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Co-creation with customers: Liebherr open innovation case study

HYPE Innovation

If you’re reading this, you’re likely keen to find out more about how to successfully manage your open innovation program. Perhaps you’re looking to try out co-creation innovation with your customers but don’t know where or how to start yet.

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Case Study: Xaxis Teaches Us About Accelerating Careers and Solutions

IdeaScale

In a competitive, creative industry, innovation often makes a company a market leader. Xaxis has demonstrated just how effective it is and how global open innovation can build a better company. To learn more about Xaxis, read our company case study.

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When to Use Open Innovation Portals

Yet2

As providers of both proactive technology scouting services and open innovation portals, we often get asked when to use each approach. They serve different purposes, but you might be surprised to learn they’re also complementary: ~80% of our portal clients also hire yet2 for proactive technology scouting work.

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Failing Is Learning; Fail Fast to Learn Faster

Daniel Burrus

First, if you’re not failing, you’re not pursuing innovation, and when you do fail, rebound quickly and start all over again. This is the idea behind my powerful strategy: Fail Fast to Learn Faster. Studies have shown it can take the upward of 3,000 ideas to produce one product or service that goes on to be a commercial success.

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6 Don’ts For An Open Innovation Winning Formula

PlanBox Innovation

Open innovation (OI) can be a powerful approach for organizations to find groundbreaking ideas, develop new products and solve difficult problems. I have been involved in hundreds of open innovation projects — I have seen huge successes and, of course, many failures. Don’t Do it Once. Don’t Do it Yourself.

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Case Studies: Learning from Failure, or Dying from it

Qmarkets

We also frequently hear about the great innovation successes: Tesla, SpaceX, Uber, Amazon, and even the classic innovation failures, like Kodak and Nokia, who saw incoming disruptive innovation but didn't do anything to face it. What can we learn from their innovation failures? Toys Were Us.

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From Inspiration to Execution: Charting the Journey

IdeaScale

In some cases, there may not be an obvious path at all, especially if you’re tackling a challenge like entering a new industry. There are some starting points, including the overall history of innovation, your own company’s institutional knowledge, and case studies within your industry.