Tim Brown is the CEO of IDEO and a Board Member of IDEO.org. Tim is a leading voice on the value of human-centered design in business and society and is the author of the book Change by Design.
He participates in the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, and his talks Serious Play and Change by Design appear on TED.com.
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How to make R&D thrive in a high pressured environment – advice from former Elevation Labs CEO
R&D leadership is under pressure to cut costs and increase the rate of innovation. Michael Hughes, former CEO of Elevation Lab offers practical advice to help innovation thrive in a rapidly changing and high pressured environment.
The role of public research institutes within national innovation systems – Seung-Hyun Lee RADMA Scholar
RADMA scholar Seung-Hyun Lee gained support for her research, which culminated in a thesis “Exploring the Positioning of Research Actors through Interdisciplinarity and Research Collaboration: Insights from the Case of Korean Public Research Institutes”.
Innovation and geopolitical change – Yanze Liang RADMA scholar
RADMA scholar Dr. Yanze Liang gained support for his research: “Chinese Multinationals, Strategic Asset-Seeking M&As and Post-Acquisition Innovation Performance”.
AI as an agent of innovation – Soo Young Choi RADMA Scholar
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R&D Management Conference programme launched
Sven Schimpf says this year’s programme reflects contemporary trends in R&D and innovation and the call for tracks received more responses than expected.
“The format of the conference, which incorporates a colloquium for PhD students, has continuously evolved during the last years and has gained a remarkable state of maturity,” he says.
Creativity paradox – why innovation fails between idea and execution
Creativity needs openness, curiosity and time to explore. Execution needs focus, evidence and control. If we only protect creativity, we get dispersion. And if we only protect control, we kill learning too early.
This tension, Abdelmoula El Hadi, Group Head of Innovation at Knauf Insulation, describes as the Creativity Paradox and he shares his actionable insights.
Driving decarbonization in automotive manufacturing: the role of executive education
Deep decarbonization of the automotive sector requires more than isolated efficiency measures, it needs a whole systems approach and reconfiguration of the core business models therefore education and capacity building interventions are imperative. The “Sustainable Futures Programme” created a blended learning model using input from Siemens plc, members of the Northern Automotive Alliance (NAA), and facilitation by the University of Salford’s Centre for Sustainable Innovation.
AI for R&D and Innovation Research – Professional Development Workshop at #RND2026
AI-based methods are widely used for R&D Management studies – with over 50 publications in 2024-25. Here is an opportunity to gain invaluable new skills in this rapid evolving area. Join an interactive workshop at the R&D Management Conference.
Surviving and thriving in the flux world
We are living in a flux world, observed Andy Neely at Rethinking Innovation 2026, describing the perception that instability, transformation, and uncertainty are now a constant rather than extreme events.
Design thinking is the place to start for smart solutions
Tim Brown of IDEO defines design thinking a discipline that uses the designer’s sensibility and methods to match people’s needs with what is technologically feasible and what a viable business strategy can convert into customer value and market opportunity.
Surveillance capitalism – how Big Tech bros govern their own turfs
By becoming regulators of their ecosystems, and effectively running the business relationships, data exchanges, and transactions, platform firms are acting as private governors with the power to create their own domains or ‘turfs’.
Annabelle Gawer explores how the process of digitalisation has led to the economy-wide redesign of value creation, delivery, and capture processes.
Ignite your imagination and boost your creativity – #RND 2026
This experiential workshop at the R&D Management Conference 2026 complements the paper session “Arts-Based Initiatives, Creativity and Innovation” (track 1.4). It offers all conference participants a creative exploration of how artistic practices foster innovation in times of disruption.
How the AI transformation is driving change in the automotive industry
Artificial Intelligence is reshaping how vehicles are designed, manufactured, validated, operated, and maintained. Pranjal Saikia, Head of the Vehicle Component Solution Department at LG Soft India, describes the digital transformation at this pioneering automotive company.
The value of people in the success of R&D projects
50 percent of software projects fail to meet their original objectives – but does this mean they were unsuccesful? Valerie Lynch, argues that through agile working, the engineering team can often make the impossible, possible. And yet success is often judged on whether estimates were correct, rather that what they achieved within the time and budget.
From practice to theory: The birth of the Innovation Culture Framework 4/4
NASA is watching the weather forecast for Cape Canaveral in Florida. It was “80 per cent go” for the launch of Artemis II this week.
The Johnson Space Center’s (JSC) has become a real-world laboratory for understanding how culture drives innovation in complex technical organizations.
The Innovation Culture Framework enables these lessons to be shared with all progressive organisations.
Smart City Code aims to close the technology governance gap
Many smart city projects are struggling to deliver equitable urban transformations, according to Luca Mora. He says the challenge now is not technology, but governance.
His recent book outlines how a Smart City Code, which is based on learnings from over 300 urban areas, could help improve the adoption of technology that works for its citizens.
Human v’s AI vision of the future – creative workshop explores arts-based initiatives and innovation
Arts-based initiatives can enhance innovation by stimulating perception, imagination, and transformation. The humanoid robot character C-3P0 first appeared in the Star Wars in 1976, many years before droids became a reality. Creative writing can give insights into future technologies.
UK Innovation Report 2026 calls for focus on sectors that can scale, export and compete globally
A dramatic restructuring of the global economy requires a UK innovation strategy that is focussed on increasing the competitive advantage within sectors, Lord David Sainsbury observed at the launch of the UK Innovation Report 2026. The report, produced by Cambridge Industrial Innovation Policy group puts the UK performance into an international context.
The importance of rituals, language and power signal in innovation culture
Embedding innovation into organizational DNA is not about asking people to be more creative, says Anjali Jain.
She observes that it is about designing rituals that legitimize exploration, language that normalizes uncertainty, and power signals that reward intelligent risk-taking.
Leading the AI transformation
Leadership style is a critical factor in the success of AI transformation. Interviews with 31 CEOs from Finland firm revealed three distinct approaches – Generalist, Expert, and Disruptive.
How N-squared diagram reveals innovation opportunities at the interfaces
The humble N-squared diagram brings a phenomenal opportunity for better insight, explains Abi Hird. “Its logic aligns closely with the realities of contemporary R&D: interconnected ecosystems, regulatory entanglement, distributed decision-making, and collaborative value creation, and directs attention to where value is created.”
How IP roadmapping can bring people together to help align IP related decisions
Misalignment between IP and business strategy can lead to severe and costly errors, argues Frank Tietze. Blind spots can result in lost competitive advantage, reduced valuation, and costly litigation.
In a guest post, he describes how IP-roadmapping provides a useful visual tool.
Building a Shared Vision: Embedding innovation into the system 3/4
When investigation into the Colombia tragedy revealed a deeper, systematic organizational problem. NASA reponded rapidly and by 2006, JSC leadership articulated a new narrative known as the Business Imperative.
It reframed innovation as essential to mission success rather than a peripheral activity. Every new mission would demand novel approaches to technology, partnerships, and problem-solving to embed innovation into the system.
BAE Systems explores R&D processes to encourage innovation at Low-Technical Readiness Levels
Working on R&D projects in the Weapon Systems UK business at BAE Systems means developing solutions at Low-Technical Readiness Levels (TRLs). In this environment, uncertainty isn’t simply another entry in a risk register, it’s the defining challenge of the work says Martin Currie, Project Engineering Manager.
He is conducting research to discover how different types of uncertainty are perceived and which project management practices are most effective in reducing them.
Digitalizing R&D – learnings from Unilever
How would you digitalize the R&D department of Unilever, a company that was founded over 138 years ago? Innovation continues to be a driving force in the company, so to ensure the sustainability and profitability of the organisation, it created the fully automated Materials Innovation Factory (MIF) on the University of Liverpool campus, to enable it to digitalize its R&D function.
Crowdsourcing innovation at NASA – solving grand challenges
Crowdsourcing innovation doesn’t require a world expert, just someone who can connect the dots. Research from MIT found 70% of the time the successful challengers came from somewhere not in the domain of the challenge owner and in 75% of cases the solution already existed.
Crowdsourcing innovation and IP – what potential contributors should consider
The crowdsourcing paradox – Individuals that act as providers of knowledge need to exchange (codified and tacit) solution information to attract seekers and develop a solution, while they need to protect their knowledge base from unwanted knowledge leakages and spillovers.
How to access people beyond your payroll – Open Innovation Challenges unlock global genius
Open innovation challenges are a way to solve the hardest problems on Earth (and beyond) by bringing together people from around the world, explains Trisha Epp, Director of Innovation for NASA Tournament Lab at Freelancer.com
We talked to Trisha about crowdsourcing for innovation.
Transformational leadership: Redefining what it means to lead at NASA 2/4
In the years following Columbia, JSC invested heavily in its leadership. The goal was to shift from directive, hierarchical management to transformational leadership, an approach that emphasizes inspiration, empowerment, and mutual growth between leaders and followers.
Sony Mobile gaining value from future focused investment
Sony Mobile emerged when Sony acquired Ericsson’s share of its joint venture. Against a difficult market it gained value from its future focussed investment and successfully regained its reputation for groundbreaking innovation. The role of innovation management in facilitating these transitions is discussed.
Why cyber-physical integration needs two playbooks, not one
Many cyber-physical programmes stall because teams assume “integration” is a single pathway. In reality, there are two distinct playbooks with different implications for architecture, data, and governance.
How entrepreneurial language can influence academic decision making
Engaging with universities offers a cost-effective, and risk-sharing proposition for resource contrained start-ups. However there are often culture differences around motivations. Research reveals that entrepreneurial language can accelerate speed to decision.
Firms have restructured R&D in response to US science policy and AI, but will it damage long-term innovation capacity?
In 2025 there was a significant increase in global organisations looking to restructure R&D operations. Research by Steve Bone has revealed that measures directed at improving operational efficiency may infact pose a ‘significant risk of slowing innovation’ unless it has a clear strategic direction.
Impact of end consumer on innovation culture – a Japanese perspective
Customer insights can help international R&D programmes adapt their approach to new product development. Dr Hajime Endo, an Executive Consultant for TouGas Oilfield Solutions, explains the end consumer impact on innovation culture.
Keynote speakers for #RND2026 announced
Hosts for the R&D Management Conference 2026 are delighted to announce some of the keynote speakers for #RND2026. Peter Gallagher, who led technology strategy for part of Unilever is the first industry practitioner to be named.
Would expected value offer a new way to value innovation?
It is not that innovation is inherently unmeasurable, it is just that we have been measuring the wrong things, argues Simon Hill, CEO of Wazouku. He has developed a new metric based on the concept of expected value that treats innovation as a system that can be measured, improved and governed.
Revival: How NASA’s Johnson Space Center rebuilt its innovation culture after Columbia 1/4
On February 1, 2003, the world watched in disbelief as the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated, taking the lives of seven astronauts.
Beyond the technical causes, the Investigation Board identified a deeper, systemic problem: a cultural failure.
This is the story of how NASA’s Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston rebuilt its innovation culture.
How can established companies resource radical innovation?
Innovation managers often struggle to access the resources required for radical innovation. This study shows how a tailored innovation management system, supported by leadership and embedded in the organisation was successful in creating recognition and reward.
How can we empower our R&D teams to create new opportunities?
“How can we encourage our R&D teams to feel empowered to create new opportunities?” This concern emerged from a meeting of industry members and explored in a research project which discovered, that access to the big picture, the leadership skills of team leaders and clear strategic goals tempered with an agile approach, created motivated and innovative teams.
Rick Mitchell – pioneer of people-centred R&D Management
When Rick Mitchell became R&D Manager at Domino, the pioneering inkjet printing company, he was not to know that his work would become a such an excellent example of successful innovation strategy – that he would become a respected authority on innovation management.
His enthusiasm for innovation has been a life-long passion and RADMA has been enriched by his contributions as a Trustee.
Apply for the R&D Doctoral Colloquium – funding available
Are you researching innovation and R&D management? Do you want helpful input for your PhD?
Apply now for the Doctoral Colloquium head of the R&D Management Conference – an opportunity to interact and network with your peers and experienced researchers.
Can tax incentives encourage entrepreneurship?
