Search Books
Managing Your Personal Fina… Handbook in Monte Carlo Sim…

How Breakthroughs Happen: The Surprising Truth About How Companies Innovate

Author Hargadon, Andrew
Publisher Harvard Business Review Press
Category Business & Economics
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
49.98 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸

✓ In Stock.

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN1578519047
ISBN-139781578519040
AvailabilityIn Stock.
Sales Rank207,272
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

This book presents lessons from the famous 'Invention Factories' past and present. Did you know that the incandescent lightbulb first emerged some thirty years before Thomas Edison famously 'turned night into day'? Or that Henry Ford's revolutionary assembly line came from an unlikely blend of observations from Singer sewing machines, meatpacking, and Campbell's Soup? In this fascinating study of innovation, engineer and social scientist Andrew Hargadon argues that our romantic notions about innovation as invention are actually undermining our ability to pursue breakthrough innovations. Based on ten years of study into the origins of historic inventions and modern innovations from the lightbulb to the transistor to the Reebok Pump athletic shoe, How Breakthroughs Happen takes us beyond the simple recognition that revolutionary innovations do not result from flashes of brilliance by lone inventors or organizations. In fact, innovation is really about creatively recombining ideas, people, and objects from past technologies in ways that spark new technological revolutions. This process of 'technology brokering' is so powerful, explains Hargadon, because it exploits the networked nature—the social side—of the innovation process. Moving between historical accounts of labs and factory floors where past technological revolutions originated and field studies of similar processes in today's organizations, Hargadon shows how technology brokers create an enduring capacity for breakthrough innovations. Technology brokers simultaneously bridge the gaps in existing networks that separate distant industries, firms, and divisions to see how established ideas can be applied in new ways and places, and build new networks to guide these creative recombinations to mass acceptance. How Breakthroughs Happen identifies three distinct strategies for technology brokering that managers can implement in their organizations. Hargadon suggests that Edison and his counterparts were no smarter than the rest of us-they were simply better at moving through the networked world of their time. Intriguing, practical, and counterintuitive, How Breakthroughs Happen can help managers transform their own firms into modern-day invention factories.
Business Cycles and Forecasting
View
Development Economics: Its Position in the Present Sta…
View
Cost Systems Design
View
So You Want to Dance on Broadway
View
The Blueprint: Reviving Innovation, Rediscovering Risk…
View
Managing IT Outsourcing, Second Edition
View
Education and the Creation of Capital in the Early Ame…
View
Global Corruption Report 2005: Special Focus: Corrupti…
View
More Tales for Trainers: Using Stories and Metaphors t…
View