February 25, 2026

Strategic Management" and Functional Strategies - Recent Research - Papers and Articles

 


Agwu, M.E. & Onwuegbuzie H.(2017) 
Strategic importance of functional level strategies as effective tools for the achievement of organizational goal.   
Archives of Business Research, 5(12), 338-348.


Present business environment is characterized by high levels of competition, dynamism and technological sophistication. This is especially challenging to organizational managers since they have to design and implement strategies that can achieve and sustain competitive advantages. Consequently, the topic functional level strategy plays a pivotal role as organizations aim at gaining industry leadership. This study set out to investigate functional level strategy as a tool for achieving organizational goals. Gaining insight from existing literature and theoretical models four hypothesis were developed and investigated through the survey of the strategic business units of selected financial organizations. Copies of well-structured questionnaire were administered. Findings revealed that there is a relationship between marketing strategy and customer satisfactions, the price of a product and consumer purchasing such product. It also indicated that effective productivity facilitation of the firm resources help expand the firm. The authors recommends that in order to be more competitive, organizational managers must be strategically aware of how effective control of the various functional departments in the organization help organization to be aware of customer needs and offer unique products and services that satisfy such needs.



Industry Forces, Competitive and Functional Strategies and Organizational Performance: Evidence from Restaurants in Istanbul, Turkey☆

Gültekin Altuntaşa Fatih Semerciöza Aslı Mertb Çağlar Pehlivanc

Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences

Volume 150, 15 September 2014, Pages 300-309


Each of industry forces, competitive and functional strategies and organizational performance has been subject to so many studies presented in literature. However, there is a lack of combination of all and consensus on the role of each in restaurant businesses. Thus, this study examines the relationships among industry forces, competitive and functional strategies and organizational performance within the context of “well-known branded” restaurants in Turkish hospitality industry. The study employs a questionnaire that evaluates the attitudes of restaurants of those themes in Istanbul, Turkey without any sampling procedure. Results indicate that competitive strategy of cost leadership is significantly related to bargaining power of suppliers. Functional strategy regarding the brand image relates significantly to the competitive strategy of differentiation. Organizational performance is in a significant relation with functional strategies of human resources and information technologies.


Strategic Management for Competitive Advantage

by Frederick W. Gluck, Stephen P. Kaufman, and A. Steven Walleck

From the HBR Magazine (July 1980)


For the better part of a decade, strategy has been a business buzzword. Top executives ponder strategic objectives and missions. Managers down the line rough out product/market strategies. Functional chiefs lay out “strategies” for everything from R&D to raw-materials sourcing and distributor relations. Mere planning has lost its glamor; the planners have all turned into strategists.







Ud. 25.2.2026
Pub. 15.10.2021



February 16, 2026

Total Innovation Management - Introduction


For industrial engineers innovation and productivity are important themes to focus on. IEs have to organize events, participate in the event actively and promote industrial engineering as the department, function and discipline to promote productivity through innovation.

Background Material - 2025 India National Productivity Week - February 12- 18, Theme - From Ideas to Impact

https://nraoiekc.blogspot.com/2025/01/background-material-2025-india-national.html




 Total Innovation Management Downloaded from www.worldscientific.com

 Re-use and distribution is strictly not permitted, except for Open Access articles.

Total Innovation Management

Theory and Practice

https://doi.org/10.1142/12118 | July 2023

Pages: 528

By (author): Qingrui Xu (Zhejiang University, China)

https://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/12118#t=toc





The Technological and  Competitive environments of the new century require enterprises to implement total innovation 



Since the 1990s,  a tide of new scientific and technological revolutions featuring the universal application of IT technologies and the Internet has led to a fundamental reform of the environment for survival and development, operating objectives and models of enterprises. In the networking environment, the information interaction capability has been greatly improved, thus enabling information to break through space-time limitations and providing enterprises with good material and technical support for the implementation of total innovation management (TIM). 

