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PRIVACY
Opinion

Why need to 'share the love' on innovation

We need to embrace open innovation

Firms could increase profits dramatically by working with others(Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

Whilst change is usually a long drawn out process that can take years if not decades to take effect, there is a revolution in the development of innovation that is slowly but surely changing the way that economies achieve competitive advantage in a rapidly changing global business environment.

During the late 19th and 20th centuries, the process of innovation was driven by businesses generating product ideas internally which they would then develop, manufacture and sell themselves.

As a result, they gained competitive advantage through heavy investment in research and development (R&D) and hiring the brightest people to get to market first.

Once this was done, companies would then protect their new products through aggressively controlling intellectual property to stop anyone else exploiting it.

This would then result in greater profits which could then be reinvested in more R&D and hiring more staff to develop more new products, thus creating a virtuous circle that led to a small number of large firms dominating key technology-based industries.

This looked set to continue for years to come until businesses started to realise that not only could not generate every idea internally, but that they could utilise external ideas to develop innovation and new paths to market.

This process, defined in 2003 by the American academic Henry Chesbrough as “open innovation”, meant that rather than just using intellectual property to develop its own products and services, a business could increase profits dramatically by working with others to exploit its full potential.