Post by account_disabled on Jan 1, 2024 2:24:03 GMT -5
Forum Do short-term to sustainable business models? You must be logged in to leave a comment. First time here? Sign up for a free account: comment on articles and access more articles. Comments Rav Singh Year Month Day Very interesting post. Not many people are seriously discussing sustainability except Al Gore, haha. But this is serious. There is a lot going on in the world today, and WikiLeaks is the latest threat of mass destruction. We all need to come together to sustain the planet for future generations. Interesting post. Thanks for raising this as a business issue.
I don’t pay much attention to sustainable development, thinking that it is not a business issue, but more of a social issue. This casts sustainability in a new light and spawned a corresponding autumn research topic in the journal: Do intellectual property strategies necessarily Job Function Email List undermine open innovation? How your IP strategy might be stifling your open innovation activities, and what you can do to make it an enabler, or even builder, of industrial ecosystems. Oliver Alexi, Paula Krisculow, and Amon Salter Year Month Day Reading Time: Minutes Topics Innovation Workplaces, Teams, and Culture Innovation Strategy Collaboration Subscribe for Access and Share.
What to Read Next MIT Year in Artificial Intelligence Must-read book Top 10 articles of the year Two decades of open innovation Adding cybersecurity expertise to your boardroom, courtesy of Siemens Protection for intellectual property ( ) seems to contradict the pursuit of open innovation ( ) Companies use external ideas as well as internal ones , as well as internal and external paths to market as they seek to advance their technology. Selective use of research conducted elsewhere can bring new ideas and capabilities to a company, increasing its productivity and profits, preventing it from having to reinvent the wheel, and saving significant amounts of money. While many companies strive to reconcile the two approaches, often finding that their IP strategies hinder their efforts, this is not necessarily the case. Companies that know how to use intellectual property.
I don’t pay much attention to sustainable development, thinking that it is not a business issue, but more of a social issue. This casts sustainability in a new light and spawned a corresponding autumn research topic in the journal: Do intellectual property strategies necessarily Job Function Email List undermine open innovation? How your IP strategy might be stifling your open innovation activities, and what you can do to make it an enabler, or even builder, of industrial ecosystems. Oliver Alexi, Paula Krisculow, and Amon Salter Year Month Day Reading Time: Minutes Topics Innovation Workplaces, Teams, and Culture Innovation Strategy Collaboration Subscribe for Access and Share.
What to Read Next MIT Year in Artificial Intelligence Must-read book Top 10 articles of the year Two decades of open innovation Adding cybersecurity expertise to your boardroom, courtesy of Siemens Protection for intellectual property ( ) seems to contradict the pursuit of open innovation ( ) Companies use external ideas as well as internal ones , as well as internal and external paths to market as they seek to advance their technology. Selective use of research conducted elsewhere can bring new ideas and capabilities to a company, increasing its productivity and profits, preventing it from having to reinvent the wheel, and saving significant amounts of money. While many companies strive to reconcile the two approaches, often finding that their IP strategies hinder their efforts, this is not necessarily the case. Companies that know how to use intellectual property.