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MOOI Theme 5:
How to create a corporate culture where OI can thriveProf. Henry Chesbrough, University of California, Berkeley & ESADE
Prof. Wim Vanhaverbeke, Hasselt University, ESADE & National University of Singapore
Dr. Nadine Roijakkers, Hasselt University
April 1, 2014
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“Rome, …, wasn't built in a day. Likewise, open innovation is not something you can achieve overnight. It is not a single event, but a process and a culture that must grow over time.Rome did not build itself, either, and similarly, open innovation won't just happen. It takes work, commitment and patience to cultivate an effective program. It is a major initiative requiring focus, investment and time.”
Kevin Stark, director, technology solutions, NineSigmaIndustry Week, October 12 2011
What is an open innovation
corporate culture? Do we have the
same understanding ?
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Open innovation cultureWhat is “corporate culture”?
• Corporate culture can be defined as the values, norms, attitudes and behavior patterns, that are shared within an organization [Herzog, 2011]. Corporate culture can be seen as the personality of a company that influences people's behavior within the organization, regardless of size and field of action
• OI and corporate culture?
• Herzog (2011): cultural issues sparked by open innovation fit into three layers of firms’ culture.
Practices: these are the easiest to change and in the open innovation context include issues such as management support, freedom to express doubts, organizational risk-taking, and technological opportunism.
1. Organization's norms; “not-invented-here” and the “not-sold-here” syndromes (Chesbrough 2003, 2006). Harder to change.
2. Shared basic values in the organization which are the most difficult to change.
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Open innovation cultureImplications when moving from closed to open innovation?
• Culture for closed innovation is not appropriate for OI
• Starting OI entails a cultural shift, whereby working with other companies becomes accepted and endorsed throughout the organisation.
• Resistance will lead to (cultural) barriers
• How to overcome these barriers? What are the mechanisms and management tools to be successful?
• Cultural changes usually take time: adapting to an OI culture may be one of the most difficult hurdles to take
• An OI culture implies that OI is embedded in values and norms, practices and behaviors – OI culture is emerging at mature levels of OI implementation.
• Implementation of OI culture is (thus) a slow, stepwise process – how do corporate crises help in speeding up this process?
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Interactive poll 1What are the three most important items in establishing an OI
culture in a company
• Commitment of and communication by top-management
• Using informal networks to communicate the change to OI
• Align individual rewards with OI requirements
• Train managers and employees
• Go for quick successes with OI
• Focus on tearing down cultural barriers against OI
• Provide processes and tools to implement OI
• How the organization responds to failure6
Culture as an enabler and an
obstacle when implementing
Open Innovation
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Enablers:
Benefits and Enablers of having Open Innovation
SOURCE: Mortara, L, Napp, J., Sladk, I. And Minshall, T (2009), How to implement opn innovation, IfM, University of Cambridge.
Barriers:
Barriers to Open Innovation
SOURCE: Mortara, L, Napp, J., Sladk, I. And Minshall, T (2009), How to implement opn innovation, IfM, University of Cambridge.
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“The move from Closed Innovation to Open Innovation needs to be accompanied by a change in the underlying innovation culture. A different way of thinking and a different way of dealing with ideas and technologies is required to fully exploit the potential of Open Innovation” - Gali, 2011, p. 206
“…the biggest challenge was changing the culture, shifting the mindset from ‘only invented in P&G’ to ‘proudly found elsewhere’”.Chris Thoen (2009), P&G
In the beginning…. the really good IP was being held back by the [P&G] businesses. This is when the 3/5 program was created. 3 years after the product is shipping into the market, or 5 years after the patent is issued, the patent would be made available to others…. Nothing was untouchable.”Martha Depenbrock, P&G, quoted in Chesbrough, Open Business Models 2006
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SOURCE: Mortara, L, Napp, J., Sladk, I. And Minshall, T (2009), How to implement opn innovation, IfM, University of Cambridge.
Culture as an obstacle when implementing OI
Know-it-all, control-freak managers
Rigid top-down approach
SOURCE: Mortara, L, Napp, J., Sladk, I. And Minshall, T (2009), How to implement opn innovation, IfM, University of Cambridge.
Culture as an obstacle when implementing OI
Lack of incentives to innovate
SOURCE: Mortara, L, Napp, J., Sladk, I. And Minshall, T (2009), How to implement opn innovation, IfM, University of Cambridge.
Culture as an obstacle when implementing OI
Failure seen as a weakness
SOURCE: Mortara, L, Napp, J., Sladk, I. And Minshall, T (2009), How to implement opn innovation, IfM, University of Cambridge.
