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Open Innovation: The First Decade Joel West KGI - The Keck Graduate Institute Claremont, California UCSD, Rady School of Management January 27, 2015
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Page 1: Open Innovation: The First Decade

Open Innovation:The First Decade

Joel WestKGI - The Keck Graduate Institute

Claremont, California

UCSD, Rady School of ManagementJanuary 27, 2015

Page 2: Open Innovation: The First Decade

Plan

• What is open innova tion?

• Three modes of open innova tion- Inbound

- Outbound

- Coupled

• What’s next?

Page 3: Open Innovation: The First Decade

• Keck Graduate Institute of Applied Life Sciences

• Youngest of 7 Claremont Colleges• Founded in 1997: Harvey Mudd spinoff• Funded by grant from Keck Foundation• 300+ graduate students• Preparing students for biotech careers• Genentech, Amgen are biggest employers

What is KGI?

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Where is KGI?

KGI

Page 5: Open Innovation: The First Decade

Open Innovation

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Open innovation: a common practice

• Qua lcomm- Outlicens ing pa tents- Se lling components to handse t makers- Acquiring Snaptrack, Fla rion, Atheros

• Amgen- Licensed EPO to J&J (Procrit)- Today in-licenses oncology drugs

• IBM- Se lling components to othe rs- Collabora tion with Apache , Eclipse , Linux open source

communitie s

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Invention vs. Innovation

“Inventions … do not necessarily lead

to technica l innova tions . In fact the

majority do not. An innova tion in the

economic sense is accomplished only

with the firs t commercia l transaction.”

—Freeman (1982: 7)

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Latent value of an innovation

“The inherent va lue of a technology

remains la tent until it is commercia lized in

some way.

“A bus iness model unlocks tha t la tent

va lue , media ting be tween technica l and

economic domains .”

– Chesbrough & Rosenbloom (2002)

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Bringing innovation to market

• Crea tion- Technica l invention

- Bas ic research, applied research, product deve lopment

• Commercia liza tion- Production, marke ting, sa les , dis tribution

- Requires diffe rent complementa ry asse ts (Teece 1986)

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Vertical Integration

Research of Alfred D Chandle r (1918-2007)

• Studied la rge US firms 1840-1940

• Firms vertica lly integra te to supply own inputs and control the ir outputs- R&D is an essentia l part of integra tion

- Technology indus tries require la rge R&D labs

- Marke ts don’t exis ts to buy/se ll innovation

• Integra tion wide ly adopted in practice- Pa tte rn of la rge 20th C US and MNC firms

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ResearchResearchInves tiga tionsInves tiga tions

Deve lopmentDeve lopment New ProductsNew Products& Services& Services

TheMarket

Science&

TechnologyBase

Source : Chesbrough (2006)

Vertically Integrated R&D

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Open Innovation

• Chesbrough (2003, 2006, 2007)

• Key points :- Find a lte rna te sources of innovation

Either marke ts or spillovers

- Find a lte rna te marke ts for innova tion

- Centra l role of the bus iness model

• Cognitive manageria l pa radigm

• Overlaps with other work such as user innova tion

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What is “open innovation”?

“Open innova tion is the use of purpos ive

inflows and outflows of knowledge to acce le ra te

inte rna l innova tion, and expand the marke ts for

exte rna l use of innova tion, respective ly.”

Henry Chesbrough, O p e n Inno va tio n:Re s e a rching a Ne w Pa ra d ig m (2006)

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Source : Chesbrough (2006)

CurrentMarke t

Inte rna lTechnology

Base

Technology Insourcing

New Market

Technology Spin-offs

Externa lTechnology

Base

Other Firm’s Marke t

Licens ing

“Open” innova tion s tra tegies

R&D under Open Innovation

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What’s new?

• Many antecedent/overlapping a reas- Technology sourcing, IP marke ts ,

univers ity licens ing, a lliances , supplie r innova tion, use r innova tion

• New ideas include- Role of the bus iness model- Agnos tic to inte rna l/exte rna l pa ths- Rise of innova tion inte rmedia ries

Cf. Chesbrough (2006)

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Open vs. user innovation

Open Innovation User Innovation

Focal actor Firm User

Knowledge transfer IP Needs

IP regime Pa tents Free revea ling

Innova tion production

Hiera rchy Community, individua l

Motiva tions Mone ta ry Socia l, persona l utility

Frank Pille r & Joe l West, Ch. 4 of O p e n Inno va tio n: Ne w Fro ntie rs & App lic a tio ns

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Three open innovation processes

1. Inbound (or “outs ide-in”)- Externa l technology commercia lized by the foca l

firm

1. Outbound (or “ins ide-out”)- A firm’s technology commercia lized by others

1. Coupled combines these two- Various forms of collabora tion

Cf. Chesbrough (2003, 2006), Gassmann & Enke l (2004), Enkel e t a l (2009), Wes t & Gallagher (2006)

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Inbound Open Innovation

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Why Look Outside for Innovation?