Will recent changes to the tax reliefs be sufficient to support UK innovators? Are tax incentives the best way to keep entrepreneurs? In this guest post, Bhavika Nesbitt and Emma Richards of the Wilson Partners, discuss how policy makers use tax to incentivise enterpreneurship.
The Institute of Innovation Management – has just launched
The Institute of Innovation Management (IIM) aims to raise global standards in innovation practice – it has spun out from work by the BSI which supported the development and launch of the ISO Innovation Management Standard 56001.
Open innovation challenge design canvas facilitates knowledge transfer
Open Innovation is an approach that enables organisations to benefit from the expertise and knowledge of people from outside their organisation. Nicola Doppio, Open Innovation Officer, at HIT explains how the Hub has developed an Innovation Challenge Design Canvas to faciliate solution creation.
From innovation pipelines to ecosystem plays: A new era for Open Innovation
Have we inadvertently narrowed our understanding of the real strategic potential of Open Innovation? Ahead of the Henry Chesbrough Festschrift, Wim Vanhaverbeke asks if the simple metaphor of innovation as a porous R&D funnel needs re-evaluation.
Innovationship – how relational capital can drive innovation
When Francesco Starace became CEO of Enel, one of the world’s largest energy companies, he realized that the firm could no longer rely solely on its internal R&D. His drive to connect with the thousands of innovators working outside its boundaries – has been described as “Innovationship” in a new book.
Open Innovation – not a process but a contested space
Open Innovation is proven to enhance company performance and resilience so why does it often stall? Research shows alignment of interpretation is critical to success.
Proactive board is crucial to future focussed investment decisions
The crucial role of the board was highlighted in a conference hosted by Innovationsledarna and RISE. It should provide dynamic capabilities and strategic leadership so the board’s mix of competences and the way it operates, need to align with challenges facing the organisation.
Tracks announced for R&D Management Conference 2026
The theme of R&D Management Conference 2026 is “Creativity and resilience in an era of technological disruption” and this has elicited a tremendous response from the community. The call for papers has just opened.
Offshore windpower first cost-effective application of superconductivity
Superconducting cables could improve the competitiveness of offshore wind power, overcoming supply chain issues and transmitting electricity with near zero loss of power. The SupraMarine collaboration shows the strength of an ecosystem approach to sustainable innovation.
The people factor is vital for successful innovation
“Good leadership is key. If you want to be successful, it is crucial that your management holds knowledge about innovation and that it is implemented in a structured way.” Mikael Gummesson was Head of IT Innovation at H&M Group, as the company expanded into seventy terrioritories. He describes how H&M kept its entrepreneural spirit as it scaled and the learning points he gained.
Agentic AI and the People Factor: the role of human-aligned strategies
Despite the challenges of adoption, the opportunity is extraordinary. Gartner forecasts that by 2029, agentic AI will autonomously resolve 80 per cent of customer-service issues. We asked RADMA scholar Fatema El-Wakeel how the next wave of AI will impact the People Factor in innovation management.
Is it possible to create a recipe for successful innovation?
Currently one in four products fail within a year. Guy White, explores how deep customer insights based on evidence can reveal the ‘jobs to be done’ and make the success of innovation entirely predictable.
Vital role of innovation practitioners in sustainable economic growth revealed by Nobel Prize winners
Technology advances are the basis for sustained economic growth, but this has not always been the case. The Nobel Prize for Economic Science 2025 has been awarded to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt, who together have set to answer the big question of “how to sustain economic growth”.
We must improve success rates in innovation -Johan Grundström Eriksson
“I see a day when innovation management will be considered a discipline like project management. When a more systematic approach is adopted, more projects will succeed,” says Johan Grundström Eriksson of Innovationsledarna, ahead of their event “Successful Investments in an Uncertain World” on the 18 November 2025.
R&D Management Conference 2026 call for track proposals
Do you have a good idea for a track for the next R&D Management Conference? The Manchester team have just opened a call for track proposals. The deadline is October 31st. Don’t forget to save the date.
2025 RADMA Doctoral Study Programme Awards
We are delighted to announce the recipients of the 2025 Doctoral Study Awards. The award provides up to three years funding to talented prospective or mid-study PhD students, offering them the opportunity to concentrate on the studentship for the period of the award.
RADMA welcomes three new trustees
Innovation management is by its very nature dynamic, so the appointment of three new RADMA trustees, Professor Mandy Parkinson, Dr Dhruba Borah, and Dr David Johnson, who each offer a wealth of experiences and knowledge, is warmly welcomed by board.
CleanTech East using an ecosystems approach to accelerate the energy transition
Innovation ecosystems – such as CleanTech East – can play a critical role in accelerating the energy transition by fostering innovation, collaboration, integration, and collective action.
The world’s energy diet is changing as demand for electrons grows
The requirement for electrons to fuel the AI knowledge revolution, and the drive for domestic production of renewable fuel (protected from geopolitical tensions) is increasing the appetite for electricity, comments Henry Aszklar, who argues that there is a precedent for renewable energy boosting the economy in the US.
Could ‘plant-based’ provide an alternative for food-to-go plastics?
Plant-based alternatives to plastic could help to reduce the pollution caused by single-use plastics – but does the food-to-go industry have the appetite for change and will the Single-Use Plastics Directive (SUPD) support adoption of new technology? We asked Dr Marc Rodriguez Garcia, Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer at Xampla for his view.
Disruption in energy: why promising technologies stall—and how to help them scale
Time and time again, entire industries have been transformed by new entrants – often ones that initially appeared harmless to the giants they eventually unseated.
Ann Christensen, President and CEO of the Christensen Institute, explores how “Disruptive Innovation” — might unfold in the energy sector, and how to give breakthrough ideas their best shot at survival.
New AI Code of Practice enables compliance with world’s first legal framework for AI
The EU AI Act, is the world’s first comprehensive legal framework for artificial intelligence. It sets out voluntary but influential standards for General-Purpose AI (GPAI) systems, which are among the most powerful and widely deployed AI technologies in development and use today.
We asked lawyer Wayne Cleghorn, about the significance of the act and his advice for innovation professionals.
Evaluating internal corporate venture ideas: strategic relatedness, feasibility, and novelty
How do internal corporate ventures select new business ideas? Using a resource-based lens, Merte Merde and his collaborators, examined venture proposals within a multi-business firm. Focusing on strategic relatedness, idea feasibility, and novelty it provide insights into the internal selection dynamics within a complex environment.
Monitoring, Conserving, Restoring, Valorizing – MCRV Framework supports a biodiversity positive business strategy
Despite a growing body of evidence that highlights the interdependence between corporate economic performance and biodiversity health, sustainability frameworks still tend to prioritise climate and relegate biodiversity to a secondary concern. Jacopo Cricchio and his colleagues at Scuola Superiore Sant’ Anna propose the MCRV framework to put biodiversity at the heart of business strategy.
AI for Sustainable Heating: Optimizing District Heating Networks
District Heating Networks (DHNs) can enable the heating of an entire neighbourhood from a single sustainable source. By learning from the experiences of the shared economy, and using AI to optimise the network, they offer potential to redefining the future of energy management.
How to accelerate technology transitions by creating windows of opportunity
Smalt discovered pneumatic unloaders that could unload grain 15 times faster than the existing manual method and at a lower cost – the response of the grain traders? “No, not interested. There are no bottlenecks in unloading grain at Rotterdam. Why disrupt the status quo?” Henry Aszklar explains how understanding socio-technological linkages is the key to accelerating technology transitions.
Innovation, interdisciplinarity and the urgency of biodiversity
The question is no longer if biodiversity matters to industrial innovation, but how quickly and effectively we can adapt our systems to reflect this new reality says Fiona Lettice, RADMA trustee reporting about the R&D Management Conference. “We are seeing the early signs of this transformation – but the road ahead will require a much more integrated approach to research, regulation, and investment,” she warns.
Innovation & Biodiversity – the heat is on
The R&D Management Conference 2025 in Pisa – brought together around 500 participants from across the world and has been the hottest conference on record. Innovation & Biodiversity was a challenging theme, but the organisers have successfully created a coherent programme with excellent keynotes and presentations, says RADMA chair Jeremy Klein.
1,000 years in 10 days – Tattva’s biomaterial offers carbon sequestering alternative for construction
Biomaterials offer an alternative to the cement and plastics widely used in the construction sector – which account for 37% of global carbon dioxide emissions. But the challenge for innovators is how to offer higher perceived value. Tattva’s Stromate is a strong, lightweight, fire resistant alternative to conventional building materials.
Breaking the innovation bottle-neck with continuous foresight
Just 35% of global consumer-packaged goods launched in the first 5 months of 2024 were genuinely new products – the lowest since tracking began (1996). Sunanda Jayanth argues that continuous technology foresight, which forecasts the trajectory of emerging technologies using global invention data, can help innovation managers to overcome this challenge.
Will rise of Corporate Venture Capital overcome ‘trough of disillusionment’?
Corporate investment is a crucial component of the innovation ecosystem but the sector is in a time of transition. The CVC invests in businesses that are relevant and beneficial to the parent group gaining market insight and innovative technology. The business gains access to expertise and contacts.
The circular leap – inspiring new business models for the circular economy
The circular economy calls for a fundamental redesign of how value is created, delivered and retained. A creativity workshop can help teams find inspiration for the circular leap
Using AI to optimise investigator site selection for clinical trials
Ensuring that clinical trials take place at the optimal investigator sites is vital to recruiting and retaining patients with the required profile for a trial – AI tools are able to analyse more data sets and provide objectivity as Dr Gen Li, Founder & President of Phesi, explains.
Are you a RADMA student at the R&D Management Conference 2025?
We are expecting a record attendance at the R&D Management Conference 2025, and looking forward to seeing old friends and welcoming newcomers to this vibrant community.
Can a climate tech ecosystem accelerate innovation adoption?
Innovation ecosystems are often geographically focussed, but the Climate Tech SuperCluster is changing this model. It aims to become a growth engine for innovation that will decarbonise the grid, drive the hydrogen economy and improve housing for a net zero future. We discuss its role with the co-founder and members.
Will they pay for a nature positive alternative? H2Upgrade case-study
Nature-positive business models that reduce externalities at potentially higher initial costs may be less attractive than business-as-usual production models. Creating value is one strategy that can be used to overcome this obstacle.
Renewable curtailment is major obstacle to decarbonisation – Shifted prioritises customer insights to build solution
When Spain lost all power in April 2025, there was concern that a heavy reliance on renewable energy was to blame. The intermittent nature of renewables creates challenges for the national grid which needs constant balancing to ensure it is not overloaded or under powered.
100 hours energy storage for $20/kWh? Is Silbat’s melting silicon battery the solution?
When the incumbent is a proven technology and 90% efficient, an emerging challenger needs a strong value proposition. Silbat says its revolutionary melting silicon battery offers flexibility to locate energy storage where it is needed, addressing a major challenge faced by producers of renewable energy.
Green hydrogen – Electrogenos reducing the cost of production
Green Hydrogen will play a key role in decarbonising heavy industry, but there are still many technical, logistic and policy changes that are needed before it is widely adopted. Augustro Bartolome of Electrogenos discusses the challenges and how its innovation will support the transition.
Why successful digital healthcare innovation needs more than great technology
Successful digital healthcare innovation is not about selling a product – it is about convincing a whole ecosystem that the new technology is safe, valuable, and fits into their daily work.
Industrial sustainability – an interview with Professor Steve Evans
“If you’re in R&D management and you’re ignoring sustainability, you are limiting your future job prospects,” says Steve Evans, Centre for Industrial Sustainability. He explains the importance of the energy transition to enabling sustainability and the role of value as tool for determining how to create change for the better.
What does failed value mean in the world that’s interested in sustainability?
New business models are key to sustainability, but many of the traditional tools fail to provide a solution. Our value mapping exercise unlocked the intellectual logic. What we found was designers didn’t need better design tools, they needed tools to understand failed value, and that’s all they needed.
Precision meets accountability: The future of AI in R&D
AI isn’t just a tool for faster research – it’s a catalyst for discovery. To support this, Elsevier has launched ScienceDirect AI, a cutting-edge generative AI tool for researchers that enables them to instantly extract, summarize and compare trusted insights from millions of full-text articles and book chapters on ScienceDirect.