It is embodied in the following aspects: Information can be distributed and transferred among different regions, functional departments and positions, and all employees within an organization, thus providing employees involved in research, development, production, manufacturing and management with information and relevant knowledge necessary for implementing total innovation.


Information can  also be sufficiently shared with external suppliers, consumers, partners and competitors at a lower cost, thus technically supporting the innovation based on rapid and continuous integration of internal and external resources of an enterprise, even its global resources.  With economic globalization and the vigorous development of e-business and networking transactions, the boundaries of enterprises become increasingly blurred. 


To remain competitive in the market, enterprises have to respond to the overall demands of consumers faster than their competitors, alter the existing innovation management modes, realize the synergy effects between technology and non-technology elements, and fully mobilize employees from all departments such as production, manufacturing, marketing and services to innovate whenever and wherever possible. Only in such a manner can enterprises improve the efficiency of developing new products, continuously expand their market shares and obtain great profits.


 In the framework of total innovation management, total-round innovation is the content, total-involvement innovation is the subject, and total space-time innovation is the form of realization.


As Rui-Min Zhang said, “the world is my human resources department, and the world is my research and development department”. Each of Haier's research and development centers is required to rely on the local advantages to carry out their own innovation, committed to research and development of industry-leading products


The business mode in the Internet era requires zero distance from users. The  “end to end”  distance has to be zero.  One end refers to internal employees, while the other end is users. For this reason, Haier puts forward the transformation from “customer” to “user”, there is similarity between two words, but the meanings are very different. Customers may only have one transaction with the enterprise, who are just the consumers of the product terminal, while users will participate in the design and experience of the product, and they become the designers, producers and consumers of the product. Haier attaches great importance to user innovation and puts forward the concepts such as “user stickiness”, “user multiplier”, etc., hoping to promote the improvement of Haier's innovation capability with the help of the wisdom of users. Among them, Haier's COSMOPlat is an intelligent manufacturing system focusing on user innovation and user value,.

Source - Haier Innovation path, Qingrui xu


Application of Total Innovation Management to Leverage Innovation Capabilities of Chinese Small & Medium Sized Enterprises 


Final Technical Report Submitted to International Development Research Centre (IDRC) by Research Center for Innovation and Development (RCID) - 135 pages


Date of Submission: March, 2010 Grant No.: 104044-001 


RCID (ZJU) Research Team #1: XU Qingrui (Project Leader), SHOU Y.Y. (Project Coordinator), and others.

https://idl-bnc-idrc.dspacedirect.org/bitstreams/ab1d0d89-e595-42ae-b39e-9ee5c613484e/download



Research

Open access

Published: 19 November 2021

Strategic study of total innovation management and its relationship with marketing capabilities in palm conversion and complementary industries

Neda Baniasadi, Davoud Samari, Seyyed Jamal Farajollah Hosseini & Maryam Omidi Najafabadi 

Journal of Innovation and Entrepreneurship volume 10, Article number: 46 (2021)

https://innovation-entrepreneurship.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s13731-021-00179-z


Total Innovation Management

https://ceopedia.org/index.php/Total_Innovation_Management


Preview Book

Total Innovation Management: Theory And Practice


Qingrui Xu

World Scientific, 3 Mar 2023 - Business & Economics - 528 pages

This book is the research report of the 'Construction of Theory and Formation Mechanism of Total Innovation Management (TIM)' (Program No. 70372018), a program funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China. This program aims to discuss and analyze, under the general trend of indigenous innovation, how enterprises construct indigenous innovation capability through total innovation management and to offer enterprises theoretical foundations and practical guidance to develop themselves towards indigenous innovation. The research results are not only the results of a three-year long research but also the reflection of the accumulated experiences of our research center in the field of technology innovation for nearly 40 years. In the field of technology innovation, we have experienced three distinct phases, namely: secondary innovation, portfolio innovation and total innovation. Total innovation is the main characteristic of an innovation-based enterprise. Creating an innovation-oriented enterprise by constructing a total innovation system is the approach that successful foreign enterprises use to move towards excellence and also the only way that Chinese enterprises have to take to become innovation-oriented enterprises that leapfrog in development.

