26 July 2011 | Editor
This is the archive entry for our e-mail newsletter, PARC Innovations Update. [subscribe]
On the surface, Malcolm Gladwell’s recent article for The New Yorker, “Creation Myth: Xerox PARC, Apple, and the truth about innovation”, is a story about the mouse and how inventions travel and evolve across time and place. But examined more deeply, the article is really about the factors that determine whether you end up with an invention or an innovation. In contrast to Gladwell’s thesis that there’s a clean split between invention and innovation, and that companies are structurally limited in their innovation opportunities, we believe that there is now a framework that allows companies to innovate beyond their comfort zones and existing infrastructures. It’s called open innovation.
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Many companies want to invent the next killer app for their industry, so they can create new business opportunities or anticipate future directions. But while most companies have incremental and next-generation innovation down, non-core innovation presents the most challenges. In a talk delivered at the Front End of Innovation conference, we share some strategies and lessons learned on what happens AFTER you conceive the next “killer app” or disruptive product for your industry…
see the slideshow with talk track here
Yet how do we — and how can you — balance the seemingly conflicting goals of long-term research vs. short-term profits, or of diversifying research into many markets vs. developing critical mass in just a few? In case you missed our “primer” on PARC’s portfolio management approach to managing R&D investments:
catch up here
Contact us at engage@parc.com to book an appointment with us if you’re attending these events:
Global competition is intensifying. Your customers have more options than ever before. Products are at constant risk of being commoditized. Newcomers are disrupting established industries. And the entire technology landscape is evolving at a staggering pace. Enter PARC…
we have a new brochure! – download it here
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