Human-centric design thinking reveals unexpected innovations
Tim Brown of IDEO defines design thinking a discipline that uses the designer’s sensibility and methods, to match people’s needs with what is technologically feasible, and what a viable business strategy can convert into customer value and market opportunity. There’s no single definition for design thinking. It’s an idea, a strategy, a method, and a [...]
Who’s steering future innovation – humans or AI?
AI generated digital twins have the potential to transform product innovation and development. The emergence of ‘Physical AI’ offers a potential step change for new product development, according to Andy Walker, Head of Commercial for Deep Tech at TTP.
AI can help you win at new product development – Dr Robert Cooper says now is the time to act
The number one benefit of AI is improved innovation. As an estimated 70% of new product developments never become a commercial success, it is time to apply the power of AI, says Dr Robert G Cooper.
Regenerating natural ecosystems – Virginia Castellucci, 3Bee
As more companies are needing to offset to balance their decarbonation pathways, this is creating an opportunity for regeneration of natural ecosystems. Virginia Castellucci, Head of Sustainability & Advocacy at 3Bee, explains that it is a win-win situation.
Energy transition is an opportunity for innovation – Nicola Rossi, Enel Green Power
Decarbonisation is essential if we are to keep the planet at a liveable temperature, but the energy transition also creates new market opportunities, explains Nicola Rossi, Head of Innovation, Enel Green Power and Thermal Generation.
Systems medicine approach to human health – Jacopo Orlando, Agricultural Public Affairs, Aboca
Many of today’s pharmaceuticals are based on inorganic chemistry, potentially working more closely with nature would allow more interventions more closely aligned with the body’s own metabolism and disease responses and be better for the planet. Aboca takes a systems medicine approach that is based on clinical evidence.
Innovation for a sustainable future – call for contributions
“If you’re in R&D management and you’re ignoring sustainability, you are limiting your future job prospects,” says Steve Evans, Director of Research at the Centre for Industrial Sustainability, IfM. Aligning innovation with the challenge of decarbonisation will create new market opportunities – if you have a story to share do contribute to our special feature.
Valentina Re looks forward to a warm, engaging conference
The R&D Management Conference is a highlight in the year for many working in this discipline – a chance to meet up in person and discuss new and emerging ideas in your field. We asked Valentina Re about life behind the scenes.
Your life is manufactured – can manufacturing become regenerative?
In his entertaining book, Tim Minshall explains how huge inefficiencies in each of the make, move and consume stages of the manufacturing process are not sustainable, but then reveals how looking at issues from a different perspective can address these challenges.
IKEA uses its supply chain influence to promote sustainability goals
By leveraging its ‘buyer-driven’ powers to impose sustainability standards on its suppliers and supply chains, IKEA is able to drive change in a way that national governments are not, concludes research by Arabella Mocciaro Li Destri.
The impact of supply chain complexity on product recalls
Product recalls are on the rise in many industries and as supply chains become more globalised and products subject to rapid technological change, the factors contributing to product safety risk intensify, research by RADMA student Roman Schumacher found.
Arts Value Map: an alternative way to measure creativity
Companies introduce the arts, not just as an organisational and management initiative but also as an experience-based process that will provide enjoyment and drive value to the business. How do you measure the value created?
Measuring value created by innovation at the firm level to improve economic policy
The ability to measure value created through innovation at a macro-level, would make it possible to assess to contribution of government policy to the stimulation of innovation and the value created by funding and investment. David Stroll argues that Productivity Cost Accounting would bridge the gap between firm and economic level.
How to value innovation in emerging technologies
In an economy where the only certainty is uncertainty, knowledge is the only sure source of lasting competitive advantage. If knowledge is a company asset then how do you measure its acquisition and value? Valerie Lynch discusses the benefits of a value process.
Art thinking – putting the creativity back into innovation
Virtually every Nobel Prize winner is a polymath in some way. Fifty percent of the scientists and closer to ninety percent of mathematicians have a highly developed avocation for music. Art thinking can add creativity to innovation.
RADMA – funding, research support, and save the date
We are pleased to announce that the call for the RADMA 2025 Doctoral Studies Programme is now open. Those working in R&D Management will also be interested in potential funding for research work and travel to conferences and the Colloquium in the summer.
Solving complex holistic design problems with search strategies
Holistic design is challenging as it involves many interconnected elements. This study introduced the concept of a “problem freeze” stage, where design exploration is intentionally limited to enable progress toward production. This is a practical approach for handling high-complexity projects.
Scaling the sharing economy – how Airbnb became a global brand
When all the hotels in San Francisco were fully booked ahead of a design conference, two roommates saw an opportunity to offer delegates an airbed and breakfast for a small fee. A new enterprise based on the sharing economy was born and Airbnb has become an international brand.
How Tesla made sustainable innovation desirable
Tesla’s new product strategy used ‘valuation entrepreneurship’ to successfully launch a high-end battery electric vehicle to the market; when others had failed to gain traction. The way
it achieved this has been investigated by Maximilian Palmié and his co-workers, they reveal that reputational politics and blame avoidance tactics were key factors.
The Innovation Management System creates space for innovation
For many years, the innovation has been characterized by ideation, creating concepts and validation. The IMS offers an added focus: look at the opportunity to see what will generate most value, and create the processes and mechanisms to deliver that value.
Driving an innovation culture at Velindre University NHS Trust
Velindre University NHS Trust is implementing the ISO 56001 Innovation Management System to drive an innovation culture and enhance service delivery
Innovation management within a highly regulated environment
Steven Armitage discovered the Innovation Management System by chance and saw the potential for it within the aviation industry. It offers a structured approach to identifying the opportunity, creating concepts, and validating them.
Is the FDA’s waterfall framework for design control outdated for medtech development?
The Federal Drug Agency’s 1997 design control guidance – built on a traditional waterfall framework – is increasingly misaligned with the dynamic landscape of medical device development, argues Dr Stuart Grant of Archetype Medtech, a med-tech innovation management consultancy.
Digitalisation of existing companies is key to economic revival
The potential of the ‘Great North’ to drive the digitalisation of the UK’s economy has been underestimated, according to Professor Carsten P Welsch, Director of the Liverpool Centre for Doctoral Training for Innovation in Data Intensive Science (LIV.INNO).
Sharing best practice with the ISO 56001 Innovation Management System
For many organisations innovation happens in silos – there is poor visibility by senior management of the process and little sharing of best practice between business units. Creating a common and consistent language for describing innovation terminology is a major benefit of the ISO Innovation Management Systems standard 56000, says Jon Rains, Group Innovation Manager at Mott MacDonald.
Selling silver or a market opportunity? Corporate innovation and the R&D tax model
The recent report “Selling Less of the Family Silver” has provoked some interesting responses. Valerie Lynch, Chairman of AND Technology Research, gives her perspective on why the government relies on R&D Tax Credits to support corporate innovation.
The Next Generation of R&D Management in China
“It’s fantastic being here and the conference was wonderful,” says Jeremy Klein, Chairman of RADMA, about The Next Generation R&D Management in China Conference, which was held in Wuhan on 15-17 September 2024.
R&D in China – the trends, models and the learning points
R&D in China is at a historical height – R&D expenditure is 2.4% of GDP, patent applications are significantly increased, and the phenomenal emergence of regional innovation hubs across the country is impacting innovation globally. Underpinning it all are advances in R&D Management.
Selling less of the family silver: report calls for better UK innovation policy
“Selling less of the family silver” report by the Cambridge Judge Business School raises concern about how sales of UK start-ups to overseas strategic buyers, has become the routine option as entrepreneurs struggle to scale their technology companies. It calls for a better UK innovation and industrial policy.
Agile R&D Unit Organisation or ARDO can improve NPD success in turbulent times
Agile can be defined as a capability – a rapid response to turbulent markets, changing business requirements and advances in technology. Although more widely discussed in the context of the software industry, researchers Alexander Kock and Andre Meier identified a growing phenomenon for R&D Units to adopt agile principles.
Sustainable agricultural transformation – behavioural insights to inform policy
Crop residue burning by smallholder farmers in Thailand is a significant contributor to greenhouse gas emissions – how can behavioural insights support effective policy interventions?
Best paper at R&D Management Conference
The core of the R&D Management conference is the nurturing of academic research. The best paper was nominated by the track chairs for its quality of research, relevance to the current environment and fit with the conference theme.
Transforming industries through technology
The 2024 R&D Management Conference in Stockholm discussed different aspects of the sustainability challenge: can we find new ways to transform industry – and society – through technology? This was reflected by keynotes from four innovative organisations using renewable energy, the price for carbon, hyperscaling and digital blueprints to drive change at a global level.
Everything starts with clean water: Solvatten
A technology that uses the UV-B rays from the sun to create safe drinking water is revolutionising lives. Solvatten is a combined portable water treatment and water heating system that has been designed for off-grid household use in the developing world.
Producing the world’s greenest battery: Northvolt
Electric vehicles are dependent on batteries for energy storage – and the production of these is energy intensive, produces high volumes of CO2 and requires mining of scarce metals. Northvolt is the world’s first fully circular gigafactory using renewable energy to produce the world’s greenest battery with 75% lower emissions.
Putting a price on carbon: H2 Green Steel
Steel production is one of the ‘dirtiest’ industries, producing two tonnes of carbon dioxide for every tonne of steel produced, but it has previously been constrained by its need for fossil fuels. Putting a ‘price on carbon’ has opened the opportunity for innovation in the sector.
The great textile shift driven by digital blueprint tech: Syre
60 million tons of polyester produced each year from virgin oil and little is recycled, creating a global problem. Syre is tackling the challenge by using a new recycling method to turn old clothes into high-quality polyester.
Lifetime achievement award for Dr Valerie Lynch
Congratulations to RADMA trustee Dr Valerie Lynch whose work in electronics innovation was recognised by Electronics Weekly with a “Lifetime Achievement Award.
New practitioner track at R&D Management Conference
If you want to know more about developing your organisation’s Innovation Management System and the role ISO56000 can play in that process – then you are invited to join a special session tailored for industry at the R&D Management Conference, 17 June 2024.
Domains of innovation intent
How do you sustain breakthrough innovation? Gina O’Connor describes how a framework based on Domains of Innovation Intent can maintain true strategic innovation.
What is the role of social media in new product development?
The Adidas Creators Club is a platform where customers and athletes share ideas and participate in the design process. This type of collaborative R&D is made possible by social platforms but how can the power of social media be captured for new product development?
Orchestrating orphan ideas at the fuzzy front end to create value
Orphan ideas are unexpected concepts that can lead to step-changes in innovation. However, as they fall outside of a firm’s strategic roadmap and their development is a risk for innovation managers. How can you nurture them and ensure value creation?
Innovation management is high-risk, but would professional status bring high reward?
Although 45% of CEOs prioritise innovation in the boardroom, for innovation leaders it is a high-stress, high-risk career. Success is uncertain and failure is poorly tolerated. Would making it a profession help career progression? Join the discussion in a free event on 25th April 2024.
Could regenerative innovation fix our food system?
Scott May heads up the innovation ecosystem MISTA focussed on the food sector. He explains how Regenerative Innovation can help overcome the inertia of the past that inhibits people, teams, and companies from continuously adapting and evolving to create new futures.
First R&D Management Workshop 2024 for researchers in Oceania
Oceania researchers involved in exciting research on R&D and innovation management, strategy, and policy are to benefit from a new R&D Management Workshop 2024 in Australia
2024 R&D Management Conference tracks announced
The tracks for the 2024 R&D Management Conference have been announced – the deadline is the 14th of February 2024.
Extracting the full value of the supply chain
Greater use of all sources of capital – finance, social, environmental – can lead to the creation of more sustainable business models, according to Peter Ball, Professor of Operations Management at the School for Business and Society, University of York.
AI as an agent of innovation – Soo Young Choi
AI technologies are evolving at the fastest speed and organisations are rapidly adopting these technologies. However, relatively little is known about the precise role of AI as an agent of innovation. RADMA scholar Soo Young Choi investigated this fascinating subject that will far reaching implications for innovation management.