https://books.google.co.in/books?id=6iG_EAAAQBAJ




Ud. 16.2.2026,  21.1.2025

Pub. 12.1.2025












February 7, 2026

Innovation Management - MIT Course and Other Lectures



Innovation Management


First Week  (5 Days)

1. Managing Innovation - Course Outline - MIT Course Ware

2. Technology Driven Dynamics - MIT Course Ware

3. Competitive Implications of Technology - MIT Course Ware

4. Innovation Systems - MIT Course Ware

5. Transforming Invention into Innovation - MIT Course Ware

Second Week

6. Organizing Innovation Teams - MIT Course Ware

7. Incentives to Innovators- MIT Course Ware

8. Collaborating with the community - MIT Course Ware

9. Incentives to External Collaborators  - MIT Course Ware

10. Collaboration with Academia - MIT Course Ware

11. Understanding the Market for Commercializing - MIT Course Ware

12. -New Rules of Innovation

_____________

_____________

13. - Reverse Innovation - Vijay Govind Rajan

_____________

_____________

14. -Disruptive Innovation - Clayton Christensen

___________

___________

15. - Creating an Innovation Mindset

__________

__________

16. - How to Lead Innovation through Implementation
Standford Online

__________

__________

17. - Innovation for Informatics Ventures
___________

___________

18. - The Process of Innovation

___________

___________

19. - Innovation at Proctor and Gamble

___________

___________

20. - Andreas "Andy" Bechtolsheim

More than 30 years ago as a Stanford graduate student, Andreas "Andy" Bechtolsheim designed a simple but powerful computer workstation that would help define the modern technology era and launch Sun Microsystems. He's since founded three more startups, including cloud-networking company Arista Networks, where he is now chairman. His investing foresight is legendary. Not only was he the first major backer for Google, but he's also been an early-stage investor in VMware, Brocade and others. Bechtolsheim discusses the process of innovation and describe its importance to Silicon Valley.

___________

___________

21. An Overview of the General Theory of Innovation
By Greg Yezersky
http://www.triz-journal.com/archives/2008/04/06/

22 Consumer Drive Innovation at Electrolux
A Presentation
http://www.ieadsm.org/Files/Exco%20File%20Library/Workshop,%20Stockholm%20October%202010/Electrolux%20innovation%20process.pdf

23. Gaining Actionable Insight to Increase Innovation
A Research-based Executive Brief
2012, Coveo
http://coveosc.coveo.com/~/media/Files/WhitePapers/Gaining-Actionable-Insight-to-Increase-Innovation.ashx


More related from MIT

https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/24-263-the-nature-of-creativity-fall-2005/

https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/esd-051j-engineering-innovation-and-design-fall-2012/

https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/15-351-managing-the-innovation-process-fall-2002/

https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/15-769-operations-strategy-fall-2010/

https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/2-96-management-in-engineering-fall-2012/



Ud/ 7.1.2026
Pub. 6.6.2014

Innovation on the Production Line - Process innovations - Role of Operations - Paul Trott - Chapter Summary

2025 India National Productivity Week - 12 - 18 February Theme - From Ideas to Impact: Protecting Intellectual Property for Competitive Startups.

For industrial engineers innovation and productivity are important themes to focus on. IEs have to organize events, participate in the event actively and promote industrial engineering as the department, function and discipline to promote productivity through innovation.

