SES # | TOPICS | CASES | READINGS |
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Introduction | |||
1 | Dynamics of technological innovation | Gladwell, Malcolm. "Smaller: The Disposable Diaper and the Meaning of Progress." The New Yorker, November 16, 2001. |
Additional readingsChristensen, Clayton. "Exploring the Limits of the Technology S-Curve. Part I: Component Technologies." Product and Operations Management Journal 1, no. 4 (1992): 334-357. ———. "Exploring the Limits of the Technology S-Curve. Part II: Architectural Technologies." Product and Operations Management Journal 1, no. 4 (1992): 358-366. Moore, Gordon. "Cramming More Components onto Integrated Circuits," Electronics, April 19, 1965. (PDF) |
2 | Industrial implications of technological innovation |
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3 | Competitive implications of market and technology dynamics | Gladwell, Malcolm. "The Televisionary." The New Yorker, May 27, 2002. |
Afuah, A., and J. Utterback. "Responding to Structural Industry Changes: A Technological Evolution Perspective." Industrial and Corporate Change 6 (1997): 183-202. |
Exploring innovations: experimentation and iteration | |||
4 | Systematizing innovation; "What's the Big Idea;" IDEO | Christensen, Clayton. and Scott D. Anthony. "What's the Big Idea?" Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-602-105, September 26, 2005. |
Fleming, L. "Breakthroughs and the Long Tail of Innovation." MIT Sloan Management Review 49, no. 1 (2007): 69-74. |
5 | Scoping technology: Advanced Inhalation Research | Roberts, Michael, and Diana Gardner. "Advanced Inhalation Research, Inc." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-899-292, September 9, 2003. | Thomke, S. "R&D Comes to Services: Bank of America's Pathbreaking Experiments." Harvard Business Review 81, no. 4 (2003): 70-79. |
6 | No class; teams work on assignment 1 | ||
7 | Iterating design: Team New Zealand | Iansiti, Marco, and Alan MacCormack. "Team New Zealand." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-697-040, April 17, 1997. | Thomke, S. "Capturing the Real Value of Innovation Tools." MIT Sloan Management Review 47, no. 2 (2006): 24-32. |
8 | Experimenting with markets: innovation at 3M | Thomke, S. and Ashok Nimgade. "Innovation at 3M Corp." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-699-012, July 23, 2002. |
Additional readingsHo, Teck-Hua, and Kay-Yut Chen. "New Product Blockbusters: The Magic and Science of Prediction Markets." California Review Management 50, no. 1 (2007): 144-158. Urban, Glen L., and Eric von Hippel. "Lead User Analyses for the Development of New Industrial Products." Management Science 34, no. 5 (1988): 569-82. |
9 | Capstone: Iridium | MacCormack, Alan, and Kerry Herman. "The Rise and Fall of Iridium." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-601-040, November 28, 2001. |
Additional readingsEvans, David, and Karen Webster. "Designing the Right Product Offerings." MIT Sloan Management Review 49, no. 1 (2007): 44-50.
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Executing innovations: organizing to execute | |||
10 | Organizing innovation teams: 'The Bakeoff' | Gladwell, Malcolm. "The Bakeoff: Project Delta Aims to Create the Perfect Cookie." The New Yorker, September 5, 2005. |
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11 | Organizing flexible processes; 'Internet Time' exercise | Iansiti, M, and A. MacCormack. "Living on Internet Time." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-697-052, November 13, 1996. |
Iansiti, M., and A. MacCormack. "Developing Products on Internet Time." Harvard Business Review 75, no. 5 (1997): 108-117. Additional readingsCusumano, Michael. "How Microsoft Makes Large Teams Work Like Small Teams." MIT Sloan Management Review 39, no. 1 (1997): 9-20. |
12 | Incentivizing and organizing innovators: GSK | Huckman, Robert. "Glaxo-Smith Kline: Reorganizing Drug Discovery." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-605-074, May 17, 2005. | Goffee, Rob, and Gareth Jones. "Leading Clever People." Harvard Business Review 85, no. 3 (2007): 72-79. |
13 | Organizing innovation between firms and communities; One Laptop Per Child, innovation communities (Visitor: Mako Hill) | Baldwin, Carliss, Siobhan O'Mahoney, and James Quinn. "IBM and Linux (A)." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-903-083, June 26, 2003. |
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14 | Incentivizing and organizing external innovators: D-Wave | MacCormack, A., A. Agrawal, and R. Henderson. "D-Wave Systems: Building a Quantum Computer." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-604-073, April 26, 2004. | Huston, Larry, and Nabil Sakkab. "Connect and Develop: Inside Proctor & Gamble's New Model for Innovation." Harvard Business Review 84, no. 3 (2006): 58-67. |
15 | Negotiation innovation work between firms and academia (SpudSpy & negotiation exercise) | Snow, D., and Lee Flemming. "SpudSpy." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-605-059, February 3, 2005. | Edwards, M., F. Murray, and R. Yu. "Gold in the Ivory Tower." Nature Biotechnology 24 (2006): 509-515. |
Exploiting innovations: options, portfolios and platforms | |||
16 | No class; time for project work | ||
17 | Dynamics of the market for ideas; designing the value chain |
Gans, J., and S. Stern. "The Product Market and the Market for Ideas: Commercialization Strategies for Technology Entrepreneurs." Research Policy 32, no. 2 (2003): 333-350.
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18 | Leveraging portfolio development: A123 (Visitor: Ric Fulop, Founder A123 Systems) | MacCormack, A., and S. Sucher. "le Petit Chef." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-602-080, November 13, 2002. |
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19 | Capstone: leveraging platforms in online video gaming (Visitor: Cyrus Beagly, Sloan '02) | Eisenmann, T. "Electronic Arts in Online Gaming." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-804-140, October 12, 2006. |
Prugl, R., and M. Schreier. "Learning from Leading Edge Customers at The Sims." R&D Management 36, no. 3 (2006): 237-250. Background only (optional)Sviokla, J., and A. Paoni. "Every Product's a Platform." Harvard Business Review 83, no. 10 (2005): 17-18.
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20 | Portfolio management processes: le Petit Chef | Bowen, Kent, Kenneth P. Morse, and Douglas Cannon. "A123 Systems." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-606-114, May 8, 2006. |
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Renewing innovations: organizing disruption | |||
21 | Internal vs. external sources of renewal: Intel | MacCormack, Alan, and Kerry Herman. "Intel Research: Exploring the Future." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-605-051, October 27, 2005. |
Background only (optional)
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22 | Renewing innovation; corporate venturing; IBM Alphaworks | Chesbrough, Henry. "Inxight: Incubating a Xerox Technology Spinout." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-699-019, December 17, 1998. | Wolcott, Robert, and Michael J. Lippitz. "The Four Models of Corporate Entrepreneurship." MIT Sloan Management Review 49, no. 1 (2007): 75-82. |
23 | Renewing innovation; internal venturing; GE imagination breakthroughs | Bartlett, Christopher A., Brian J. Hall, and Nicole Bennett. "GE's Imagination Breakthroughs: The Evo Project." Harvard Business School Case. Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Publishing. Case: 9-907-048, June 19, 2007. | Stringer, Robert. "How to Manage Radical Innovation." California Management Review 42, no. 4 (2000): 70-88. |
24 | Wrap-up |