When the going gets tough, the tough get going – the innovation paradox
“What is the worst thing that you can do in a time of pandemic? Wait and sit it out.” This advice from Prof Oliver Gassman struck home for Professor Petra de Weerd-Nederhof as she prepared her inaugural lecture.
PepsiCo’s design thinking approach to organizational innovation
PepsiCo transformed its organization by adopting a design thinking approach. Researchers identified nine design thinking practices that could lead to organizational innovation
Decline in academic freedom is impacting innovation output, warns study
Innovation output is directly proportional to academic freedom and researchers warn that this has declined over the last decade for the first time since 1940s.
Are you analogue, digital or hybrid scientist? Abderrahim Nekkache’s research reveals new social identities
What type of scientist are you – analogue, digital or hybrid? Research by RADMA scholar Abderrahim Nekkache revealed how chemists and biologists reassessed their work …and their professional identities…. when they adopted cutting edge digital tools in their work.
Supporting research – RADMA announces latest funding awards
Digital twins, investing in radical innovation, transition to circular economy and the impact of REF on research strategy are among the studies funded by RADMA this year, it has been announced.
Innovation-to-Business strategy adopted by Schaeffler Group
As rapid change results in ever shorter cycles of competitive advantage, The Schaeffler Group, found that its traditional methods of leveraging its corporate values for competitive advantage were not sufficient. So it has adopted a new Business-to-Innovation strategy.
Roadmapping for strategic planning: a vital tool in volatile times, study reveals
As society and industry grapple with unprecedented transformative change and disruption, roadmapping provides a useful approach for strategic planning, a recent study has found.
Can India increase its technological sovereignty?
The Silicon Valley of India consistently ranks in the top 25 start-up ecosystems. Could the country become more self-reliant in technology and to have self-determination in critical areas such as AI?
Green innovation ecosystems study awarded best paper at R&D Management Conference 2023
The award for best paper went to Charlotte Chappert, Montpellier Management “Multiple asymmetrical collaborations in green innovation ecosystems”.
2023 R&D Management Conference launches
The 2023 R&D Management Conference Responsible and Responsive Innovation for a Better Future – is now open in Seville.
It began with welcome remarks from Prof. Carmen Cabello, RADMA chair Jeremy Klein, Prof. Andrea Piccaluga and Rector Prof. Francisco Oliva.
Sustaining roadmapping in commercial organisations – Subsea 7 case-study
The need for Roadmapping is still vital, but is it sufficiently adaptable to support geographically dispersed teams challenged by rapidly changing technologies and business environments?
A hurdle-rate theory of R&D procyclicality
According to Schumpeter’s theory of “creative destruction,” R&D should be countercyclical to the business cycle. Empirical evidence, however, consistently contradicts this view. The authors of this study argue that economic downturns increase the equity risk premium, which increases the “hurdle rate” or cost of (equity) capital that is applied to R&D project budgeting decisions, thus stifling corporate innovation.
The future of R&D Management: 50 years strong
In 2020, R&D Management journal celebrated 50 years of publication. Co-Editor Paavo Ritala conducted a comprehensive analysis of the journal’s past five decades and looked towards the future in the R&D management field.
The economic costs of the Russia-Ukraine conflict in terms of lost entrepreneurship
The common belief that wars can be good for the economy is a myth; empirical evidence shows consistently that war negatively affects GDP per capita, argue Hanna Motuzenko and Paul Momtaz, co-authors of a new paper analysing the economic impact of the conflict in Ukraine.
What is needed to support SMEs’ transition towards sustainable business models?
Unexpected challenges have forced European SMEs to rethink their business models, as a result they are opening their boundaries and adopting collaborative strategies – but what is needed for this to be successful?
Inter-organisational collaboration for a better and ‘circular’ future
Development of the circular economy is stalling, according to Benito Mignacca, University of Cassino and Southern Lazio. He argues that a lack of collaboration between key players is hindering the transition to more sustainable development and that greater adoption of open innovation strategies could increase the uptake of re-use initiatives.
Enabling technologies for innovation ecosystem emergence
Certain technologies drive the development of new ecosystems and other, enabling technologies, form the basis of innovation in complementary sectors, observes Petra Nylund. Her particular interest is understanding the mechanisms that connect enabling technologies with ecosystem emergence.
How can regulations and standards support sustainable open innovation?
Many companies adopt industry standards to guide the adoption of best practice and research has shown that adoption of standards have many benefits for firms. However, there is still potential for them to hinder innovation, with many firms de-certifying in order to pursue radical innovation strategies.
The challenge arises how can regulations, standards and intellectual property (IP) management support the implementation of successful sustainable open innovation practices?
How to make cross industry innovation successful
Despite the undoubted benefits of cross industry innovation at different levels, the cognitive distance between the source and target industry could make it difficult to identify and take advantage of opportunities that are generated. A greater understanding is required about the factors that contribute to success.
Too many bricks in the wall? Sustainability at the gate of the Metaverse
The pace at which disruptive technologies are advancing – following a super-linear scale – raises new questions and challenges for resource allocation and business (re)configuration as well as policy and regulation.
SkillsXInnovation: exploring a complex twofold relationship
Innovation skills are considered to be a combination of soft skills, cognitive skills and technical skills, with technological developments creating new demands for individuals.
The future of R&D and innovation: how we will innovate in 2030
There will be an opportunity to time travel at the 2023 R&D Management Conference, according to Sven Schimpf. After reviewing the trends for innovation systems that were identified in 2018 his session will accelerate in time to 2030 and from this vantage point look back at the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on innovation systems.
Quality is a key driver for adoption of AI in smart manufacturing
Improving quality is the priority for manufacturers considering adoption of AI, says one of the findings from a global study commissioned by Rockwell Automation. Respondents said that the biggest internal obstacle they face is balancing profitable growth and quality…
Postgraduate researchers benefit from RADMA grants
We are delighted that Martha Bloom from Sussex University has completed her PhD and is now an economist/policy analyst at the OECD. Her thesis title was ‘Creative Arts and STEM Fusion in and around the UK Creative Industries: A multi-level study’.
Innovation ecosystems in the age of digital transformation
An emerging and disruptive business model is the creation of new ecosystems by a focal firm. However, the mortality rate of these ecosystems is high, particularly in the early stages. This is in part because the firms lack a deep understanding of the dynamic and complex nature of ecosystems.
How IP management can nudge and influence strategic decision making
The shift of value creation towards business model innovation, while at the same time shifting to open innovation, open science and sharing community approaches, has challenged current IP management.
Exogenous linkages of and between entrepreneurial ecosystems
Restricting freedom of movement presents long-term risks to Entrepreneurial Ecosystems, including reduced levels of international collaborations and absorption of human capital. In short, it means that these policies are hampering knowledge flows in ecosystems.
Digital transformation driving socio-technical change
The rapid digitisation of services during Covid now means that it is not possible to fully participate in the socioeconomic community without a smartphone, resulting in the disenfranchisement of sections of the population.
Sponsors announced for R&D Management Conference 2023
A great line-up of innovative organisations are sponsoring the R&D Management Conference, including energy company Endesa, beverage company HEINEKEN Spain, research centre INN-LAB, and CESUR, the association of Entrepreneurs for South of Spain.
Nurturing the entrepreneurial capabilities of academic scientists can enable rapid response to crises
AbCellera Biologics Inc was the first to co-develop an antibody therapeutic for COVID-19, it was the first to receive FDA Emergency Use Authorisation and by 2021 had prevented more than 11,000 deaths in the US alone. This case-study illustrates how the strategy taken by the scientist-entrepreneur before formation of an academic spinout can make a significant impact on its success.
The work of Dr Elicia Maine recognised with CSPC Trail Blazer Award
Dr Elicia Maine accepts the CSPC Trail Blazer Award for her work on the i2I program, which aims to develop an entrepreneurial mindset in graduate scientists and engineers.
New knowledge hub included in the R&D Today refresh
The role of R&D Today is to signpost fresh ideas in innovation management and also to provide a context for those new to the discipline. To support this we have refreshed the look and feel of the website and have included a new ‘Knowledge Hub’ to make it easy to find the information about a subject of interest using a key word search.
Artificial intelligence not replacing humans but augmenting their work
Artificial intelligence is augmenting the work that humans do, not fully automating it. That means companies should focus on situations where AI augmentation makes sense, according to a new book by Thomas Davenport, fellow at the MIT Initiative on the Digital Economy.
Important deadlines – abstract submission extended
For those submitting abstracts to the 2023 R&D Management Conference, Seville, Spain, 17-21 June the deadline has been extended to 13th February 2023.
Entrepreneurial ecosystems: Perspectives from Interregional and Global connectedness
Why do entrepreneurial ecosystems emerge where they do – and what determines their success. Christina Theodoraki, Associate Professor in Entrepreneurship and Strategic Management at TBS Education, discusses some of the considerations and why she finds the subject fascinating.
69 percent of UK companies polled have offshored R&D activities
Reductions to R&D tax credits and lack of access to European innovation funding programmes are driving UK companies to ‘off shore’ their R&D activities, a study by the Ayming Institute has found in its inaugural UK Innovation Barometer 2023.
Want a springboard for your research into innovation management?
There is a unique opportunity to interact with experienced researchers in the field of Innovation and R&D Management at the Doctoral Colloquium, June 17-18, 2023, to be held in Seville, Spain in the week of the R&D Management Conference.
Submissions open for 2023 R&D Management Conference until 1 February
The deadline for abstracts and colloquium submissions for the 2023 R&D Management Conference is 1 February 2023.
Cinderella and the fashionista king – a tale of innovation
The rags to riches story of Cinderella may just seem like a children’s fairy tale, but actually it is witty joke about innovation, according to Genevieve Warwick, Professor of the History of Art at the University of Edinburgh.
How do you scale a co-operative without compromising its ideals?
Set up by two first time entrepreneurs, Namasté Solar, is a workers co-operative based in Boulder USA. It aimed to provide innovative solar electric to Colorado and to distribute the benefits of its success to future employees. But when the cooperative needed finance to grow it looked as though it would have to compromise those ideals.
Authors Júlia Martins Rodrigues, Nathan Schneider discusses how Namasté Solar developed an adaptive network to overcome a range of challenges and become one of the largest worker co-ops in the United States.
Role of virtual spaces to include elderly at fuzzy front end of innovation
Living labs have an important role for collaborative innovation, but elderly consumers may have difficulties participating in a virtual cafe. This research project investigated the role of intermediates and found they have a valuable role in facilitating the involvement of the older population at the fuzzy frontend of innovation.
What is the role of digital technologies in enabling a circular economy?
An exclusive range of sunglasses promoted at the 2020 Tomorrowland festival were produced from recycled bottles and created using 3D printers by Yuma Labs. The intersection between digital technologies and the circular economy is the theme for an R&D Management Special Issue.
The CEO beauty premium
Does the attractiveness of the founder Chief Executive influence the validation of the company? This was the question that Massimo Colombo and his co-authors set out to discover in their paper “The CEO beauty premium: Founder CEO attractiveness and firm valuation in initial coin offerings”.
R&D Management under disruption and uncertainty – call for papers
Making decisions under uncertainty has always been challenge for R&D Management, but over recent years uncertainty has almost become the norm, prompting a number of leading academics to call for an ‘innovation system approach’ to tackling the issues facing R&D managers in a time of disruption.
Cyber-foresight and the seamless paradigm – can you have both?
Bruno Fischer observes that a move to seamless integrated innovation processes can increase the vulnerability to attack. “Many organisations have undergone a digital transformation to increase visibility of information flows through an organisation.To keep a step ahead requires the organisation to have ‘strategic cyber-foresight'”
Entrepreneurship and democracy in decline
Entrepreneurship has been on global decline since the turn of the century and so has democracy. This is not a coincidence according to David Audretsch of Indiana University He says “democracy and entrepreneurship are inextricably linked. Both are manifestations of the same underlying force — freedom of thought, decision-making and action.”
Covid, the ultimate burning platform, tears up the ‘Innovation Playbook’
Organisations often talk about the importance of having a burning platform as the catalyst for change. Peter Robbins discusses how Covid, the ultimate burning platform, accelerated the innovation process and intensified collaboration between new partners across the private, public and third sector; partnerships that would have been unimaginable beforehand.