Interactive poll 2
What are the two most important barriers in establishing an OI culture in a company
• The know-it-all, control-freak managers
• Rigid top-down approach
• Lack of incentives to innovate
• Traditional channels of communication
• When failure is a sign of weakness
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NIH and NSH
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– it is about losing what you are and have now for building for the future –
Overcoming NIH / NSH syndromesChesbrough (2003,2006)
- Threat of being fired- Loss of capabilities- “Best practices are established by the best
companies. How will we become industry leaders if we adopt other’s best practices?”
- Rotate and cross-pollinate team members on a project basis
- Engage outsiders to ensure fresh perspectives and new thinking
- Encourage team members to regularly interact with the wider community (e.g., conferences).
- Formalize regular competitor reviews and environmental scanning to stay abreast of them
- Consider open innovation models, competitions (e.g., Netflix Prize), and outside collaborations to institutionalize a meritocratic approach to new ideas.
- Teach team members about the causes, costs, and remedies for NIH
NIH-syndrome
WHAT CAN WE DO ABOUT IT?
Overcoming NIH / NSH syndromesChesbrough (2003,2006)- Unwillingness to undertake extra-organizational
knowledge transactions- Loss of IP- Risk that licensee / spin-off may become very
successful
- It is actually a way to boost morale among R&D-employees (us through licensing or spin-off)
- Communicate positive experiences with external monetization of technologies
- Establishing an appropriate incentive system to fight the NSH syndrome.
- Use it or loose it policy : technologies are shelved because business units may insist “on vetoing any external use of the technology”.
- Better to license than to face competition without licensing income
NSH-syndrome(resistance against
external commercialization of
technology)
WHAT CAN WE DO ABOUT IT?
10 steps that companies should
follow to create and cultivate a
successful open-innovation program
Source: K. Stark (2011)
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– it is about losing what you are and have now for building for the future –
How to create an appropriate culture for OI
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CREATE A LIST OF STRATEGIC AND BUSINESS
NEEDS
How to create an appropriate culture for OI
DEFINE THE COMPANY’S CORE COMPETENCIES
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How to create an appropriate culture for OI
INITIATE SCOUTING (new partners &
technologies)
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How to create an appropriate culture for OI
DEVELOP AN IP STRATEGY
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How to create an appropriate culture for OI
BROADEN OUTREACH TO ADDITIONAL STAKEHOLDERS
such as customers and employees
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How to create an appropriate culture for OI
LET EVERYONE KNOW THAT
THE COMPANY IS “OPEN” TO INNOVATIONThe role of OI
portals
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How to create an appropriate culture for OI
TRANFORM EXISTING RELATIONS
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How to create an appropriate culture for OI
BUILD A KNOWLEDGE
BASE & MEASURE PROGRESS
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How to create an appropriate culture for OI
COLLABORATE WITH PEER
ORGANIZATIONS
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How to create an appropriate culture for OI
CREATE ACCOUNTABILITY
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Interactive poll 3What are the three most important of the 10 steps
that companies should follow to create and cultivate a successful open-innovation program?
• Create a need list
• Define the company’s core competencies
• Initiating scouting
• Develop an IP strategy
• Broaden outreach to additional stakeholders
• Let everyone know that the company is "open" to innovation.
• Transform existing relationships into strategic relations
• Build a knowledge base
• Collaborate with peer organizations
• Create accountability
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Q&A
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References (1/2)
• Chesbrough, H. (2003). Open innovation ; The new imperative for creating and profiting from technology, Harvard Business School Press, Harvard : Boston.
• Chesbrough, H. (2006). Open innovation Business Models; How to thrive in the new innovation landscape, Harvard Business School Press, Harvard : Boston.
• Coppolino, A. (n.d.). Open innovation and creativity: conceptual framework and research propositions. Unpublished manuscript, University of Messina.
• Grimaldi, M. (2012). Assessing and managing intellectual capital to support open innovation paradigm. World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology
• Herzog, P. (2011). Open and closed innovation: Different cultures for different strategies, 2nd edition, Gabler Verlag, Germany
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References (2/2)
• Ihl, C., Piller, F., & Wagner, P. (2012). Organizing for open innovation - aligning internal structure and external knowledge sourcing. Informally published manuscript, RWTH Aachen University.
• Mortara, L, Napp, J., Sladk, I. And Minshall, T (2009), How to implement opn innovation, IfM, University of Cambridge.
• Mortara, L., Minshall, T, 2011. How do large multinational companies implement open innovation? Technovation, 31 586-597.
• Piller, F. (2010). Open innovation readiness. TIM-Group at RWTH Aachen University,
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We acknowledge contributions of ESADE MSc students
Silvia García, José Miarnau, Marc Rovira, Nahikari Zuasti,
Alandra Stadler, Sanna Gräno, Johannes Papp, Maximilian Almayer-Beck
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