IRMA-International.org: Creator of Knowledge
Information Resources Management Association
Advancing the Concepts & Practices of Information Resources Management in Modern Organizations

Knowledge in Innovation Processes

Knowledge in  Innovation Processes
View Sample PDF
Author(s): Marco Paukert (Fraunhofer Institut für Integrierte Publikations–und Informationssysteme, Germany), Claudia Niederée (Fraunhofer Institut für Integrierte Publikations–und Informationssysteme, Germany)and Matthias Hemmje (FernUniversität Hagen, Germany)
Copyright: 2011
Pages: 11
Source title: Encyclopedia of Knowledge Management, Second Edition
Source Author(s)/Editor(s): David Schwartz (Bar-Ilan University, Israel)and Dov Te'eni (Tel-Aviv University , Israel)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-931-1.ch055

Purchase

View Knowledge in Innovation Processes on the publisher's website for pricing and purchasing information.

Abstract

The success of industrial and scientific research has always been dependent on new discoveries and innovations, but tighter budgets and increasing global competition push the pace with which innovation must happen nowadays. Bringing new products to the market before competitors do constitutes a crucial competitive advantage for many companies and organizations. Accelerating discovery and innovation is increasingly dependent on the use of advanced information and knowledge technology for building environments that support the innovation process systematically and efficiently (cf. Specht, Beckmann, & Amelingmeyer, 2002; Amidon, 2002). Such environments depend on a number of advanced knowledge management technologies and have to adapt to the wide variety of innovative practices, innovation cultures, organizational context, and application areas where innovation takes place. It is essential that the functionalities of such are aligned with the needs of innovators and their context. Innovation starts with an adequate identification of goals including an appropriate problem description and ends with the successful exploitation of the problem solution. Therefore, innovation is understood as dealing with complex problem-solving processes in whose activities knowledge of different types is applied and created. Systematic support of innovation processes requires efficient management of knowledge with respect to activities like acquisition, creation, enrichment, retrieval, reuse, and combination of such knowledge.

Related Content

. © 2023. 11 pages.
. © 2023. 19 pages.
. © 2023. 25 pages.
. © 2023. 14 pages.
. © 2023. 26 pages.
. © 2023. 17 pages.
. © 2023. 15 pages.
Body Bottom