How to get published in R&D management journals
Do you want to get published? Then keep it original and appropriate for the readership of the journal. Editors from a range of prestigious publications gave their advice at the R&D Management Conference 2022 and a number of common themes emerged.
Innovation and digital transformation – IP Management
Around 90 per cent of the value of modern-day companies is determined by their intangible assets, which includes Intellectual Property Rights (IPR). Dr. Alfred Radauer, explains that both formal and informal tools are available to help companies give a value to their research.
Responsible and responsive innovation will need coopetition, says Carmen Cabello Medina
Coopetition – competitors working together – is not a rare phenomenon; some well known innovations have resulted, such as development of vaccines and engine efficiency in the automotive industry. Carmen Cabello Medina, organiser of the 2023 R&D Management Conference, comments: “It is clear that coopetition entails risks, such as issues regarding knowledge appropriation, which have to be managed. But it is worth taking the risk, as it represents the opportunity to bring very specialized and valuable knowledge together. This is the only way to tackle grand challenges of our time.”
How to design an Innovation Challenge – learning points and a great Canvas tool
Innovation Challenges enable companies to source knowledge and solutions to innovation problems. This is achieved by companies engaging with young talents and experts outside the immediate organisation, facilitated by an intermediate according to the Open Innovation paradigm.
Nicola Doppio, Innovation Officer at HIT, ran a workshop at the R&D Management Conference 2022 and discussed some of the learning points that the organisation has gained from running these challenges. We asked him to share his experiences
Best papers announced at R&D Management Conference Trento
Jeremy Klein, Chair of RADMA, congratulated the organisers on a very successful conference, that had attracted 500 registrations with over 300 delegates attending in person. He also announced the winners of the Best Papers. R&D Management Conference invites a diverse range of papers on difference aspects of the discipline, so he found it a difficult job to select just a few that are outstanding.
If you are what you eat, is what you eat what you think?
If you had a new technology to design a new food product would you create something new or slavishly produce a replica of a familiar dish? Benjamin Wurgaft is exploring the future of food in his keynote at the R&D Management Conference
Terma Innovation podcast featuring Jacob Brix discussing radical innovation
When working with defence and space an innovative mindset is a must. But new opportunities equal uncertainty. Trying to solve a classified problem involves enormous risks in the innovative process. Prof. Jacob Brix is in conversation with Annette Skyt, Innovation Specialist at Terma, a leading engineering and technology company operating in the aerospace, defence, and security sectors.
Complexity theories in R&D Management after a time of crisis
The pandemic has increased capability to manage complex systems, says Raffaella Manzini, LIUC Università Cattaneo. When researching a special issue for R&D Management she was positively surprised to find that many organisations were already adopting new models for technology innovation.
Auto-ID technologies support circular business models
The introduction of object identification to securely connect the physical and virtual worlds can help facilitate the introduction of a circular business model (CBM) but there are several types of CBM and different technologies are required for each.
Strategic / Radical Innovation Management
Radical innovation requires a different skill set to new product developments, but offers a huge opportunity for business growth. Jacob Brix is keen to explore ‘why so few companies are embracing radical innovation?’ in this track in the R&D Management Conference.
Innovation by experimentation
This track at the R&D Management Conference explores the potential of experimentation, both success and failure, and the implications for the organisation. We are hoping to offer a new perspective on knowledge creation says Alessandro Narduzzo.
Strategic leadership and new pathways for radical innovation
The challenges reshaping the global economy have seen strategic leaders exploring differentiated ways of enabling radical innovations that will be game-changing. This track in the R&D Management Conference 2022 looks for future-focused answers on ‘how’ strategic leaders can and do pursue radical innovations. We asked co-chair Mariano (Pitosh) Heyden about the influences in this field.
New product development in new ventures
Crowdfunding, rapid prototyping and the rise of Fab-Spaces are lowering the obstacles to new product development for entrepreneurs but the theories of innovation management have not kept pace, says Valeria Dammicco, who aims to stimulate debate in this track at the R&D Management Conference
Contextual Specificity in R&D Management
Designing a new electric car or developing a new treatment for Covid – the technologies required set the context for innovation and will influence: risk, timescales, IP strategy, financing requirements and more. This track on contextual specificity at the R&D Management Conference 2022, explores the interaction between the innovation context – particularly scientific or technological – and R&D management practices.
Frugal digital innovation and transformation
The need to reuse and repurpose during a time of restricted resources has created a wider resonance for a frugal approach. But there are detractors, hear the debate at the R&D Management Conference.
Sustainability, innovation and the role for SMEs
Climate change and social inequality are of concern to society, but to achieve a twin transition – digital and green – requires SME’s to integrate ethical principle into their business models as well as multinationals, Dr Andrea Caputo argues.
Exploitation of public sector R&D through open innovation strategies
One size doesn’t fit all when it comes to knowledge transfer from public research organisations. Research by RADMA scholar, Maryam Ghorbankhani, has found that universities and public research organisations are very different types of institutions and this impacts the success of knowledge-transfer.
Unravelling antecedents of product innovation
RADMA Scholar Dacosta Omari is to to present a paper at the 29th IPDMC (Innovation and Product Development Management Conference) in Hamburg Germany 17-19 July 2022 about the antecedents of product innovation.
Design thinking to achieve ambidextrous innovation management
Design Thinking can help organisations to become ‘ambidextrous’ (pursue the competing agendas of exploitative innovation and explorative innovation in parallel), but to do both requires a shift in thinking. Researchers studied the journey of a leading Australian property development company in its bid to become ambidextrous.
Meet the editors at R&D Management Conference 2022
Leading journals will be participating in the tracks at the R&D Management Conference and several have special issues based on the theme of the track.
There are four broad themes and 38 tracks planned for the three days.
AI feel you – capturing the customer experience with chatbots
Could chatbots be used to elicit customer experience insights? Karim Sidaoui and colleagues at the Alliance Manchester Business School reviewed how AI could be used to combine the deep insights gained from interviews with the objectivity of quantitative analysis.
EINST4INE supporting digital transformation across innovation ecosystems
EINST4INE is a new training network that aims to develop a new generation of researchers with skills in innovation and technology management for the digital age.
As physics advances our journey through the unknown, is faith being squeezed out?
Discovery of the ‘God particle’ was like finding the missing piece in a vast jigsaw – we knew what it needed to look like to complete the picture, but what if it didn’t fit?
Open Innovation the Chinese way
High-speed rail and semiconductors play a key role in the implementation of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, which can be considered a country-level policy of ‘Inside-Out’ open innovation.
The authors observe that China’s path to prosperity is very different to that of the West and offer instead a novel combination of innovation theory that is illustrated through strategic management frameworks: dynamic capabilities and OI strategy.
Contextual Specificity in R&D Management – an interview with Jeremy Klein
Managing pharmaceutical drug development is a world apart from managing software development. The timescales are different, the costs are different and the people are different too. Jeremy Klein, Chair of RADMA, explains why contextual specificity is important in R&D Development.
How do you use roadmapping? Could it work better?
Few companies were realising the full potential of roadmapping back in 2015/16 when the Institute of Manufacturing and Fraunhofer Group conducted a study of roadmapping practice. The research team is now revisiting the study to see how the situation has changed, particularly following the advent of supporting tools and new technologies such as machine learning and AI.
Is AI the new R&D function in modern corporations?
The role and impact of R&D (broadly defined to include driving innovation in any aspect of the firm) has dramatically increased, says Marco Iansiti of the Harvard Business School. In essence, AI has become the new R&D function in businesses ranging from Netflix to JP Morgan Chase.
Multiple perspectives key to project portfolio management
Project portfolio management (PPM) is about the management, control and accountability of all programs, projects and related activities of an organisation. Projects are valued according to a range of criteria. The Strategic Project and Portfolio Management event, taking place from 2nd-4th February 2022, has invited a range of practitioners to discuss the tools and techniques they are using in their businesses.
Competing in the Age of AI
Traditional organizations start to face diseconomies of scale, scope, and learning as they grow. You know the stuff. But AI allows the modern giga-platform companies to grow at unprecedented pace and the it seems that there are very little limits to scalability. Read the book to understand why!
Submissions open for R&D Management Conference 2022
The organisers of the R&D Management Conference 2022 “Innovation for people and territories” have opened the call for abstract submissions.
Focus on antimicrobial resistance and a surge in quantum computing research are R&D predictions for 2022
What are your predictions for hot topics for 2022? Innovation experts at the Pistoia Alliance cite tackling antimicrobial resistance, quantum computing to optimise supply chains, commercial space travel and use of AI in drug discovery.
Which projects are most suited to an Agile approach?
A survey of companies attending STIM events through 2019 and 2020 showed that there is growing interest in the application of Agile project management processes. In discussions it was revealed that more guidance on the types of projects where an Agile approach is suited would be of interest.
Accelerating new product development
“Now is the time to re-think the firm’s innovation process and methods,” argues Robert G.Cooper, best known for the development of StageGate, a new product development process that is widely used by multinational organisations.
In his recent paper “Accelerating innovation: Some lessons from the pandemic”, in the Journal of Product Innovation Management, Cooper reviews five approaches to accelerated development and discusses how they have supported rapid new product development during the recent global crisis.
Funding for R&D management students
RADMA has provided funding for R&D Management students for over 40 years.
Is Open Innovation the way to tackle the most pressing societal challenges?
Open innovation might be the way to tackle the world’s most pressing societal challenges – trials that can only be weathered when diverse sets of collaborative partners join forces – but very little understanding exists, beyond anecdotal, to link open innovation to societal impact, says Joon Mo Ahn.
Management Innovation: a processual approach through practices and bundles of practices
The Covid-19 crisis has stimulated the adoption of a number of managerial innovations, says Caroline Mattelin-Pierrard. She observes that one innovation – ‘the liberated company’ – provides opportunities for an organisation to develop greater agility.
How can Entrepreneurship Ecosystems support the development of rural territories
Entrepreneurial ecosystems have the potential to support the regeneration of low-density and rural territories, but they are predominately applied in urban environments, could these frameworks be applied in a rural context? João Almeida of the University of Aveiro (Portugal) has been investigating and he presented his early findings at the R&D Management Conference.
Product technology roadmapping – a visual framework for ‘sense making’ in a changing world
One of the biggest challenges facing technology developers is how to blend and combine human, analytical and digital processes. A new six-week course, ‘Product Technology Roadmapping’ from the University of Cambridge, aims to help resolve these issues and show how the use of roadmapping can ensure technological decisions and developments are aligned with product and business plans.
How ‘digital servitization’ is building value in B2B ecosystems
Digital servitization uses a platform strategy to develop mutually dependent ecosystems. In B2C firms take a ‘winner takes all’ strategy, but research has revealed that within the B2B sector the approach is used more collaboratively to expand the platform value with their customers, suppliers, technology providers, and competitors.
Role of accelerators in emerging economies
Accelerators have moved from being simple support organizations, to become a key part of economic development policy. But are the models developed mainly in the US and Europe appropriate for emerging economies? Fizza Khalid, a doctoral researcher at University of Edinburgh Business School in Entrepreneurship & Innovation group, is investigating and we asked her about her findings.
Looking ahead to R&D Management Conference 2022 in Italy
Alberto Nucciarelli, Associate Professor at the University of Trento, announced that the R&D Management Conference 2022 would be held in the Dolomite mountains of northern Italy – we asked him more about his ambitions for the 2022 conference.
The latest news from R&D Management journal
R&D Management has announced its two new Co-Editors-in-Chief Alberto Di Minin and Paavo Ritala, they are supported by an editorial team with significant experience in both academic and commercial spheres of R&D and technology management.
RADMA: Technology affordance
Congratulations to RADMA scholar Dana Lunberry on gaining her PhD. Dana was investigating how affordance of technology impacts relationships between technologies, humans and their environments.
Keynotes at R&D Management Conference
Now is the time to change – inspirational speakers provide their insights in the three plenary sessions at the R&D Management Conference
Innovation under the radar at Wiley Book Club
African firms are innovative but unsupported, argues Xiaolan Fu in her most recent book ‘Innovation Under the Radar’. The book provides the first survey-based analysis of innovation in the informal economy.
