discussant: innovation ecosystems (aom 2014)

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8/4/14 1 1 Innovation Ecosystems: Benefits, Challenges, and Structures Discussion August 5, 2014 Joel West Professor, Innovation & Entrepreneurship School of Applied Life Sciences 2 Innovation Ecosystems Interdependence between firms Joint need for ecosystem health Work cooperatively to create value Specialization and niche finding Often lead by dominant firm Firm success depends on ecosystem management skills Importance of building healthy and complete ecosystem Moore 1993, Iansiti & Levien, 2004, Adner, 2012

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Closing discussant slides for August 4, 2014 session at Academy of Management 2014 entitled “Innovation Ecosystems: Benefits, Challenges, and Structures.” Covers talks by Luigi Marengo, Raymond Miles, Charles Snow and David Teece

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Discussant: Innovation Ecosystems (AOM 2014)

8/4/14

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Innovation Ecosystems: Benefits, Challenges, and Structures

Discussion August 5, 2014

Joel West Professor, Innovation & Entrepreneurship School of Applied Life Sciences

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Innovation Ecosystems

• Interdependence between firms •  Joint need for ecosystem health • Work cooperatively to create value •  Specialization and niche finding

• Often lead by dominant firm •  Firm success depends on ecosystem management skills •  Importance of building healthy and complete ecosystem

Moore 1993, Iansiti & Levien, 2004, Adner, 2012

Page 2: Discussant: Innovation Ecosystems (AOM 2014)

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Users

Smartphone Ecosystems

West & Wood, Advances in Strategic Management (2013)

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Networks, Communities

• Networks link multiple organizations via transactions or ongoing ties

•  Powell, 1990; Gomes-Casseres, 1996; Staudenmayer et al, 2000 • Communities add shared identity and governance

•  Markus, 2007; von Hippel, 2007; O’Mahony & Lakhani, 2011 • Ecosystems link firms that provide complementary

goods and services •  Moore, 1993; Iansiti & Levien, 2004; Adner & Kapoor, 2010

• Platforms combine a technical compatibility architecture with an ecosystem

•  Gawer & Cusumano, 2002; West, 2003; Eisenmann, 2008

See West, New Frontiers in Open Innovation (2013)

Page 3: Discussant: Innovation Ecosystems (AOM 2014)

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Marengo: Platforms

• Interdependence and complementarity of ecosystems

• Particular interest in platforms • Complex systems • Mutual interest in platform success • Need to evolve ecosystem and its outputs

• Studied via a model

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Marengo: Further Research

• Opportunity to generalize insights on dynamic platform competition

• Examine competing platforms • Four basic types of platform contests (Gallagher &

West, 2009): • Static (VCR) • Episodic (early videogames) • Linked (cellphones, current videogames) • Continuous (smartphones, social media)

Page 4: Discussant: Innovation Ecosystems (AOM 2014)

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Miles: Communities

• We know collaboration is important • What are the barriers between firms? • What are the barriers within firms? •  Is it driven by firm (or societal) norms? • How can we change things?

• Direct links to cumulative innovation • Allen, 1983; Nuvolari, 2004; Scotchmer, 2004; Murray

& O’Mahony, 2007; also von Hippel, 2005

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Miles: Further Research

• Many firms compete w/o cooperating • Rarer are examples of firm cooperation

•  Inventors of the airplane (Meyer, 2013) • Standardization communities (Axelrod et al, 1995;

Leiponen, 2008; Simcoe, 2012) • Open source software (West, 2003; Stam, 2009;

Spaeth et al, 2010) • Are differences attitudinal or strategic?

• An open empirical questions

Page 5: Discussant: Innovation Ecosystems (AOM 2014)

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Snow: Communities

• Multi-firm innovation ecosystems • How can firms best collaborate? • What are the rules? • What benefits can be realized?

See Fjelstad et al (2012), Moore (1993)

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Snow: Further Research

• We have examples of the architecture of interfirm collaboration

• West & O’Mahony, 2008; Fjeldstad et al, 2012 • But need a more general solution

• What are the fundamental axioms? • Moderators? •  Contracts and property rights?

• Other research designs (experiments, simulations, ethnographic, etc.)

•  Cf. O’Mahony & Ferraro, 2007; Terwiesch & Xu 2008

Page 6: Discussant: Innovation Ecosystems (AOM 2014)

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Teece & Leih: Local Ecosystems

• What is the proper role for a university in the local innovation ecosystem?

• How can it be made more effective? • What are the needs of new firms? • How can both parties benefit? • Will this corrupt the university?

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Teece & Leih: Further Research

• Some of this is well-trodden • Universities as seeds of local industry

clusters (cf. Kenney & Mowery 2014) • University tech transfer

• University-firm open system • Measuring ongoing flows (both ways) • Measuring simultaneous ties • Role of boundary spanners

Page 7: Discussant: Innovation Ecosystems (AOM 2014)

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Final Thoughts

• Ecosystems are increasingly recognized as important to firm success

•  Important to theory and practice

• An opportunity for future research • Considerable research on ICT and other digital goods • How do these ideas extend beyond ICT?

• E.g. Kim et al 2014 study of Chez Panisse • Clearly delineate overlap with other constructs