove Innovation Management Remove Technical Review
article thumbnail

Key Issues in Innovation Management – Revisited – Part 2

Tim Kastelle

In part 1 of this post , Ralph revisited key innovation issues that were already addressed by us three years ago. It doesn’t always translate to managers, however. Co-Innovation and startup engagement. On top of this, from an incumbents’ point of view, there are legitimate reasons for rejecting a new technology.

article thumbnail

The Top 5 Technology Trends That Will Drive Innovation in 2018

hackerearth

Innovation is never easy, and in today’s world where everything is becoming digital, innovation is technology first and quite complex. Over the years, the linear model of innovation has been tweaked to include these variations—the phase gate model (e.g. photo editing software), and technology push (e.g. Blockchain.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

5 Innovation Trends of 2018 that will Disrupt the Corporate Landscape in 2019

Qmarkets

Even North and South Korea walked under a united banner at the Winter Olympics.Things have been no less epic on the corporate innovation front. Companies across multiple sectors have launched collaborative efforts to gather disruptive new ideas, harness new technologies, and achieve greater sustainability.

Trends 74
article thumbnail

Key Innovation Issues for 2016 and Beyond

Integrative Innovation

Hence, I gave it some thought, starting by revisting an earlier reflection: Beginning of 2013, Tim Kastelle and I identified four key issues in innovation management for the time to come. Reinvention through business model innovation. Let’s remind: One size does not fit all.

article thumbnail

The only two measures that matter

David Marks

The Disruptability Curve presented in my previous blog , is a modest addition to this collection. In the next blog I’ll demonstrate how it could be used to focus the innovation efforts. The Disruptability Curve has two axes. Some companies enjoy a monopolistic position due to (historical) regulations.

article thumbnail

The only two measures that matter

David Marks

The Disruptability Curve presented in my previous blog , is a modest addition to this collection. In the next blog I’ll demonstrate how it could be used to focus the innovation efforts. The Disruptability Curve has two axes. Some companies enjoy a monopolistic position due to (historical) regulations.