Business experimentation for sustainability

Carbon emissions and natural resource depletion are associated with urgent, linear timelines and irreversible damage. In contrast, the commercialization of radical innovations is associated with timelines of 20-40 years. These two timelines are at tension with each other and a shortening of the orga...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Weissbrod, Ilka
Other Authors: Tennant, Mike
Published: Imperial College London 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.718402
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7184022018-10-09T03:25:04ZBusiness experimentation for sustainabilityWeissbrod, IlkaTennant, Mike2016Carbon emissions and natural resource depletion are associated with urgent, linear timelines and irreversible damage. In contrast, the commercialization of radical innovations is associated with timelines of 20-40 years. These two timelines are at tension with each other and a shortening of the organizational radical innovation timeline is needed to address urgent sustainable development challenges through new product and service offers. This transdisciplinary PhD research investigates the practice of radical innovation in large firms. It generates insights on how firms pursue explorative innovation activities with the goal of creating social and environmental value whilst capturing economic value. The organizational capability of ‘experimentation’ has been highlighted as the key to improve radical innovation performance in established firms. However, the details of what the experimentation capability might be, and entail in the context of sustainable development challenges is unknown. Furthermore, how experimentation may address the contrasting timelines of organizational innovation and sustainable development challenges has not been explored. To address this gap in the knowledge, this research gathered qualitative data from leading practitioners through semi-structured interviews, followed by an in-depth case study. The insights generated through the data analysis contribute to knowledge in the strategic management and sustainability literature. This research offers a descriptive framework on how firms might build on the innovation process used in lean startup thinking to shorten the radical innovation timeline with the view to develop products and services that create environmental and social value whilst capturing economic value.338.9Imperial College Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.718402http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/47961Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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topic 338.9
spellingShingle 338.9
Weissbrod, Ilka
Business experimentation for sustainability
description Carbon emissions and natural resource depletion are associated with urgent, linear timelines and irreversible damage. In contrast, the commercialization of radical innovations is associated with timelines of 20-40 years. These two timelines are at tension with each other and a shortening of the organizational radical innovation timeline is needed to address urgent sustainable development challenges through new product and service offers. This transdisciplinary PhD research investigates the practice of radical innovation in large firms. It generates insights on how firms pursue explorative innovation activities with the goal of creating social and environmental value whilst capturing economic value. The organizational capability of ‘experimentation’ has been highlighted as the key to improve radical innovation performance in established firms. However, the details of what the experimentation capability might be, and entail in the context of sustainable development challenges is unknown. Furthermore, how experimentation may address the contrasting timelines of organizational innovation and sustainable development challenges has not been explored. To address this gap in the knowledge, this research gathered qualitative data from leading practitioners through semi-structured interviews, followed by an in-depth case study. The insights generated through the data analysis contribute to knowledge in the strategic management and sustainability literature. This research offers a descriptive framework on how firms might build on the innovation process used in lean startup thinking to shorten the radical innovation timeline with the view to develop products and services that create environmental and social value whilst capturing economic value.
author2 Tennant, Mike
author_facet Tennant, Mike
Weissbrod, Ilka
author Weissbrod, Ilka
author_sort Weissbrod, Ilka
title Business experimentation for sustainability
title_short Business experimentation for sustainability
title_full Business experimentation for sustainability
title_fullStr Business experimentation for sustainability
title_full_unstemmed Business experimentation for sustainability
title_sort business experimentation for sustainability
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2016
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.718402
work_keys_str_mv AT weissbrodilka businessexperimentationforsustainability
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