Impact of the rise and fall of the great US labs
There are three things that make the iPhone possible – cellular networks, lasers and solid-state electronics and transistors – all these innovations were made possible with a significant contribution from fundamental research at the Bell Labs, now these labs along with many others have closed. Where will future innovation come from? Professor Ashish Arora of Duke University discusses the Changing Structure of the American Innovation Ecosystem.
Integrated Corporate Social Innovation framework – John Makokha RADMA scholar
John Makokha gained RADMA support for his research, which culminated in a thesis: “Integrated Corporate Social Innovation: unmasking a values-based corporate sustainability framework for the management of corporate sustainability tensions in financial institutions in sub-Saharan Africa”.
Democratisation of access to IP information
“Although the pandemic has stimulated digital innovations and digitisation of many B2C sectors, the pandemic has made it more difficult for companies developing ‘hard’ technologies,” says Jane List, editor-in-chief of World Patent Information.
Science policy for sustainable growth – Chris Freeman revisited
2021 marks the centenary of Chris Freeman’s birth, founder of the Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU). An influential economist and science policy advisor, he argued that growth should be sustainable economically and socially. Jeremy Hall, Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Engineering and Technology Management is to talk about his work at the R&D Management Conference.
What is the best platform orchestration strategy?
Platform-based businesses, such as Ebay, AirBnB, Deliveroo have become increasingly important in the economy, but little is known about the impact of different orchestration strategies for managing social and interpersonal interaction with the platform. Xia Han’s research has shown first mover advantage has been over stated.
It’s official: the rate of innovation did increase during the pandemic
The rate of innovation during the pandemic has increased, research has revealed, but the long term implications are less certain. Bram Timmermans comments that in May 2020 just over 50% of managers indicated that they have innovated as a result of the pandemic; this increased to 76% six months later.
Greater use of technology platforms in product innovation during the pandemic
Greater use of tools and techniques for innovation will have lasting impacts after the crisis, according to Charles Henry Noble, editor in chief of the Journal of Product and Innovation Management.
Agile practices in the development of physical products: buzzword or opportunity?
Agile practices originated in the software domain but are increasingly applied to the development of physical products. A multiple case-study involving 17 manufacturing companies from a variety of industries was conducted to understand how agile is currently applied in industry practice.
Opportunity for PhD students to meet peers and leading academics in R&D Research
The Doctoral Colloquium of the R&D Management Conference 2021 will be held on 6 July 2021. This vibrant online event, will take a workshop style to enable students to receive customised feedback on their work from established researchers.
Could a frugal approach offer long term benefits for healthcare provision?
Could the frugal approach adopted during the pandemic to rapidly develop new healthcare products and services offer long lasting benefits to the sector? This is the question discussed by authors Cadeddu, Ahuja and Alami in their paper exploring how frugal innovation offers a new form of solidarity.
What is the business model for autonomous vehicles? Work with or compete with traditional private cars?
Considerable investment is being made in autonomous vehicles, but it is the business model that will determine if they win or fail, says Dr Maurizio Catulli.
Ten ways to design successful corporate startup collaborations
Corporate accelerators provide a unique platform for longterm growth and renewal; offering mutual benefits for corporations and startups, argues Thomas Kohler. He identifies 10 characteristics of successful corporate accelerators.
R&D Management Conference 2021 – deadline for abstracts 17 March
A new e-poster session will be one of the features of the online R&D Management Conference 2021. The deadline for abstracts and posters is the 17th March
The Role of Entrepreneurial Ecosystems in Technological and Social Challenges – call for papers
An Entrepreneurial Ecosystem (EE) is known to stimulate entrepreneurship, innovation and technological development. The R&D Management journal has opened a special issue call for papers on this topic to explore their role in technological and social change.
Innovation in an era of disruption – R&D Management Conference 2021 announces tracks
The disruption of the coronavirus pandemic showed that innovation can happen at faster clock speeds when it is imperative. The R&D Management Conference 2021 ‘Innovation in an era of disruption’ is reviewing the impacts and has just announced its tracks.
Museum of Making shows movement still relevant today
The world’s first factory, in Derby, UK has been opened as a museum to celebrate the role of the maker as a driver of innovation.
Digital fabrication maker response to COVID-19
The rapid spread of Covid-19 has led to an unprecedented bottom-up, distributed, frugal innovation response from individuals and maker communities worldwide who have rapidly developed and distributed crisis-critical items, filling shortages and providing a stop-gap solution for the disrupted supply chains. Lucia Corsini and Valeria Dammicco looked at these responses in the light of the frugal innovation paradigm.
Innovation in an Era of Disruption – R&D Management Conference 2021 – Call for tracks
The pandemic is driving economic and societal change, creating a space for new thinking, new business models and sustainable innovation. Do you have a track recommendation?
How to gain private sector funding for discovery science
A game of chess is how Dr Lawrence Dooley describes the strategy that academic principal investigators (PI) have had to develop to ensure funding for discovery science. He discusses how conflicts in different agenda risks stifling blue-sky research prized by the private sector and how alternative models could address the checkmate.
Discovery science for the Large Hadron Collider upgrade will fast track innovation
The upgrade of the Large Hadron Collider requires new technologies and components. Professor Carsten Welsch believes this development that initially targets discovery science has excellent potential to translate into medical and industrial applications.
Trust and control in innovation ecosystems
Innovation ecosystems offer an environment that allows multidisciplinary collaboration, ultimately the success of such alliances depends on trust and of ‘knowing’ each other, according to Nadine Roijakkers. We ask her about the impact social distancing will have on trust and governance in these systems.
Call for papers – Sustainable Ecosystems
What is required for an innovation ecosystem to be sustainable? The publication Sustainability is calling for submissions to its special issue.
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – offshoring R&D to emerging countries
Social media leaves a trail and Dhruba Borah, of the Manchester Institute of Innovation Research and a RADMA scholar used the LinkedIn platform to identify collaborative R&D when investigating offshoring of R&D.
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – IP Pledge or Open IP
Intellectual Property (IP) offers huge value to firms so why do some companies give away their patents for free? This is the conundrum being considered by Jonas Ehrnsperger, a RADMA scholar studying at CTM, University of Cambridge.
Best papers of the R&D Management Symposium
Choosing the best conference papers from the R&D Management Symposium was a difficult job says Dr Lawrence Dooley, University of Cork, one of the judging panel that also included Prof Ellen Enkel University of Duisberg, Essen, Dr Letizia Mortara, University of Cambridge and Prof Paavo Ritala
Usability testing of new COVID-19 workplace test kits
Testing for COVID-19 can provide reassurance, even if the result is positive, explains Val Lynch of AND Technology Research, the company provided usability testing to answer 3 questions for the client.
How do companies deal with potentially disruptive technologies?
Within Fraunhofer disruption field study, companies were asked about how they manage potentially disruptive technologies at different stages from identification, through development to implementation – in comparison to other technologies.
Ingenuity in the face of crisis gives hope for a strong recovery
“We are reviewing how innovative SME’s have changed their strategies over the last 100 days, says Alberto Di Minin. “This has given me hope.” As Europe adapts to the ‘new normal’ there is evidence that knowledge-based companies are rising to the challenges.
Pirelli’s approach to Technology Roadmapping
Globalization has meant that the development of tyres has become increasingly complex and dynamic. Guido Amati, R&D Project Portfolio Management at Pirelli Tyres describes Pirelli’s approach to Technology Roadmapping
Effective decision-making in R&D: a case study using biofilms
Deciding which project to progress when the technologies and applications are diverse is a challenge that faces many innovation managers. In this guest blog Mark Richardson, CEO of the National Biofilms Innovation Centre, discusses how he resolved this problem and introduced an objective scoring system for projects.
Is the media sustainable? Interview with Paavo Ritala
The sustainability of the media industry is one of the issues that is of interest to Paavo Ritala, Professor of Strategy & Innovation at LUT University. The COVID-19 crisis has shown that information provider and ‘watch-dog’ are among the many roles that that media has. Paavo talks about his research interests and his current project #MediaContradictions.
Ambidextrous organisational design – balancing radical innovation with daily business
How do you balance the generation of short-term profit, gained from the exploitation of existing knowledge and success patterns, with long-term success to be achieved from building up new knowledge, new solutions and new structures? Patrick Olivan, with the support of Prof. Joachim Warschat, discusses the design of an ambidextrous organisation that can sustain daily business while pursuing radical innovation.
Challenges of opening labs after lockdown
Gradual lifting of lockdown by the UK government means that laboratories in both academic and industrial settings will be opening, Steve Bone explains this is far from trivial and offers some advice on best practice.
How to avoid the pitfalls of trying to be an instant R&D expert in every science field
Quickly assessing a mass of diverse and sometimes misleading information, such as that presented by the COVID-19 crisis is exactly what many R&D managers have to do, writes Steve Bone. Fortunately, there are tools that can help those that need to be instant experts.
RADMA: Celebrating 40 years professional identity and impact on health system innovation
“The Good Doctor” prescribes that physicians are meant to be clinicians, teachers, and researchers. However, the digital revolution of the last few decades has dramatically changed the role and expectations of physicians, explains Adler Archer, King’s Business School, King’s College London and a RADMA scholar. “I am investigating how professional identity and neo-institutionalism shape whether […]
R&D Management Symposium going virtual on 4-5 August 2020
It is confirmed that the 2020 R&D Management Symposium “Invention to Innovation: Creating the Conditions for Impact” is to be virtual and free to participate.
Providing solutions in emergencies – call for papers
The current global challenge has provoked interesting approaches to innovation – from collaborative working and open innovation, to crowdsourcing and repurposing of labs and equipment. If you have some interesting examples – then R&D Management has a call for papers for its special issue
Collaborative innovation in a time of social distancing – 5 things we now know
Like so many meetings, the IfM’s Open Innovation Forum’s March workshop, was hastily reconvened into a virtual event due to the coronavirus crisis. Co-organiser Dominic Oughton, discusses some of the learning points.
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – growth investment matrix
“My research provides a Growth Investment Matrix to support business growth through Corporate Venture Capital (CVC) assessing where the linkages are deliberate or to align emergent strategy,” says Dayo Abinusawa of the AWA Business School, he has been supported by RADMA.
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – using consumer behaviours for business model innovation
“‘Plans are only good intentions unless they immediately degenerate into hard work’ Peter Druker is quoted as saying but I have found that in many cases, intentions cannot materialise into actual behaviour,” says Tung Dao, a PhD Research Student at Nottingham Trent University who has been helped by a RADMA grant.
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – impact of organisational behaviour on innovation
Combining organisational behaviour research with innovation and technology management to come up with a innovation process based on behavioural basis rather than structure is the aim of research by Cihat Cengiz, supported by RADMA.
Reviewing the innovation pipeline to detect timely opportunity
Rapid responders are organizations that are already reviewing the innovation pipeline to detect timely opportunity. In response to new environmental factors and circumstances, they pause briefly and ask this of the projects in their pipeline, “is it time…?”
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – roadmapping for aligning technology and markets
Characterising the emergence of technology ventures by applying roadmapping principles, is the theme of Yuta Hirose, research supported by RADMA.
Interesting papers from Technovation
Imoh Ilevbare works at Institute for Manufacturing, University of Cambridge as a Product Manager he has provided a quick overview of these papers from Technovation
Reflections on business model innovation and future vision
Business model innovation is an essential driver of a company’s competitive advantage, however, successful models seem to result from trial and error exercises rather than from a systematic process. This offers an opportunity for scholars to increase the ability of firms to engage a more systematic approach argues Cyrine Tangour.
The Future of R&D and Innovation: Development, models and tools
Dr Sven Schimpf, Managing Director of Fraunhofer Group comments that the future of R&D and Innovation is highly uncertain. “A higher degree of interdisciplinarity, openness, flexibility and digitalisation with a stronger focus on user value are among the developments that we foresee in the future.
Systems Theory Approaches for Innovation and Entrepreneurship Research: Gaining novel insight into factors that influence innovation processes and outcomes
Convergence between technologies and approaches stimulates innovation but understanding the multiple interactions can be problematic, Kevin Reuter of West Saxon University discusses the need for a systems approach to research.
