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extended submission  deadline: 1 November 2021

Dear Colleagues, 

Please kindly find below a final reminder of the SI CfPs in TECHNOVATION

Call for Papers: Special Issue: “The limits of open innovation: Failures, risks, and costs in open innovation practice and theory”

The International Journal of Technological Innovation, Entrepreneurship and Technology Management

Guest editors:

Marina Dabić*

University of Zagreb, Faculty of Economics and Business, Croatia

Nottingham Trent University, United Kingdom

Tugrul Daim

Portland State University, USA

Marcel Bogers

Eindhoven University of Technology, Netherlands

University of Copenhagen, Denmark

University of California, Berkeley, USA

Anne-Laure Mention

RMIT University, Australia

Tampere University, Finland

Singapore University of Social Sciences, Singapore

* Corresponding Guest Editor.

Call for Papers

The limits of open innovation: Failures, risks, and costs in open innovation practice and theory

Deadline for submission:

Starting: 1 March 2021

Closing: 1 November 2021

While much has been said regarding the possible benefits of an open approach to innovation, we still lack a clear understanding of the downsides of openness, the limits of openness and its interplay with failure in innovation ventures. This can lead to detrimental effects, such as differences in failure acceptance culture, a lower commitment to innovation management, and a lack of personal, organisational, project-related, marketing, consumer-based, or social prerequisites. At the same time, the growing complexity of engineering and technological advancements, along with the increased responsiveness of society when it comes to open innovation, represents new challenges for open innovation practices and research related to failures within the innovation process. Disciplines such as economics, business, law, engineering, sociology, psychology, and even mathematics and other sciences must interact to design efficient and safe open innovation strategies, structures and processes.

Learning from failures or predicting possible risks or costs requires multi-disciplinary and multi-scale methods and can decrease the likelihood of decision errors and, eventually, inhibit firm performance. For example, the influence of the distance between operations in multinational corporations and the costs of coordinating the geographically dispersed activities of open innovation teams are likely to be considerably more challenging. Furthermore, bringing in other perspectives and new levels or units of analysis will help to facilitate a better understanding of when open innovation will succeed and when it will fail, offering important insights into future practices and theoretical developments.

Open innovation describes a distributed innovation process in which organization need to manage knowledge inflows and outflows to accelerate their innovation processes. However, emerging research has investigated some of the limits of open innovation, for example, in terms of decreasing returns to openness, cost-increasing effects, deviant co-creation, and the negative impact of openness on the speed and cost of product development projects. Nevertheless, our understanding of the exact limits of open innovation is still limited. Better understanding the limits of open innovation - through failures, risks, costs, and lack of trust - is necessary in order to obtain a better understanding of the contingencies of open innovation, thereby informing related theories and practices.

For this Special Issue, we envision articles possibly related to (but not at all limited to) any of the following questions:

· What are limits or boundaries of open innovation practice at different levels of analysis? How could these limits be measured?

· How does risk evolve? What are the reasons for failure in firms' open global operations?

· What role does risk play in open innovation processes and practices?

· Do different types of firms - for example, in terms of their nationality, ownership, and governance - approach and respond to open innovation risks and failures in the same manner?

· How can we more accurately measure risks or possible collapses in global open innovation practices?

· How could universities and science provide tools to help overcome risks in open innovation?

· What role does failure in open innovation play in the subsequent success of innovation projects? How do organizations manage false positive and/or false-negative errors in open innovation projects? In what way does project organization communication foster the failure of open innovation projects?

· What are the organizational, managerial, and/or behavioural attributes of open innovation failures, risks, and costs?

· What is the influence of environmental, political, and technological changes on open innovation failure?

· What are the drivers of failure in firms' open innovation activity systems, global value chains, and relationships?

· How do we recognise lack of trust in relationships between multilevel dimensions of complexity in open innovation practice?

· How can the lack of innovation supervision and organisational requirements lead to unmitigated failure in open innovation projects?

We invite submissions that are either conceptual or empirical. No specific theoretical or methodological approaches are preferred. High-quality conceptual, qualitative, quantitative and mixed methods submissions are welcome.

Only original unpublished manuscripts can be submitted, according to the 'Guide for Authors' published on the Technovation website.

Please mention the name of the Special Issue in your cover letter. All manuscripts will be peer-reviewed following the established policies and procedures of the journal. The final papers will be selected for publication depending on the results of the peer-review process and the reviews of the Guest Editors.

Expected date of publication: 2022

A paper feedback session at: IEEE- TEMSCON Spring conference, Dubrovnik, 17th May, Croatia & World Open innovation conference WOIC 2021.

