07/12/2009
por Verónica Savignano
Compartilho com os leitores, especialmente os que estão fazendo doutorado em temas correlatos à inovação aberta, esta informação recebida sobre um seminário para PhDs que estudam open innovation e open business models.


Trata-se de um curso de 2 dias (14 e 15 de janeiro) em Barcelona, na escola de negócios ESADE. Os organizadores são dois dos mais relevantes pesquisadores da área, os professores Henry Chesbrough (colaborador deste blog) e Wim Vanhaverbeke.
A partir da leitura dos tópicos que serão abordados (vejam abaixo, na reprodução do texto de divulgação), infiro que o curso vai fazer uma revisão do arcabouço teórico que pode embasar a pesquisa em inovação aberta, vai colocar os temas de pesquisa emergentes na academia e e vai também falar sobre recursos para a pesquisa em inovação aberta (bases de dados, por exemplo). O texto de divulgação faz menção à possibilidade de que os participantes do seminário discutam com seus pares suas pesquisas em andamento.
Vejam o texto de divulgação dos organizadores:
Seminar Open Innovation & Open Business Models
- School: ESADE Business School

- Date: Jan 14-15, 2010
- Time: 09:00 h. to 13:00 h. - 14:00 h. to 18:00 h.
- Place: ESADE Business School Address: Barcelona – Sant Cugat Campus
- Room: To be confirmed
- ECTS: 3
- Fee: 660 €. Special fee for CEMS / EDAMBA
- Language: English
- Participants max: 25
- Participants min: 4
- Enrolment deadline: January 4th , 2010
- Applications to: Ms. Olga Linares - olgamaria.linares@esade.edu
- Contact information: Ms.Pilar Gállego - pilar.gallego@esade.edu
ESADE Business School visiting Professors Henry Chesbrough (Haas School of Management - UC Berkeley & ESADE) and Wim Vanhaverbeke (ESADE, Vlerick Management School
and Hasselt University), are organizing a 2 day PhD seminar about Open and Collaborative Innovation at ESADE – Barcelona.
These two leading researchers in Open Innovation will deal with the latest insights in Open Innovation and explore how PhD students can successfully design and shape research in this area.
The following topics will be discussed during the workshop.
1. What are the antecedents of Open Innovation? What are the factors leading to more Open Innovation in different industries? Under what conditions can we expect Open Innovation to yield greater performance than Closed Innovation?
2. How does Open Innovation relate to prior innovation literature (e.g. absorptive capacity, dynamic capabilities, corporate and business level strategy, etc…)? How can Open Innovation be linked to existing innovation management models and theories of the firm? What other relevant theories that can be linked to Open Innovation? What kind of challenges can we expect when doing this? How should theories be adapted to fully explain Open Innovation?
3. What are some of the underlying business models in Open Innovation? What are the implications of open business models for the current innovation management and strategy literature?
4. Exploring some emerging areas in Open Innovation:
a. How can Open Innovation be applied to SMEs in low/ medium tech industries? What are the differences with Open Innovation in high-tech industries? Should Open Innovation be managed differently in SMEs compared to large firms?
b. Large firms are almost always MNEs. How does a multinational setting and the resultant heterogeneity of external technology resources influence the original Open Innovation framework? Can we discuss the role of resource proximity and regional innovation systems in Open Innovation?
c. What are the advantages of Open Innovation IP models? How can Open Innovation IP models help in fostering cooperative innovation efforts between a set of firms? What are the latest developments in the field and how do they challenge the classical view on IP-management?
d. How can one manage the collaboration between VC backed start-ups and large firms? What are the consequences for the organization of external corporate ventures?
e. What is the empirical evidence on Open Innovation? What are the databases that can be used for empirical research: publicly available databases, databases developed by companies or innomediaries, etc? How should one design large scale surveys to advance our understanding of Open Innovation? How can case studies be used in Open Innovation research?
5. What are the limits and valuable critiques of Open Innovation?
Participants will have the possibility to discuss their ongoing research in small groups and receive feedback from the faculty.
Entry Filed under: Open innovation, innovación abierta, inovação aberta. Tags: curso, ESADE, henry chesbrough, innovación abierta, inovação aberta, management, open business models, Open innovation, pesquisa acadêmica, wim vanhaverbeke.
Trackback this post | Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed