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Managing Systems of Innovation:

Improving the Capacity to Innovate

 

A Wharton School Conference Designed & Sponsored on Oct. 27, 2006 by the
William & Phyllis Mack Center for Technological Innovation
O
rganized by Professors George Day and Karl Ulrich

 

 

Pictured here are, left to right:  Prof. Karl Ulrich (co-organizer of the event); John Ranieri, DuPont; and Prof. Ian Macmillan.  More than 90 people attended our Fall industry partner conference entitled: "Managing Systems of Innovation: Improving the Capacity to Innovate."  Systems of Innovation is a major theme of the Mack Center, since corporate growth increasingly relies on innovation, and innovation comes from networks and ecosystems as well as internal R&D.  A printed conference report is being prepared, to summarize insights from the event.

Managing Innovation Systems:

Improving the Capacity to Innovate

A Wharton School Conference Designed & Sponsored by the
William & Phyllis Mack Center for Technological Innovation

Organized by Professors George Day and Karl Ulrich

Conference Description & Agenda

Firms have become increasingly proficient at managing individual innovation projects through their separate development funnels.  Each successive stage through the funnel provides further information about the commercial and technological feasibility of the project. 

Typically, more than 80 percent of projects don't make it all the way through the funnel and into the market.  Is there a way to improve the economic efficiency of this process?

These individual projects cannot be managed independently.  Each is part of an innovation system that manages dozens or hundreds of projects in the innovation portfolio at one time.  What is best for an individual project may be counterproductive for the entire system.  Lack of capacity at key points often causes internal traffic jams that delay all projects while seriously stressing the organization.  These stresses are compounded when there are competitive pressures to cut the elapsed time through the funnel.

This conference will take a systems approach to these "innovation issues" to ask:

  • How should the development funnel be shaped?  Where should the bottleneck be in the development process?

  • How much capacity should a firm have at each stage in the process?  How can capacity constraints be overcome?

  • Should a firm maintain "inventories" of partially developed projects or run a "lean" innovation process?  What is the best way to organize these approaches?

  • What are the best long-term and short-term metrics for monitoring the health of an innovation system?

Conference Participants:  Participants in this conference will learn from on-going academic work on system performance, and best practice studies of industries ranging from pharmaceuticals to motion pictures, to consumer products and venture capital investments. 

Attendees will include senior executives from large corporations involved in technological innovation/emerging technologies, including decision makers responsible for strategic planning, R&D, market scanning, marketing and organization development.

Final Agenda 

8th Floor - Huntsman Hall - 38th & Walnut St., Philadelphia 

 8:30 - 9:30     Welcome and Conference Introduction

                      George Day - Co-Director, William & Phyllis Mack Center   
                                            for Technological Innovation; 
                                            Boisi Professor of Marketing, Wharton

                      Karl Ulrich   - CIBC Professor and Chairperson,
                                            Department of Operations & Information 
                                            Management, Wharton

                      The Process View of Innovation - Karl Ulrich

9:30 - 10:30    Managing R&D Capacity for Improved Time-to-Market

                     Jim Bright Associate Partner
                                         R&D Management Services

                                         IBM Business Consulting Services

                     Craig Homann Director of Sales
                                        
Realization Technologies, Inc.

10:30-11:00    Break

11:00-12:00    Pipeline Management in Pharmaceuticals

                     Christian Terwiesch - Associate Professor of Operations &
                                                       Information Management, Wharton

                     Brian Kelly - Executive Director
                                         Development Operations Group
                                         Merck
and Company

12:00 - 1:30    Lunch and Informal Discussion  

  1:30 - 2:30    Optimizing Innovation Programs Using Real Options

                      Ian MacMillan - Dhirubhai Ambani Professor of Innovation and
                                               Entrepreneurship; Professor of Management;
                                               and Director, Sol C. Snider Entrepreneurial
                                               Research Center; The Wharton School

                                                       

                      John Ranieri - Vice President-General Manager
                                             DuPont Bio-based Materials
                                             E. I. DuPont de Nemours

  2:30 - 2:45    Break

  2:45 - 4:00    Managing Innovation Systems: Learning from Successes

                      Chair:  George Day  

                      Josh Eliashberg- Sebastian S. Kresge Professor of Marketing;
                                                 and Prof. of Operations & Information Mgmt.
                                                 Wharton

                      David Lester -  New York Site Head
                                              Pfizer Human Health Technologies
                                              Global Clinical Technology
                                              Pfizer, Inc.
                     

4:00            Adjourn

 


 


Technology Enabled
Business Transformation

Friday - Nov. 2 - 2007

Our Fall industry partner event will focus on technology-enabled transformation of businesses and industries with a focus on how these changes have impacted market leading firms in many industries, from IBM and Microsoft to Citigroup and DuPont.   Organized by Prof. Harbir Singh, Co-Director of the Mack Center and Chair of the Management Department; and Wharton Prof. Nicolaj Siggelkow.

10th Annual Emerging Technologies Update Day: "The Future of Connectivity"
Friday - Feb. 1 - 2008

The ET Update Day is our most popular annual event, where we invite technology experts to provide an update on radical innovations that have the potential to transform industries, markets and strategies.  This year's theme will be: "The Future of Connectivity."  Michael Tomczyk, Managing Director of the Mack Center, organizes and hosts this event.


 


 

The Future of BioSciences:
Four Scenarios for 2020 and Their Implications for Human Healthcare
Edited by Paul J.H. Schoemaker
and Michael S. Tomczyk

The electronic version of this report can be purchased online at:
http://www.caleogroup.com/index_files/dsi.htm

Industry partners in the BioSciences Crossroads Initiative and corporate sponsors of the Future of BioSciences report will receive complimentary copies.

PERIPHERAL VISION:

Detecting the Weak Signals That Will  Make or Break Your Company

 

By Prof. George Day &
Paul Schoemaker - May 2006


* The Mack Center is an independently managed web site