Background Material - 2025 India National Productivity Week - February 12- 18, Theme - From Ideas to Impact: Protecting Intellectual Property for Competitive Startups.

https://nraoiekc.blogspot.com/2025/01/background-material-2025-india-national.html



Innovation on the Production Line - Process innovations - Role of  Operations 

Part of Total Innovation Management - Introduction

https://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2025/01/total-innovation-management-introduction.html



Chapter contents

 Operations management 156

 The nature of design and innovation in the context of operations 157

 Design requirements 158

 Design and volumes 160

 Craft-based products 162

 Design simplification 163

 Reverse engineering 163

 Process design 164

 Process design and innovation 166

 The relationship between product and process innovation 168

 Managing the manufacturing: R&D interface in process industries 168

 Stretch: how innovation continues once investment is made 168

 Innovation in the management of the operations process 169

 Triggers for innovation 170

 Design of the organisation and its suppliers: supply chain management 175

 Business process re-engineering (BPR) 178

 Lean innovation 179

 Case study: Innovation on the production line 180

-------------------

 Learning objectives

 When you have completed this chapter you will be able to:

 ● recognise the importance of innovation in operations management;

 ● recognise the importance of sales volume in product design;

 ● recognise the importance of design in the process of making and delivering a product or service;

 ● appreciate the different relationships between product and process innovation;

 ● recognise that much innovation is not patentable; and

 ● provide an understanding of a number of approaches to design and process management.


Making the resources available to continuously innovate and improve the service to customers and developing new markets for products is a difficult and complex task. 

Operations management is about the control of a conversion process from an input to an output. 

A large percentage of the asset base of the organisation normally lies within the functional  boundaries of operations, and it is essential that the assets be used to effect, to gain an advantage in this increasingly competitive world. In particular, the degree of innovation involving these expensive assets is crucial, if the organisation is to prosper.



The nature of design and innovation 

Some innovations are described as ‘leading edge’ and are based upon work from within the R&D laboratories and may involve patent applications. Innovation may also be a new application of an existing technique to a different situation. Something that is new and innovative to one company may be a tried and tested procedure or product to another. Also, every innovative idea may not be suitable to patent but, to those concerned, the novelty, the ingenuity, the problems associated with its introduction and the cost–benefit to the organisation may be just the same.

Large and significant improvements can be followed by incremental and less spectacular innovations and improvements, but senior managers and company directors must be aware of the strengths and weaknesses of both.


Design

Designing and inventing are different in kind. Design is usually more concerned with the process of applying inventions to specific situation. The invented device or machine has to be scaled to fit the situation. Design is also a compromise between the different elements that constitute the design. For example, increasing the wall thickness of a product made from steel may increase the product’s strength, reliability and durability, but only with the consequential increase in product weight and cost.

Design simplification

The purpose of design is to develop things that satisfy needs and meet expectations. By making the design such that the product is easy to produce, the designer enables the operation to consistently deliver these features.  If the product is simple to make, the required quality management procedures will be less complex, easy to understand and, therefore, likely to be more effective. If a design is easy to make, there will be fewer rejects during the manufacturing process and less chance that a substandard product reaches the customer. 

Innovation within the manufacturing function involves searching for new ways of saving costs in the manufacturing process and is a continual process, and the closer designers work with operations and marketing personnel, the more likely the organisation is to succeed. 

(Innovation within the manufacturing function involves searching for new ways of saving costs in the manufacturing process and is a continual process. It is undertaken by Industrial Engineering Department. In the companies using Toyota Production Systems, operations function is also given responsibility and targets for continuous cost reduction. Industrial engineering department works in collaboration with operations departments to support them in cost reduction).

 Process design

 The process design is based on the technology being used within the process. The metal-forming processes, the chemical processing industry, the plastic material processing and electronic assembly are all sophisticated subjects with their own literature.


Process design and innovation

 There can be few who doubt the importance of process innovation to the firm. 

Famous examples, such as Ford’s Model T production line, and Pilkington’s float glass production process  have shown clearly that when it comes to delivering benefits to the firm it is process innovations that can generate enormous wealth for the firm.


Process innovation has received much less attention than product innovation in the literature on innovation management. This may be because product innovations are visible, whereas process innovations frequently are invisible. Indeed, Rosenberg argued that process innovations have been subsumed into treatments of productivity and that many of the process innovations that firms make are silent, requiring little strategic decision making (Rosenberg, 1982). It is, therefore, not surprising that the following idiom often is quoted in the industry: ‘Product innovations are for show whereas process innovations are for dough.’ 

