MIT Sloan Management Review

Innovation

A Systematic Approach to Innovation

July 1, 2009

In an interesting book, two Wharton professors analyze the innovation process.

In the popular imagination, innovation is often associated with creative inspiration that can neither be predicted nor planned. So what happens when two professors of operations and information management (who have also developed products and launched companies) tackle the topic of innovation? An informative new book, Innovation Tournaments: Creating and Selecting Exceptional Opportunities (Harvard Business Press, 2009), is the result. In it, Christian Terwiesch and Karl T. Ulrich, professors at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, look at innovation process — in other words, a process management approach to innovation.

In particular, Terwiesch and Ulrich focus on “innovation tournaments” as a tool that companies can use to identify promising ideas for innovation, which they term “opportunities.” Much as the American Idol television show is able to use a tournamentlike approach to identify a small number of promising performers from thousands of would-be contestants, companies can use tournaments, Terwiesch and Ulrich argue, to identify new opportunities for their businesses. Ideas may be sought from employees, from people outside the organization or from a combination of internal and external sources.

Among other topics, Innovation Tournaments essentially provides a how-to guide for setting up and administering an innovation tournament. (In fact, the authors have set up a Web site offering free tournament... To read the complete article, login or sign-up using the form below.

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