Silent Innovation - Corporate Strategizing in Early Nanotechnology Evolution

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Silent Innovation - Corporate Strategizing in Early Nanotechnology Evolution. / Andersen, Maj Munch.

2011. Paper præsenteret ved DRUID Summer Conference 2011, Copenhagen, Danmark.

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Andersen, MM 2011, 'Silent Innovation - Corporate Strategizing in Early Nanotechnology Evolution', Paper fremlagt ved DRUID Summer Conference 2011, Copenhagen, Danmark, 15/06/2011 - 17/06/2011.

APA

Andersen, M. M. (2011). Silent Innovation - Corporate Strategizing in Early Nanotechnology Evolution. Paper præsenteret ved DRUID Summer Conference 2011, Copenhagen, Danmark.

Vancouver

Andersen MM. Silent Innovation - Corporate Strategizing in Early Nanotechnology Evolution. 2011. Paper præsenteret ved DRUID Summer Conference 2011, Copenhagen, Danmark.

Author

Andersen, Maj Munch. / Silent Innovation - Corporate Strategizing in Early Nanotechnology Evolution. Paper præsenteret ved DRUID Summer Conference 2011, Copenhagen, Danmark.34 s.

Bibtex

@conference{584548d4c52243378da361cbaf76328c,
title = "Silent Innovation - Corporate Strategizing in Early Nanotechnology Evolution",
abstract = "Nanotechnology offers a rare opportunity to study the early evolution of a new generic technology in real time. This paper suggests focusing more on the market formation side, rather than technology generation, when seeking to explain technology evolution. Applying an evolutionary capabilities perspective, the paper examines how firms organize innovation in the early embryonic stages of a technology and how the market as a selective device undergoes qualitative change as part of economic evolution. The traditional Danish window chain is used as a case. A model of nanotechnology evolution is proposed which suggests that nanotechnology commercialization is significantly driven by small and medium-sized firms based on their internal knowhow, with larger firms as important suppliers of know how. These smaller firms are adept at addressing social needs which appear to be key factors in the nano-commercialization process. A taxonomy of nine enterprise strategies for entry into nanotechnology is suggested. The paper identifies a marked shift in marketing strategizing among the nanotechnology innovative companies, from being ?loud? around the turn of the millennium to becoming increasingly ?silent? at the present time, illustrating the unconsolidated stage of the current nanotechnology market.",
author = "Andersen, {Maj Munch}",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
note = "DRUID Summer Conference 2011 ; Conference date: 15-06-2011 Through 17-06-2011",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Silent Innovation - Corporate Strategizing in Early Nanotechnology Evolution

AU - Andersen, Maj Munch

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Nanotechnology offers a rare opportunity to study the early evolution of a new generic technology in real time. This paper suggests focusing more on the market formation side, rather than technology generation, when seeking to explain technology evolution. Applying an evolutionary capabilities perspective, the paper examines how firms organize innovation in the early embryonic stages of a technology and how the market as a selective device undergoes qualitative change as part of economic evolution. The traditional Danish window chain is used as a case. A model of nanotechnology evolution is proposed which suggests that nanotechnology commercialization is significantly driven by small and medium-sized firms based on their internal knowhow, with larger firms as important suppliers of know how. These smaller firms are adept at addressing social needs which appear to be key factors in the nano-commercialization process. A taxonomy of nine enterprise strategies for entry into nanotechnology is suggested. The paper identifies a marked shift in marketing strategizing among the nanotechnology innovative companies, from being ?loud? around the turn of the millennium to becoming increasingly ?silent? at the present time, illustrating the unconsolidated stage of the current nanotechnology market.

AB - Nanotechnology offers a rare opportunity to study the early evolution of a new generic technology in real time. This paper suggests focusing more on the market formation side, rather than technology generation, when seeking to explain technology evolution. Applying an evolutionary capabilities perspective, the paper examines how firms organize innovation in the early embryonic stages of a technology and how the market as a selective device undergoes qualitative change as part of economic evolution. The traditional Danish window chain is used as a case. A model of nanotechnology evolution is proposed which suggests that nanotechnology commercialization is significantly driven by small and medium-sized firms based on their internal knowhow, with larger firms as important suppliers of know how. These smaller firms are adept at addressing social needs which appear to be key factors in the nano-commercialization process. A taxonomy of nine enterprise strategies for entry into nanotechnology is suggested. The paper identifies a marked shift in marketing strategizing among the nanotechnology innovative companies, from being ?loud? around the turn of the millennium to becoming increasingly ?silent? at the present time, illustrating the unconsolidated stage of the current nanotechnology market.

M3 - Paper

T2 - DRUID Summer Conference 2011

Y2 - 15 June 2011 through 17 June 2011

ER -

ID: 368900039