Reflections on technology from Davos 2020 – a review
Computing technologies from 5G to artificial intelligence and their implications for the economy and society were major features of the recent Davos Conference, according to analysts at Mckinsey writing in an article ‘Reflections on technology from Davos 2020’. Dr Steve Bone reviews the article suggests that computing is just the most visible part of disruptive technology.
Intellectual Property Management
Digitisation is creating new challenges for intellectual property, Martin Bader discusses this ahead of the R&D Management Conference
Frugal Innovation and Digitalization: Crossing Boundaries and Creating Impact
Evidence is busting the myth that frugal innovation is just for global south countries, this approach may provide a mechanism for affordable and sustainable solutions, Suchit Ahuja discusses this phenomenon.
Enabling sustainability-oriented innovation in R&D management: Organization, frameworks, methods and tools
Although sustainability aspects are included in innovation strategy, it is far from being an integral part of innovation management, observes Claus Lang-Koetz. His track addresses the role of sustainability-oriented innovation in R&D management – from a theoretical but also a practical perspective.
R&D Management Conference 2020 – tracks cover latest thinking
Innovations across the boundaries – is the theme for the 2020 R&D Management Conference and there are 25 tracks to choose from and we have asked the track chairs to give an insight into what fascinates them about the subject. If you would like to submit an abstract then hurry as the deadline is 10th February.
Innovation for sustainability what is needed to fulfil such a role?
Innovation for sustainability is a way for firms to improve their competitiveness while also facilitating the greater good – but both facilitating and constraining forces are at play for businesses to actually adopt such a role.
How can universities, through social impact, support a sustainable future?
Universities all over the world are facing pressure to deliver knowledge in a way that supports a more sustainable development of societies. Emphasis on this ‘third mission’ is creating discussion over the techniques used.
Social Systems and Future Manufacturing (SSFM)
How do social systems shape the development and diffusion of new manufacturing technologies and how will these societal systems be affected by new technological trends? These are the big questions being discussed in this track.
Can frugal innovation make a wave in ‘red oceans’?
‘Red oceans’ is term coined to describe known market spaces, where to compete industry rivals need to be increasingly cut throat.
Frugal innovation has the potential to disrupt these assumptions rewriting many of the rules of marketing.
University-Industry owned Joint Laboratories: A new hype?
There is a lot of work done on the third mission, knowledge triangle and triple helix which postulate that universities research should be more aligned to industrial application but the best methods of implementing this are unclear. This track looks at the current findings.
Towards a data science of startups
Details of nearly a million startups from all over the world are now available through publicly accessible databases, this track explores how this wealth of information can be used.
Marketing Innovations: Adoption, diffusion and commercialisation
Traditional marketing techniques often prove to be ineffective for the design and diffusion of truly innovative offers, hence the need for a real “innovation marketing” but what techniques are available?
Corporate and start-up collaboration: the impact of digital technologies
Digital technology has made it much easier to develop, test and launch new products, lowering the barrier of entry for start-ups but should they collaborate with encumbents? Who wins? Ferran Giones discusses.
Contextual Specificity in R&D Management
Diversity in the different fields of R&D is often overlooked in the drive to create general-purpose frameworks, track chair Dr Jeremy Klein is looking forward to exploring this topic at the R&D Management Conference.
The role of Public Research Organizations in industry knowledge generation
The role of Public Research Organizations (PROs) is often overlooked, however these institutes are often engaged in capital-intensive research projects that may incur significant public investment. Raffaella Manzini discusses the role of PROs and their value to industry.
RADMA: supporting students for 40 years – Kevin Reuther
My PhD research, supported by RADMA, is on interconnected influence factors at the front-end stage of innovation processes, using a systems theory perspective
Don’t believe the technology hype – track at R&D Management Conference
Over hyped technology is part of the journey – but does this kill or make innovation? An R&D Management Conference track is exploring the dynamics of technological hype and legitimacy – two phenomena at heart of any technology’s innovation journey.
Must read papers on aspects of R&D Management
Want to know about R&D Management but too busy to read all the journals? The editors for R&D Today have each selected a journal and have made a selection of the most interesting papers of recent years.
Approaches to resource-constrained innovation in emerging markets
The economic rise in emerging markets – especially in China and India – has created a new market segment, variously referred to as the ‘middle’ market and sometimes the ‘good-enough’ market. However, there are some misconceptions around the different innovation types in this area which may limit the ability to derive informed implications for strategy and operations.
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – plastic reduction in packaging
RADMA funded fieldwork for Xuezi Ma’s research on plastic reduction in packaging for the Fast Moving Consumer Goods sector. She interviewed 15 companies across Europe producing 20 case-studies.
R&D Management Conference: Innovation across Boundaries call for proposals
Look beyond the walls. The call for proposals has opened for the 2020 R&D Management conference: Innovation Across Boundaries: Historical Reflection and Future Vision closing date 28th October 2019
50 Most Influential Projects of the last 50 years announced
In a first-of-its-kind ranking, the PMI showcases the transformative power of projects and how project management has helped turn these ideas into reality.
RADMA: Celebrating 40 years -Re-engineering business for sustainability
As Tesla engineers announce they are extending the life expectance of car batteries to 10 years. This RADMA scholar discusses his interest in the one million mile electric car
RADMA: Celebrating 40 years – unpicking the motivations for R&D collaboration
Maximising value from strategic resources, is the most influential motivation for R&D collaboration. Kyung Ju Han found hospitals partnered with universities to gain grant funding and SME’s to shorten the lead time from lab to clinic.
40 years of funding for R&D management research
For 40 years RADMA has supported research and provided opportunities to share best practice
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – Design after manufacture lessons from Tesla
Digitisation and connectivity are changing the product lifecycle model comments Antti Lyyra, support by RADMA allowed him to present his paper at the Innovation and Product Development Management Conference.
The Innovation Challenge
In my view, the conference has been a fantastic opportunity to discuss cutting-edge themes with colleagues from all over the world. We discussed the challenges and relaxed within one of the most prestigious engineering university in the world, comments Letizia Mortara.
R&D Management Conference looks to the future of metanationals
Is this the age of metanationals? As companies such as Google, Amazon, Unilever, Dyson become effectively stateless, this is creating challenges for R&D managers. The issues were discussed in a keynote for the R&D Management Conference 2019
RADMA: celebrating 40 years – new product development for IoT
The Internet of Things products and services aim to increase organisational value and turnover. Boyeun Lee is developing guidelines on new product development processes for this exciting area.
Crowdsourcing without profit: How to implement ‘Open Social Innovation’
Open innovation has emerged as a novel way for organizations to innovate by collaborating with external stakeholders. Crowdsourcing is one contemporary application of open innovation – as Krithika Randhawa of UTS Sydney shares here.
Renault is on track for autonomous driving
Scenario identification is creating use case definitions for real world driving safety critical scenarios, explains Rémi Bastien, Vice President for Automotive Prospective, Renault Group.
Are female solvers an undervalued resource in crowdsourcing?
Crowdsourcing has the potential to deliver high-value solutions at very low cost, according to Christopher L. Tucci Professor of Management of Technology. Female solvers, in the outer circle develop particularly successful solutions.
Leveraging Open Innovation for societal impact – an R&D Management special issue
How could open innovation (OI) collaborative practices provide a way to tackle the world’s most pressing societal challenges – eradication of disease? Reduction of carbon emissions? Creation of more sustainable products and services? A special issue of R&D Management investigates this proposition from a number of perspectives and provides insights into how current open innovation […]
What is the impact of Industry 4.0 on innovation design processes?
Understanding of Industry 4.0 so far has been limited to process automation and performance improvement, undervaluing the role of the Industry 4.0 design principles, such as interoperability, transparency, technical assistance, decentralization argues Lia Tirabeni, 7.2 Track co-chair.
Emerging landscapes in a world of 4.0
One of the major challenges we face in the world of 4.0 is how to change the way we think, train and work with data in order to create value
RADMA celebrating 40 years – The rise of Fab Spaces
Rise of Fab Spaces and the impact on innovation is a research interest of Valeria Dammicco, one of many students supported by RADMA over the last 40 years.
Record number of submissions to R&D Management Conference
The response to our call for abstracts has been impressive, says Prof. Thierry Rayna, Professor of Innovation Management École Polytechnique.
Gravitating towards the quadruple helix
Unlike other studies, the Trentino Regional Innovation System demonstrates that international connections are vital, to increase prestige and success in a globalised economic system, comments Professor Lew.
R&D Management Conference 2019 call for papers open
The R&D Management Conference 2019 has opened a call for submissions. Topics relating to this year’s conference main topic ‘The Innovation Challenge: Bridging Research, Industry and Society” are welcomed. Deadline March 1st 2019
The Cost of Time in R&D projects
Rick Mitchell explains how to estimate in financial terms the impact of delay to an R&D project – a vital input when deciding what actions are worth taking.
Loss of Professor Alan Pearson
It is with sadness that RADMA has announced the death of Professor Alan Pearson, who passed away this month. Alan made a huge contribution to the R&D community. He was founder of the R&D Research Unit at Manchester Business School, founder of the R&D Management Journal, founder of the R&D Management Conference series and the […]
R&D Management conference opportunity to discuss observations
The response of established businesses to the perceived threat of disruptive technologies is often counter productive, observes Prof. Thierry Rayna, Professor of Innovation Management École Polytechnique and co-chair of the 2019 R&D Management Conference.
Are these the best (or worst) festive inventions?
By using AI at the front end of invention the ideas are not subject to personal bias. However, human evaluation of the options is still vital to ensure feasibility
Can Agile be used for hardware development?
Can Agile project management methods – widely used in software – be applied in projects involving hardware? Rick Mitchell considers the question.
Preparing for the R&D Management Conference
The R&D Management Conference moves about the world and is organised by a new team each time, we asked Sihem Jouini, a professor at HEC Paris, to ask her how she got involved.
Reflections on the Milan R&D Management Conference
I’ve often been asked what the value of the R&D Management Conference is to a practitioner such as myself. For me, it’s often snippets of ideas that I’ve never come across before.
The problem of plastic: Open Innovation Forum tackles sustainable packaging
The OI Forum tackled the packaging challenge using a structured ‘Design Thinking’ approach to discover new solutions
Call for special track proposals
“The Innovation Challenge: Bridging Research, Industry and Society” is the theme of the 2019 R&D Management Conference, that will take place from 17-21 June 2019 in Paris. There is a call for proposals that will reflect the themes of the conference. Suggestions can be seen here and they include subjects such as the adoption and […]
Can creativity help a company survive in turbulent times?
To compete effectively in a marketplace marked by turbulence, those that place an emphasis on the soft skills will have an advantage, argue authors of this paper
Are Triple Helix spaces the future for innovation development?
Knowledge spaces, that focus on collaboration of different actors may provide new ways of producing knowledge that combines relevance and scientific excellence
Review of roadmapping software
A new study of roadmapping software provides a useful overview of the available tools and a decision-making aid.
Call for Papers: Innovation Management Research Methods
R&D Management has a special issue coming up on ‘Innovation Management Research Methods’ and is inviting submissions.
How to get your research published Wiley offers ten top tips
Ten top tips for getting your research published
How to support SMEs become more innovative through knowledge-transfer
Small and medium sized businesses account for 66 per cent of total employment in the EU and contribute 57 per cent of the value – but how much support do they have to be innovative and can coaching help?
Make time for re-creation
The quality of our ideas can be improved by connecting different concepts and building on existing ideas. In fact, researchers showed that over five weeks a meditating group was able to significantly increase their ability to improve on each other’s ideas.
Improving the assessment of innovation and technology management capabilities
Increasingly the alignment of technology management and innovation management is seen as crucial to the performance of knowledge and manufacturing-based organisations, creating a demand for improved methods to assess performance.
Good techniques for prioritising projects
Gut feeling may be a valid basis for making decisions about your personal life but a more objective and rigorous approach is needed to prioritise projects in a portfolio
Promoting Innovation through Living Labs
Living labs offer a platform for companies to engage in open innovation activities with customers, to collect vital ideas, useful feedback, valuable user experiences, and new information,
Greetings from Milan!
