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Paul Trott

Researcher at University of Portsmouth

Publications -  60
Citations -  3874

Paul Trott is an academic researcher from University of Portsmouth. The author has contributed to research in topics: New product development & Innovation management. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 54 publications receiving 3502 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Trott include Cranfield University & University of Plymouth.

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Book

Innovation Management And New Product Development

Paul Trott
TL;DR: The main aim of this book as discussed by the authors is to bring together the areas of innovation management and new product development and to keep a strong emphasis on innovation as a management process, rather than an integrated task.
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Why 'open innovation' is old wine in new bottles

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors systematically examine the six principles of the open innovation concept and show how the Open Innovation paradigm has created a partial perception by describing something which is undoubtedly true in itself (the limitations of closed innovation principles), but false in conveying the wrong impression that firms today follow these principles.
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Innovation risks of strategic outsourcing

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the innovation-related risks that can arise from strategic outsourcing and adopts a trust, collaboration and network perspective for this analysis, and highlight the increased risks that arise from a move from traditional to strategic outsourcing.
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A systematic review of barriers to public sector innovation process

TL;DR: A systematic review of the empirical literature on barriers within public sector innovation processes, based on data from 63 articles, is presented in this article, where the authors investigate the nature of barriers us...
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The role of market research in the development of discontinuous new products

TL;DR: A review of the literature in this area and examines the extent to which market research is justified and whether companies should sometimes ignore their customers is presented in this paper, which offers a conceptual framework that may help companies to decide when market research findings may be helpful and when they may hinder the development of discontinuous new products.