ARE BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH CLUSTERS EMERGING IN SINGAPORE? AN EXPLORATORY STUDY

2004 ◽  
Vol 01 (04) ◽  
pp. 477-490
Author(s):  
ALOK MISHRA ◽  
SANJAY A. BHAT ◽  
PRASAD KUMAR PALIYATH ◽  
HARIBHASKAR RANGARAJAN

Innovation and new product development in the biomedical device industry is a complex process requiring interface between medical sciences, precision engineering and information technology. Further challenges are added by the presence of stringent regulatory requirements (e.g. FDA), health economics, outcome considerations, intellectual property issues, and complex nature of market where highly influential intermediaries (medical doctors) not only make product selection for end users (patients) but also contribute to product development. As a result, only a few biomedical device innovations succeed in reaching the market and fewer become commercially successful. A unique characteristic of this industry with regards to innovation and new product development is the importance of research collaboration between the clusters of universities, small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs), hospitals and medical doctors (lead users). The evidence of this is seen in the largest and probably the most established biomedical cluster in San Francisco Bay area, which is home to 31 universities and over 700 life sciences companies [California Healthcare Institute and PricewaterhouseCoopers (2000)]. These clusters of innovation are observed to be contributing significantly to regional economies of the US. Hence many nations as well as biomedical device multinationals are recognizing the importance of these new sources of innovation (i.e. universities, SMEs and users) and their collaboration. From this angle, the authors in this exploratory study examined biomedical device innovations taking place in select countries in Asia-Pacific and compared that with the innovation output of Singapore from a sample population of 33 000 patented innovations over a four year period (2000–2003). In addition, an attempt was made to understand the factors that are important for successful commercialization of biomedical device innovations from Singapore universities, through a questionnaire based survey of a sample of 50 researchers, and in-depth interviews with a sample of five venture capitalists and five medical doctors (lead users). The findings based on this study indicate that (1) Singapore university researchers appreciate the need for collaborative research with the industry but are sceptical about the present environment and process in Singapore. (2) Only a third of surveyed researchers have motivation to commercialize their innovations. (3) Medical doctors are more comfortable teaming up with universities than with the industry. (4) Industry has short-term perspective of research collaboration. The authors' recommendations are to (1) Encourage co-invention teams between universities, industry, and hospitals (medical doctors and clinicians), (2) Build a long-term co-invention culture through collaborative leadership, (3) Attract investment in local biomedical device R&D and production, and (4) Help Singapore universities and researchers appreciate Asia-Pacific market opportunities.

1999 ◽  
Vol 03 (01) ◽  
pp. 91-109 ◽  
Author(s):  
GARY S. LYNN

The concept of corporate vision has been receiving considerable attention in the strategy scholarship. A clear and lofty organisational vision can provide direction to a company and can positively impact on its ability to succeed. Yet research on vision at the project level has been curiously lacking. The purpose of this research is to define project vision, discuss its components and its impact on successful new product development. By studying the vision on a series of innovations at one company (IBM), we identified several components of an effective vision that include clarity, agreement, support and stability. This article concludes with an assessment of the applicability of these vision components for the extreme form of innovation called radical innovation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 761-784 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasir Rashid ◽  
Ansar Waseem ◽  
Ahmad Ahsan Akbar ◽  
Fatima Azam

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to deliver a summary of the influential work regarding value co-creation in the context of social media. Although, research on the role of social media in co-creation and new product development is growing field; the extant literature is still in developing stage, which needs systematization and categorization to comprehend its current stage and previous research. Design/methodology/approach For this purpose, existing literature on social media and co-creation was studied. Initially, a citation analysis was conducted of influential papers correlated with the topic to identify three streams of research. Later, thematic analysis was carried out to explore specific themes within these categories. Findings Through citation analysis three research streams namely customer’s co-creation on new product development, firm specific capabilities for knowledge sharing, absorption and processing and new opportunities were identified. Later, total four categories were identified through thematic analysis which contains different sub-themes such as test of theories, proposed theoretical frameworks, lead users characteristics, customer’s motivation and experience regarding co-creation, online communities of customers and open innovation. Research limitations/implications This study also categorizes and systemizes the extant literature exploring role of social media in value co-creation. Such systematic review of the extant literature will help the academicians to understand the previous stream of work and pursue a particular line of enquiry in furthering the understanding of interaction between social media and co-innovation. Practical implications This work is particularly useful for practitioners as more firms are moving the business online. These firms are actively using social media and user-generated content to gain insight into customer’s preferences. By increasing the participation of customers and lead users through online communities, firms can also increase customer’s commitment. Originality/value The paper adds to the extant literature by identifying research streams and themes in the extant literature on the role of social media in value co-creation. Later, these themes are abductively linked to develop a theoretical framework.


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 32
Author(s):  
Zu'bi M. F. Al-Zu'bi

<p>This study aims to investigate the effects of collaboration with suppliers and lead users in new product development on open innovation in Jordanian manufacturing companies. Data was collected from 132 companies in two industries; machinery and electronics, and hierarchical regression analysis used to test the study hypotheses, with control variables of company age, company size, and length of relationship applied to avoid their potential bias. The results show that supplier collaboration in new product development does not significantly affect open innovation, while collaboration with lead users positively and significantly affects open innovation.</p>


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