Over 43 highly motivated Ph.D. students and a rich plethora of experts from academia and industry were attracted to the Ph.D. Colloquium ahead of the R&D Management Conference and engaged in critical but constructive discussions on their research ambitions. Professors Vittorio Chiesa, Federico Frattini, Davide Chiaroni, Simone Franzò and Angelo Cavallo monitored the Ph.D. weekend […]
Start-up Pitch at R&D Management Conference
A new feature of this year’s R&D Management Conference held in Milan was a start-up showcase with 15 entrepreneurs.
Are these the best tools for R&D Management?
There are many excellent tools and techniques for R&D management, but all too often people re-invent the wheel as knowledge of these gems is not shared. Here are some of the tools that RADMA trustees and contributors to R&D Today have found useful, but we are keen to know what has been missed or what [...]
Is Stage-Gate still relevant now Agile development is being adopted?
The biggest thing that separates winners from losers is their ability to understand the marketplace, see the unmet needs of the customer and build the voice-of-the-customer. Dr Robert G Cooper, originator of Stage-Gate discusses success, the impact of Agile of R&D development and his hopes for the future.
Strong industry presence at R&D Management Conference
The digital revolution has impacted every aspect of our lives and for R&D management it has changed the clock speed. There is increased pressure to ‘get something out there’ and to improve new products iteratively with the involvement of partners and end-users. Accelerated development means that rigorous processes, tools and techniques become more mission critical. […]
What skills do we need for Open Innovation?
To be successful an OI team needs around forty specific skills covering the four stages of OI – Want, Find, Get, Manage – these skills fall into four categories: introspective, extrospective, interactive and technical.
R&D Post-Project Reviews: Lessons Learnt or Lessons Lost?
For every new product development important lessons are learnt but unless these are captured and shared future teams will waste time and effort solving similar problems, argues Keith Goffin. Good post-project reviews (PPRs) can be invaluable in making future developments more productive.
RADMA trustees meet up at Wiley
The RADMA trustees meeting was hosted by Wiley Business in Oxford
Structured approach is the secret to successful R&D management
Phil Kennedy, Head of External & Digital Innovation at 3M, describes his company’s unique approach to fostering a culture of collaboration and innovation.
Working with the best people is more important than employing them
Six things I have learnt about R&D management – Mark Richardson, former VP of Research and Technology at Smith & Nephew plc, shares his experiences.
Why technology entrepreneurs fail to realise potential of new product developments
Yuta Hirose discusses why technology entrepreneurs fail to realise their potential as part of a PhD funded by the RADMA Doctoral Studies Programme.
Digitally-enabled business model innovation
How Digital Innovation can enable (or hinder) “Digitally-enabled Business Model Innovation”.
Circular economy put into practice: opportunities and challenges for innovative industrial paradigms
Circular Economy has become one of the hot topics in public debates about new and more sustainable industrial paradigms.
Environmental sustainability, social impact and innovation
Companies are increasingly investing in innovation with the intention of generating a social or environmental impact, which requires trade-offs and balance…
Managing at the intersection between Innovation and supply chain management
Supply chain innovations can drive business model innovations and vice versa.
Innovation dynamics and organizational performance: novel strategies and approaches
Scholars are studying novel search strategies, which offer new perspectives and directions to conduct R&D strategies, for example temporal boundary spanning.
Food for Thought – The Open Innovation Forum finds a hotbed for start-ups
Dominic Oughton reflects on the 2017 Open Innovation Forum Pitching Contest and the ways in which the competition has evolved since its inception.
R&D – Fit for the Future – Shaping the Digital Transformation
Fraunhofer IAO are conducting their third expert survey on current R&D trends in companies and are asking for responses.
Call for papers open for R&D Management Conference 2018
The 2018 R&D Management Conference has opened its call for papers – the deadline for abstracts is 15 February 2018.
RADMA announces 2017 doctoral studies programme
The RADMA Doctoral Studies Programme award provides up to three years funding offering an opportunity to concentrate on the studentship for the period of the award.
Do you make technology choices according to your ideology?
Faced with the question of whether they make technology choices according to ideology, most people involved in R&D would say “Of course not”. But the truth is more complex.
A busy time in Leuven!
R&D Management Conference 2017 attendants from academia and business were able to challenge and discuss their insights and the many still open questions we face and dare to ask.
Letizia Mortara to head up new R&D Management Conference office
Dr Letizia Mortara has been appointed head of the R&D Management Conference Office, a new position announced by RADMA chairman Jeremy Klein at the 2017 Leuven conference.
The “Italian way” to Open Innovation
Rapid changes in the external environment require organizations to embrace the paradigms of ‘Open Innovation’ and ‘Open organization’. Here three different approaches are discussed to show how Italian firms are taking such paradigms from theory to practice.
Innovation deficit at heart of Europe’s slow growth
At the heart of Europe’s slow growth lies its innovation deficit. Europe does not capitalise enough on the knowledge it has and produces.
Jeremy Klein opens R&D Management Conference
A structured approach to R&D Management helps to de-risk innovation and this is why sharing best practice is vital for the discipline, Dr Jeremy Klein, chair of RADMA, said to delegates at the R&D Management Conference
5 essential tips to implementing an open innovation approach in your organization
Your approach to Open Innovation should be defined by the corporate strategy, say Professor Ellen Enkel. A defender’s strategy needs a different approach to a prospector and culture will eat strategy for breakfast if you don’t selected the right people. She gives her 5 tips for success.
Open innovation
Open Innovation (OI) is an approach whereby organisations, originally companies but increasingly governments and NGOs, seek to collaborate with others to deliver innovation.
Managing the R&D pipeline
For many companies the R&D pipeline contains 'the future of the company' as it is the main and often the only, source of future products. Therefore managing the pipeline is a business function, not just a technical one. The pipeline will contain a variety of projects, some short-term and others long-term, but all involving a greater [...]
Managing international R&D
There are many challenges when managing international R&D, some of these are similar to those of international management in general but some elements come into sharper focus due to the concentrated nature of the knowledge assets.
Technology strategy
How do you choose which technologies the firm should invest in? How should new technologies be acquired, developed, protected and integrated? How can you decide the most appropriate means of exploiting technology resources and assets?
Roadmapping
Roadmapping is a powerful technique for planning an organisation’s technological capabilities to ensure they meet its commercial or strategic goals. The concept provides a metaphorical image of a roadmap being used to navigate a business through partly known/unknown territories.
Ideation and creativity in R&D
Creativity can seem quite a messy discipline, but I find it useful to categorise it into 4 aspects: process, people, product and place, based on work by the pioneering US creativity researcher, Mel Rhodes.
How do you gain consumer trust in artificial intelligence?
Professor Ellen Enkel explored trust in two dimensions: trust in technology and trust in the innovating firm to understand the relationship between humans and automation. She identifies the factors essential for reducing perceived risk.
Programme announced for R&D Management Conference 2017
How can we make a difference in a world ‘awash with ideas’? This is one of the keynote addresses at the R&D Management Conference 1-5 July, which provides an opportunity to hear the latest thinking in this progressive field.
Is Twitter’s R&D providing a return on investment?
Research and development expenditure is a key area for a technology company like Twitter. You would expect it to be a significant cost, and sure it enough it is. You would also expect to see a significant return from such investment in user growth and ultimately in revenue.
Embedding roadmapping – the role of software
The programme for the next R&D Management Conference is shaping up. There will be a good mix of sessions of interest both to academia and industry, including a session of the role of software in roadmapping.
R&D Management Conference 2017 call for papers
Call for papers for the R&D Management Conference 2017 special session Intellectual property management for Sustainable Innovation.
R&D Investment on UK government agenda
Long term investment in research and development and a new technology strategy are part of a raft of proposals announced today by UK prime minister Theresa May.
Practical Study on Disruptive Technologies and Roadmapping
How do companies handle potentially disruptive technologies from the identification up to their integration and how are these integrated into roadmaps applied in practice?
Management’s role is to nurture innovation, says Warren East
At Rolls-Royce we consider innovation to be the lifeblood of a successful company. It is also hugely satisfying; it creates enthusiasm, as success makes people innovate more and creates a kind of cooperative virtuous circle, says Warren East, Chief Executive of Rolls-Royce.
Decisions in projects: how good is intuition?
Intuition can be very powerful, but when faced with novel situations our intuition is surprisingly easily led astray. There’s a whole body of work on this in the field of Behavioural Economics.
R&D Management Conference 2017
The R&D Management Conference 2017 covers a rich and varied range of topics of interest both to academics and practitioners active in the field of innovation, technology and Research and Development management.
Best papers presented at R&D Management Conference
‘Very relevant and excellently operationalised paper on the phenomenon of circular economy with focus on cradle to cradle quality standard. This is one of the first works in this area providing such broad empirical evidence’
R&D Management Conference
A highlight of the year is the R&D Management Conference. The 2016 conference ‘From Science to Society: Innovation and Value Creation’ was held in Cambridge, UK, and the 2017 conference will be held at the University of Leuven, Belgium, from 2-5 July.
Meet the editors
Over 300 papers have been presented at the R&D Management Conference representing a huge body of work.
Creativity, roadmapping, devising technology strategies: key R&D issues
R&D Today officially launched at R&D Management Conference 2016; community website aims to be ‘trip advisor’ of best practice.
Frugal innovation in a complex world
Resources are increasingly scarce and organizations are looking for ways to do more with less. The frugal approach can be applied to intellectual and skilled resources as much as to physical ones – something of relevance in a world where R&D productivity is increasingly an issue.
R&D Management Conference 3-6 July
R&D Management Conference is kindly sponsored by Beko, BP, thyssenkrupp, Routledge Taylor & Francis and Wiley. Sessions will be of interest to academics and practitioners.
R&D Management Conference highlights for practitioners
R&D Management Conference includes many sessions of interest to practitioners including keynotes by Warren East of Rolls-Royce plc, Joe de Sousa AstraZeneca, David Teece Haas School of Business and Mark Samuels NIHR.
Where do ideas come from?
People often think that being innovative means having a lot of ideas. But where do the ideas come from? The history of innovation is full of examples of people suddenly coming up with ideas apparently “out of the blue” with Isaac Newton’s apple only one of many examples. But when you look more closely, you […]
New avenues for business model innovation
Despite the high levels of interest and attention that have been applied to business model innovation, the phenomenon still represents ‘a slippery construct to study’.
This fuzziness of the phenomenon is caused by inconsistencies in the conceptual framework of business models, which reside somewhere between economics and business strategy without possessing a solid theoretical anchoring in either field.
Once upon a time…
Stories reinforce our models and understanding of how innovation works in a vivid way. Not for nothing do they form the staple diet of most conference presentations, and in a more restrained fashion form the core of our teaching explains John Bessant.
Theme editors
Guest Theme Editors act as the focal point and editor for their part of the website. There will generally be two editors per Theme, one from an Academic background and one a Practitioner, acting in partnership.
Open versus closed innovation: are the metrics good enough?
Today’s business reality is not based on pure open innovation but on companies that invest simultaneously in closed as well as open innovation activities.
Too much openness can negatively impact companies’ long-term innovation success, because it could lead to loss of control and core competences. Moreover, a closed innovation approach does not serve the increasing demands of shorter innovation cycles and reduced time to market.
How good are you at delivering business value from technology?
A new approach has been developed at the University of Cambridge Institute for Manufacturing (IfM) to help companies assess how good they are at managing innovation and new technologies.
The development of successful new products and services is critical for profitable, sustainable growth. Investing in new technology is often essential but represents a significant challenge in today’s globalised and rapidly changing markets.
Doctoral Studies Awards 2015/16
The following have received RADMA support for their studies.
Doctoral Studies Programme 2016
The Doctoral Studies call for applications opens 1st November 2015 and closes 29th February 2016. This award provides up to three years funding to prospective or mid-study PhD students attending a UK university.



























































































































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