 Process innovations are an important source for increased productivity and they can help a firm gain competitive advantage. The introduction of a cost-reducing process often is accompanied by changes in product design and materials, whilst new products frequently require the  development of new equipment.


 The relationship between product and process innovation

 In a major review of the constructs of product and process innovations, Simonetti  et al. (1995) conclude that 97 per cent of innovations incorporate product and  process innovation attributes.

 Process innovation can be defined as new activities introduced into a firm’s production or service operations to achieve lower costs and/or produce higher quality product  Many  activities and improvements in processes may go unnoticed. Changes in the production process of a cereal box that reduces costs by 10 per cent would not be noticed by end consumers; but certainly it would benefit  the firm.



Innovation in the management of the operations process

The task of all managers is to improve their operation – otherwise they are supervisors and do not justify their job title. New, innovative ways of working within the operations process to gain competitive advantage is, therefore, part of every operations manager’s duties. The question often is how to start? How to trigger off an investigation resulting in an improvement? 

To identify techniques or triggers to help this improvement process,  a number of these triggers are discussed in the following sections.

 An excellent starting point for all analysis is the customer. Quality performance is the key operations management responsibility and innovation to help improve quality performance is critical to all organisations.



 Triggers for innovation

 Gap analysis

 In order to design quality products and services, it is necessary to fully understand your customers and their expectations. 

Expectations change over the period.   Twenty-five years ago, teachers used acetates and overhead projectors in the classroom. Today’s students expect a computer-generated image (for example, PowerPoint) presentation with the occasional video/CD clip to illustrate the lecture, i.e. the student expectations and requirements have increased with time.

 A technique used  to aid understanding of the differences (or gaps) between the customer and producer view or experience of a product or service is called ‘gap analysis’. 


Industrial Engineering - Product and Process Improvement

Industrial engineering emerged out of the efforts of ASME in the area of cost reduction. F.W. Taylor is called father of industrial engineering. It conducts product improvement studies and process improvement studies. Processes are documented first and are subjected to gap analysis or opportunity analysis. All persons connected to the product or process concerned are invited to study the process documentation and presentation and provide suggestions and ideas with potential to improve. These studies provide triggers for ideas for innovation.


Quality circles and process improvement teams

 A quality circle is a small group of voluntary workers who meet regularly to discuss problems (not necessarily restricted to quality matters) and determine possible solutions. The quality circle concept was developed from the ideas of Ishikawa in the 1960s to promote reading of quality magazine specially created for supervisor in Japan. Most people are expert in their job and appreciate this being acknowledged. Members of quality circles are given training in quality control and evaluation techniques. An idea coming from a member of the quality circle is far more likely to be adopted by the shop floor team than an idea imposed from above. Quality circles, therefore, reflect and exploit the advantages of the human resource theories embedded in employee participation and empowerment approaches. Furthermore, the recognition by senior managers that the employees are worth listening to helps to improve the total quality ethos of the company with beneficial effects on the company and its customers.

 Since their introduction it is estimated that over 10 million Japanese workers have been part of a quality circle with an average saving of several thousand US dollars. The later term ‘process improvement team’ was used (amongst others) to reflect the need to look at all aspects of the  process being considered. There has been adoption of the quality circle approach by organisations in Europe and the United States, but some argue that the cultural and adversarial differences between management and unions have inhibited the success of the approach in certain situations. However, quality circles can be a rich source of innovative solutions to problems and cost savings and patent applications may follow.


 Total quality management (TQM)


First introduced by Armand  Feigenbaum in the 1950s and then developed and refined by others (including Crosby, Deming, Ishikawa and Juran), TQM became defined as:

 An effective system for integrating the quality development, quality maintenance and quality improvement efforts of the various groups in an organisation so to enable production and service at the most economical levels which allows for full customer satisfaction.

