2017
DOI: 10.1007/s10961-016-9521-4
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Delivering on societal impacts through open innovation: a framework for government laboratories

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Cited by 15 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 53 publications
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“…OI questions earlier models of innovation, which emphasized keeping information internal and maintaining full control over the innovation process. This emphasis on openness has contributed to the development of novel methods of collaboration and partnerships in innovation and technology commercialization involving established and new firms, as well as a wide range of organizations, including universities, federal labs, and different types of innovation intermediaries (Chesbrough & Bogers, 2014;Nambisan & Sawhney, 2007;Perkmann & West, 2015;Schillo & Kinder, 2017;Von Hippel, 2005). In turn, these changes imply new approaches to the discovery, creation, and pursuit of entrepreneurial opportunities, both by new ventures and incumbent firms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…OI questions earlier models of innovation, which emphasized keeping information internal and maintaining full control over the innovation process. This emphasis on openness has contributed to the development of novel methods of collaboration and partnerships in innovation and technology commercialization involving established and new firms, as well as a wide range of organizations, including universities, federal labs, and different types of innovation intermediaries (Chesbrough & Bogers, 2014;Nambisan & Sawhney, 2007;Perkmann & West, 2015;Schillo & Kinder, 2017;Von Hippel, 2005). In turn, these changes imply new approaches to the discovery, creation, and pursuit of entrepreneurial opportunities, both by new ventures and incumbent firms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature of OI in RTOs, and specifically, the studies that research the impact of OI in the performance of RTOs (or other types of research organisations) is very scarce. Many authors approaching it focus on the impact of collaboration rather than a more holistic view of OI [11,26,27]. Some other authors have analysed (focused on company-owned research centres) the effect of inbound OI on the performance of collaborating company-owned business units and research centres; finding a positive relationship of inbound OI and performance for both business unit and research centre [58].…”
Section: Open Innovation and Performance In Rtosmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, we contribute to the literature of intermediaries in the innovation systems, focusing on them, and studying the effect that OI has on their own performance, instead of the partner role, which has been the dominant perspective [11,26,27].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The linkage (organizational identity) among commercial ecological and social interests arise as a key motivation in relation to unique products that public ERIs may contribute toward. This requires dispelling the sense that ERI are competitors in knowledge production and value creation and instead promote their inherent and mandated identity as collaborators (Schillo and Kinder, 2017). Linking commercial, ecological, and social interests in new innovative ventures should therefore be a cornerstone of any ERI business plan (Porter and Kramer, 2011;Liu and Brody, 2016).…”
Section: The Private Sectormentioning
confidence: 99%