Business Models and Technological Innovation
TLDR
In this article, the authors define the business model as a system that solves the problem of identifying who is (or are) the customer(s), engaging with their needs, delivering satisfaction, and monetizing the value.About:
This article is published in Long Range Planning.The article was published on 2013-12-01 and is currently open access. It has received 844 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: New business development & Business rule.read more
Citations
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Business Models: Origin, Development and Future Research Perspectives
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a recently converging business model view, based on analyzing business model definitions, perspectives and components in the literature, and portray its essential components in an integrated framework.
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A Critical Assessment of Business Model Research
TL;DR: A critical review of the business model literature can be found in this article with the goal of organizing the literature and achieving greater understanding of the larger picture in this increasingly important research area.
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Building dynamic capabilities for digital transformation: An ongoing process of strategic renewal
TL;DR: It is revealed that digital transformation is an ongoing process of using new digital technologies in everyday organizational life, which recognizes agility as the core mechanism for the strategic renewal of an organization's business model, collaborative approach, and eventually the culture.
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Fortune favors the prepared: How SMEs approach business model innovations in Industry 4.0
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze how Industry 4.0 triggers changes in the business models of manufacturing SMEs (small and medium-sized enterprises), by conducting a qualitative research with a sample of 68 German SMEs from three industries (automotive suppliers, mechanical and plant engineering, as well as electrical engineering and ICT).
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The open innovation research landscape: established perspectives and emerging themes across different levels of analysis
Marcel Bogers,Ann-Kristin Zobel,Allan Afuah,Esteve Almirall,Sabine Brunswicker,Linus Dahlander,Lars Frederiksen,Annabelle Gawer,Marc Gruber,Stefan Haefliger,John Hagedoorn,John Hagedoorn,Dennis Hilgers,Keld Laursen,Mats Magnusson,Ann Majchrzak,Ian P. McCarthy,Kathrin M. Moeslein,Satish Nambisan,Frank T. Piller,Agnieszka Radziwon,Cristina Rossi-Lamastra,Jonathan Sims,Anne L. J. Ter Wal +23 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present opportunities for future research on OI, organized at different levels of analysis, and discuss some of the contingencies at these different levels, and argue that future research needs to study OI - originally an organisational-level phenomenon.
References
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Book
Open Innovation: The New Imperative for Creating and Profiting from Technology
TL;DR: Open Innovation: The New Imperative for Creating and Profiting From Technology as discussed by the authors is a book by Henry Chesbrough, which discusses the importance of open innovation for creating and profiting from technology.
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Profiting from technological innovation: Implications for integration, collaboration, licensing and public policy
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explain why innovating firms often fail to obtain significant economic returns from an innovation, while customers, imitators and other industry participants be- nefit.
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Business Models, Business Strategy and Innovation
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the significance of business models and explore their connections with business strategy, innovation management, and economic theory, and understand how the enterprise can organize to best meet customers' needs, get paid for doing so, and make a profit.
Book
The sources of innovation
TL;DR: The functional source of innovation general patterns economic explanation shifting and predicting the sources of innovation innovation as a distributed process is discussed in this paper, where users as innovators are considered as the innovators.