 (Feigenbaum, 1986: 96)



 For a TQM approach to be successful, all the staff in all departments have to be involved. Quality is the responsibility of everyone and not exclusively of some other manager or department. Quality and employee improvements are, therefore, inextricably linked and should be part of a continuous cycle. If a modest innovative and improvement cycle continues, by embedding the approach in the culture of the organisation, the long-term and total result may be substantial and even exceed that of radical solutions provided by specialist innovation departments. Both in combination will provide a great advantage to the orngaization.

Much of the improvement in the reliability of cars over the past 20 years has been attributed to a very large number of incremental improvements initiated by thousands of employees in all the car manufacturing companies and their suppliers especially within Japan.


 TQM, with its continuous improvement, employee involvement and process ownership, has shown itself to be an effective policy in managing organisations, and it was made possible by the enthusiastic implementation. 


Quality function deployment (QFD)

 Quality function deployment (QFD) is a structured approach to this problem that relates the voice of the customer to every stage of the design and the delivering process. In particular, QFD:


 ● promotes better understanding of customer demands;

 ● promotes better understanding of design interactions;

 ● involves operations in the process at the earliest possible moment;

 ● removes the traditional barriers between the departments; and

 ● focuses the design effort.




The ISO 9000 approach

In 1994  the International Standards Organization ISO 9000 –  a set of standards governing documentation of a quality programme were published. A qualified external examiner checks that the company complies with all the requirements specified and certifies the company. 


 the ISO 9000 (2000)1 was developed to include four additional principles:

 ● quality management should be customer-focused;

 ● quality performance should be measured;

 ● quality management should be improvement-driven;

 ● top management must demonstrate their commitment to maintaining and continually improving management systems.


The EFQM excellence model

 In 1988, 14 leading Western European companies formed the European Foundation for Quality Management and gave an award for the most successful application of TQM in Europe. In 1999, this idea and model was refined and developed into the EFQM Excellence Model that reflected the increased understanding and emphasis on customer (and market) focus and is results-oriented. The underlying idea is that results (related to people, customer, society and key performance) are achieved through a number of enablers in managing and controlling the input/output transformation processes involved.

Performance measurement is by self-assessment, which EFQM defines as ‘a comprehensive, systematic, and regular review of an organisation’s activities and results referenced against a model of business excellence’. 


 the EFQM excellence model also embeds innovation and learning in the performance of the organisation


Design of the organisation and its suppliers: supply chain management



 Delivering prompt, reliable products and services cost-effectively form part of most organisations’ strategic plan. The term supply chain management describes the system of managing all the activities across company boundaries in order to drive the whole chain network towards the shared objective of satisfying the customers. 

Material (or information) flows through a series of operations in both directions and the principles of operations management apply.

 Increasingly, organisations concentrate on their core activities and subcontract more of their support activities to their suppliers. In many situations, these suppliers are global and supply chain management has become a key strategic issue for many organisations.

 Inclusion of suppliers in design activities is a new practice.  Much of the improvement in car design has been at the initiative of their suppliers.  With the involvement of suppliers in the new product development process, it has also been found that more cost-effective designs have been created . For a company to achieve its own quality goals it must consider the quality of the product from its suppliers and the suppliers’ own quality control procedures.  Successful supply chain management is, therefore, very dependent on good network coordination mechanisms, business relationships and information technology. For example, large organisations may help their smaller suppliers with training in quality circles.


The competition is becoming  essentially the efficiency of one supply chain versus another. Only by working together and innovating within the organisation’s supply chain, in terms of product and service, will the organisation survive.


 Business process re-engineering (BPR)

The radical breakthrough approach of business process re-engineering (BPR) is first attributed to Hammer (1990). The technique is a blend of a number of ideas found within operations (process flow-charting, network management) and the need for customer focus. These were brought together to define BPR as:

 The fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical, contemporary measures of performance, such as cost, quality, service and speed. This radical rethinking is facilitated by a technology with the potential to provide dramatic improvements.

In the 1980s, BPR techniques were used extensively in the IT industry when the cheap and progressively more powerful networked PC began to replace mainframes.


 Lean innovation Lean principles are derived from the Japanese manufacturing industry. The term was first coined by John Krafcik in his 1988 article, ‘Triumph of the Lean Production System’.  The term described the low inventory system of Toyota.