The guest editors welcome informal inquiries and can be contacted on:

Marina Dabić

The University of Zagreb, Faculty of Economics and Business, Croatia

and Nottingham Trent University, the United Kingdom

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References

Alassaf, D.; Dabic, M., Daim, T., & Shifrer, D. (2020). The Impact of Open-Border Organization Culture and Employees’ Knowledge, Attitudes, and Rewards with regards to Open Innovation: An Empirical Study, Journal of Knowledge Management, Published online ahead of print

Bagherzadeh, M., Markovic, S., & Bogers, M. (2019). Managing open innovation: A project-level perspective. IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, Published online ahead of print: https://doi.org/10.1109/TEM.2019.2949714.

Barham, H., Dabic, M., Daim, T., & Shifrer, D. (2020). The role of management support for the implementation of open innovation practices in firms. Technology in Society, 101282.DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.techsoc.2020.101282

Bogers, M., Zobel, A.-K., Afuah, A., Almirall, E., Brunswicker, S., Dahlander, L., Frederiksen, L., Gawer, A., Gruber, M., Haefliger, S., Hagedoorn, J., Hilgers, D., Laursen, K., Magnusson, M. G., Majchrzak, A., McCarthy, I. P., Moeslein, K. M., Nambisan, S., Piller, F. T., Radziwon, A., Rossi-Lamastra, C., Sims, J., & Ter Wal, A. L. J. (2017). The open innovation research landscape: Established perspectives and emerging themes across different levels of analysis. Industry and Innovation, 24(1): 8-40.

Bogers, M., Chesbrough, H., & Moedas, C. (2018). Open Innovation: Research, Practices, and Policies. California Management Review, 60(2): 5–16.

Brunswicker, S., & Chesbrough, H. (2018). The Adoption of Open Innovation in Large Firms: Practices, Measures, and Risks A survey of large firms examines how firms approach open innovation strategically and manage knowledge flows at the project level. Research-Technology Management61(1), 35-45.

Chesbrough, H., & Bogers, M. (2014). Explicating open innovation: Clarifying an emerging paradigm for understanding innovation. In: H. Chesbrough, W. Vanhaverbeke, & J. West (Eds.), New Frontiers in Open Innovation: 3-28. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Chesbrough, H., Lettl, C., & Ritter, T. (2018). Value creation and value capture in open innovation. Journal of Product Innovation Management35(6): 930-938.

Ciesielska, M. (2018). Nokia on the slope: The failure of a hybrid open/closed source model. The International Journal of Entrepreneurship and Innovation19(3): 218-225.

Dahlander, L., & Gann, D. M. (2010). How open is innovation? Research Policy, 39(6): 699-709.

Enkel, E., Gassmann, O., & Chesbrough, H. (2009). Open R&D and Open Innovation: Exploring the Phenomenon. R&D Management, 39(4): 311–16.

García-Quevedo, J., Segarra-Blasco, A., & Teruel, M. (2018). Financial constraints and the failure of innovation projects. Technological Forecasting and Social Change127, 127-140.

Gatzweiler, A., Blazevic, V., & Piller, F. T. (2017). Dark side or bright light: Destructive and constructive deviant content in consumer ideation contests. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 34(6): 772-789.

Greco, M., Grimaldi, M., & Cricelli, L. (2018). Benefits and Costs of Open Innovation: The BeCO Framework. Technology Analysis & Strategic Management, June, 1–14. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09537325.2018.1484442.

Huizingh, E., Conn, S., & Torkkeli, M. (2011). Open innovation: State of the art and future perspectives. ISPIM special issue on open innovation. Technovation, 31(1): 2-9.

Lifshitz-Assaf, H., Tushman, M. L., & Lakhani, K. R. (2018). A Study of NASA Scientists Shows How to Overcome Barriers to Open Innovation. Harvard Business Reviewhttps://hbr.org/2018/05/why-do-open-innovation-efforts-fail-scientists-want-to-solve-problems-themselves accessed March 1st 2020.

Mention, A. L. (2011). Co-operation and co-opetition as open innovation practices in the service sector: Which influence on innovation novelty?. Technovation31(1), 44-53.

Vanhaverbeke, W., Roijakkers, N., Lorenz, A., & Chesbrough, H. (2017). The Importance of Connecting Open Innovation to Strategy. In: Strategy and Communication for Innovation, 3–15. Springer.

von Briel, F., & Recker, J. C. (2017). Lessons from a failed implementation of an online open innovation community in an innovative organization. MIS quarterly executive16(1): 35-46.

Zhu, X., Xiao, Z., Dong, M. C., & Gu, J. (2019). The fit between firms’ open innovation and business model for new product development speed: A contingent perspective. Technovation, 86, 75-85.

West, J., & Bogers, M. (2014). Leveraging external sources of innovation: A review of research on open innovation. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 31(4): 814-831.

West, J., Salter, A., Vanhaverbeke, W., & Chesbrough, H. (2014). Open Innovation: The Next Decade. Research Policy, 43: 805-811.


Happy holidays,

Marina, Tugrul, Marcel  and Anne Laure

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