4.5 Review

Managing Open Innovation: A Project-Level Perspective

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT
Volume 68, Issue 1, Pages 301-316

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TEM.2019.2949714

Keywords

Technological innovation; Complexity theory; Uncertainty; Collaboration; Search problems; Task analysis; Open innovation (OI); project attributes; project complexity; project uncertainty; project-level variables

Funding

  1. Institute for Communication Technology Management (CTM), USC Marshall School of Business
  2. Novo Nordisk Foundation [NNF16OC0021630]

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This article conducts a quantitative cross-project analysis on 201 innovation projects undertaken by American firms to explore the relationship between complexity and uncertainty, two key innovation project attributes, and successful open innovation management. The study highlights the importance of project attributes in successful open innovation management. It suggests relevant project-level future research opportunities in the field of open innovation management and provides methodological recommendations to address such opportunities.
Open innovation has become a mainstream phenomenon in the current business landscape. However, despite the fact that innovation projects generally have different attributes (e.g., complexity and uncertainty), most studies on open innovation have only considered firm-level characteristics (e.g., firm size and firm openness) to determine how to manage open innovation successfully. Project-level studies on open innovation management are still scant-There are only a few conceptual and qualitative articles on the topic, and there is a lack of quantitative insights. Based on a survey designed to collect detailed data from 201 innovation projects undertaken by American firms, this article provides a quantitative cross-project analysis of how two, key innovation project attributes (i.e., complexity and uncertainty) are related to five factors for successful open innovation management: 1) openness level, 2) external partner choice, 3) open innovation mechanism choice, 4) collaboration process formalization, and 5) internal firm practices. This exploratory study contributes to the open innovation literature by highlighting the importance of microfoundations (i.e., innovation project attributes) in successful open innovation management. This article concludes by suggesting a number of relevant project-level future research opportunities in the field of open innovation management, and some methodological recommendations on how to address such opportunities.

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