Lean manufacturing or lean production is described as a systemic method for increasing flow in the system or value stream. At a more detail level,  the elimination of waste within a manufacturing process is advocated. 


More recently, the concept of lean innovation has been gathering interest from firms around the world. Lean innovation embraces a philosophy of not letting perfection get in the way of progress. It leverages the Pareto principle that 20 per cent of a product’s features will most likely deliver 80 per cent of the benefits sought by customers.  Google has  been practising lean innovation without realising it. Google, for many years, has released so-called ‘beta’ products to its consumers. For example, for many years, Google Scholar was used by many research students, even though it was not yet complete and probably contained some software errors. A definition of lean innovation is creating a new product or process, including the work required to bring an idea or concept into a final form, with emphasis on identifying and creating the value and removing the waste of the new product development (NPD) process.

 As an approach, lean innovation has a simple straightforward, step-by-step methodology that makes it relatively easy to explain and to implement:

 ● Identify the minimal viable product.

 ● Develop a version rapidly and test it with customers, ideally in a real-world competitive situation.

 ● Repeat the process until the core product is competitive or pivot to explore a new approach.

 Many argue that conventional approaches to product development in which teams expend enormous effort trying to create a perfected product without sufficient in-market customer feedback. The resulting new products are often too expensive, too complicated, too different from what customers want, and sometimes end up being too late to market.


Early reviews of firms that have adopted lean innovation techniques seem to show that it helps to create a better environment for learning market requirements. It helps to focus on the most important product attributes initially and encourages rapid cycling of trial and error based on customer involvement. In other words, lean innovation is not a better innovation process; rather it can be a more efficient learning process of the market needs. 


Chapter summary

The involvement of design and operations employees and managers is, thus, seen as an essential part of innovation management. Often, by understanding the basics of good design by, perhaps, ‘keeping things simple’ and looking at your products and services as your customers receive and use them, will help to deliver a continual stream of new product and service improvements. Continuous redesign of the company and its products and service, listening to your customers, watching your competitors, keeping aware of inventions and emerging technologies is a daunting task. Apart from fitting the various departments and functions together as a team,   a resonance has to be developed across all the constituents of the design and production spectrum to keep innovation going every day in the organization.



Ud. 7.2.2026

Pub. 25.1.2025



Innovation Management and New Product Development - Paul Trott - Book Information

 


INNOVATION MANAGEMENT AND NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT


Paul Trott

https://www.pearson.com/en-gb/subject-catalog/p/innovation-management-and-new-product-development/P200000005632/9781292744957


https://books.google.co.in/books?id=OlGNwhPvAWgC


Plan of the book



Part One Innovation management


Chapter 1 Innovation management: an introduction

Chapter Summary

https://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2025/01/innovation-mmanagement-introduction.html

Chapter 2 National systems of innovation and entrepreneurship

Chapter 3 Market adoption and technology diffusion

Chapter 4 Managing innovation within firms

Chapter Summary

https://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2025/01/managing-innovation-within-firms-trott.html

Chapter 5 Operations and process innovation

Chapter Summary

https://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2025/01/innovation-on-production-line-process.html

Chapter 6 Managing intellectual property

Chapter Summary

https://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2025/01/managing-intellectual-property-paul.html


Part Two Turning technology into business


Chapter 7 Managing organisational knowledge

Chapter Summary

https://nraomtr.blogspot.com/2025/01/managing-organisational-knowledge-paul.html

Chapter 8 Strategic alliances and networks

Chapter 9 Management of research and development

Chapter 10 Managing R&D projects

Chapter 11 Open innovation and technology transfer


Part Three New product development


Chapter 12 Business models

Chapter 13 Product and brand strategy

Chapter 14 New product development

Chapter 15 New service innovation

Chapter 16 Market research and its influence on new product development

Chapter 17 Managing the new product development process



Ud. 7.1.2026, 26.1.2025

Pub. 13.1.2025