Opening Up Is Good For Innovation

from the building-on-the-work-of-others... dept

It’s been said plenty of times here (and many, many other places of course) that innovation is the process of building on the works of others to make something even better. It’s not something that happens in a vacuum — and closing off innovators is a recipe for suffocating innovation. It appears that more research is supporting this. Future Now is pointing to research being done that shows innovators tend to network with each other across company boundaries, and that helps them to share ideas and increase innovation. While top executives think that the researchers they hire should stay hidden in order to build top secret proprietary stuff, it turns out that more innovation occurs when researchers have easy and open access with others working on similar problems at other companies. Ideas and information flows across company borders, but the end result is more and better innovation for everyone. One of these days, perhaps, executives will realize how that works.


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Comments on “Opening Up Is Good For Innovation”

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2 Comments
Steve Mueller (user link) says:

Need More Convincing

Ideas and information flows across company borders, but the end result is more and better innovation for everyone. One of these days, perhaps, executives will realize how that works.

The problem with this study is that it won’t convince most executives that this cross-pollination is good. While increased innovation is good for us in general, most management probably doesn’t care. They care about getting a competitive advantage for their company, not improving innovation for everybody.

Executives probably are worried that sharing research will give their company a minor (or no) benefit but a competitor will get a huge benefit.

What is needed is a study showing that companies with “open border” research policies are more profitable than those with “closed border” policies.

Mark Rijckenberg says:

indeed... opening up (source code) accelerates inn

Yep,

Opening up and sharing knowledge with others in every branch of society

Just look at how Linux has evolved. In the beginning , the installation process was very old-fashioned and very FreeBSD like. You could only install it using the command line interface. (console)

Nowadays, it’s a whole new ballgame. You have Linux distributions like SimplyMEPIS 2004.04 that allow you to use it as a Live CD and if you like it, install it to the harddisk in 10 minutes.

This is the power of open-source that leads to more innovation than even Microsoft can provide.

Regards,

Mark

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