Sources of Innovation
Author(s)
von Hippel, Eric A.
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It has long been assumed that product innovations are typically developed by product manufacturers. Because this assumption deals with the basic matter of who the innovator is, it has inevitably had a major impact on innovation-related research, on firms' management of research and development, and on government innovation policy. However, it now appears that this basic assumption is often wrong.
In this book I begin by presenting a series of studies showing that the sources of innovation vary greatly. In some fields, innovation users develop most innovations. In others, suppliers of innovation-related components and materials are the typical sources of innovation. In still other fields, conventional wisdom holds and product manufacturers are indeed the typical innovators. Next, I explore why this variation in the functional sources of innovation occurs and how it might be predicted. Finally, I propose and test some implications of replacing a manufacturer-as-innovator assumption with a view of the innovation process as predictably distributed across users, manufacturers, suppliers, and others.
Keywords: innovation, innovators, user innovation
Date issued
1988Department
Sloan School of ManagementPublisher
Oxford University Press
Citation
Von Hippel, Eric A. "The Sources of Innovation." Oxford University Press, 2016.
Version: Final published version
ISBN
0195040856