“Not a ll the smart people in the world can work in one place .”

Bill Joyco-founder

Sun Microsys tems

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Recent comprehensive review

• Goa l: Synthes ize inbound (& coupled)

• Sample from top management & innova tion journa ls

• Either mention “open innovation” or cite Chesbrough (2003)

• Hand se lected 291 down to 165

• 161 a rticles , 3 books , 1 chapte r

Joe l West & Marce l Bogers , Jo urna l o f Pro duc t Inno va tio n Mana g e m e nt, July 2014

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Breakdown of 165 OI pubsInbound: 118 Outbound: 50

Coupled: 70

57 14

11

24

26 1

32

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4-stage process model

InnovationSource† Customers

CommercializingObtaining Integrating

Interaction

Focal Firm

R&DOther

Functions

† Sources may include suppliers, rivals, complementors and customers.

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1. Obtaining Innovations• Bes t covered of the phases

- Searching, enabling, filte ring- Sourcing particula rly well covered

• Mos t popula r a rea : sources of innova tion- Many crowdsourcing s tudies- Also use r-genera ted content

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2. Integrating Innovations• Cons iders org capabilities and culture

- Limited examina tion beyond “Not Invented Here”

- Clear cha llenges of processes , incentives

• Integra tion seems to be a black box- How are these innova tions integra ted to

the firm?

- What skills a re needed to do this well?

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3. Commercializing Innovations• Lots of va lue crea tion

- Increased product re leases , revenues

- What is ne t? Do cos ts go up?

• Assumes exte rna l innova tions commercia lized same as inte rna l ones- How do firms diffe r in exte rna l innova tion

commercia liza tion capabilitie s?

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4. Reverse PathsBeyond the linea r mode l, this includes

• Feedback mechanisms- Information flow ups tream

• Reciproca l measures- Ongoing inte ractions

- Includes co-crea tion, communities

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Outbound Open Innovation

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What is outbound OI?

• Firms should find bes t/highes t use of the ir IP- Not a ll IP a ligns to the firm’s bus iness model

• Avoids Type II (fa lse nega tive) e rror• Can include licens ing to riva ls , spinoffs

- In para lle l or ins tead of inte rna l use

Inspired by Chesbrough s tudy of Xerox PARC spinoffs (Chesbrough & Rosenbloom, 2002)

Page 29: Open Innovation: The First Decade

Various IP licensing models

• Dolby Labs : $700m/yr, 88% margins

• Genentech: Humulin, Inte rfe ron

• IBM: licens ing IP portfolio

• Dupont: licens ing core technologies

• Game mods , e .g. Ha lf-Life

• Xerox: crea ting spinoffs

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Key challenges of outbound OI

• Identifying underused IP• Simultaneous inte rna l/exte rna l

commercia liza tion• Functioning IP marke ts• Dilemma over appropriability

- Fear of sharing if weak IP- Strong IP can de lay other’s innovation

Chesbrough (2003, 2006b), Fabrizio (2006), Enkel e t a l (2009), Dahlander & Gann (2010)

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Coupled Open Innovation

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Coupled open innovation

• “Coupled” is diffe rent from inbound and outbound

• Two modes of coupled inte raction- Bi-directiona l (Gassmann & Enkel, 2004)

Combines inbound & outboundApplies to firm-to-firm R&D collabora tions

- Inte ractive collabora tion (P ille r & West, 2014)Joint production outs ide the firmDiffe rent from e ithe r inbound or outbound

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Coupled open innovation

Focal Firm Organization

Focal FirmOrganization or

IndividualCo- Creation

BidirectionalCoupled

InteractiveCoupled

Source : P ille r & West (2014), p. 39

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Coupled open innovation

Examples of coupled open innova tion:•Open source (Wes t & Gallagher, 2006)•Communities (West & Sims , 2013)•R&D consortia (Mulle r-Se itz & Sydow, 2013)̈

Bes t practice seems very particularis tic to the se tting

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What’s Next?

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Recent trends in OI research

• Linking to es tablished theory

• Grea te r precis ion of cons tructs

• Bette r measurement

• Bette r unders tanding of pe rformance

• Diffe rent leve ls of ana lys is

• Role of appropriability

• Nonprofit actors and motiva tionsSee Vanhaverbeke e t a l (2014), West e t a l (2014) a lso http://bit.ly/1v2Gf7

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2014: new OI publications

• Re s e a rch Po lic y specia l is sue (June 2014)- Chesbrough, Sa lte r, Vanhaverbeke & West,

gues t editors- 10 a rticles- See http://bit.ly/openinno2013

• O p e n Inno va tio n: Ne w Fro ntie rs & App lic a tio ns (Oxford)- Chesbrough, Vanhaverbeke & Wes t, eds .- 15 chapters- See http://bit.ly/NFOI2014

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Thank you!

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