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Culture clash - the challenge of innovation through acquisition
IoT Business Index 2017: Transformation in Motion

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Busting the artificial intelligence myths

Ignore the hype and the fear, writes David Harding, CEO of Winton Capital Management. Recent developments in AI are not the beginning of the end of the human race, but are simply the latest step in the gradual evolution of computing

Outsourcing innovation

Today, few brand owners make their own goods. Instead, they hand this over to others and concentrate on devising, designing, advertising and selling their products. However, while outsourced manufacturing was once pursued largely to cut costs and allow organisations to focus on activities that added value to their output, companies are recognising that external partners may also have the ability to innovate.

Dell's customer crowdsourcing model

One of the strategies on which Dell built its business was the ability to customise its products using feedback from consumers. So it comes as no surprise that the computer company's model of innovation is based heavily on tapping into ideas from its customers. To do so, the company started to investigate how it might connect with customers online and find out more about their complaints, requests and problems. The result was IdeaStorm, initially a blog and now a website facilitating what is known as "crowdsourcing".

General Electric and the offshore research model

Rather than turn to outsiders, General Electric has embraced the offshoring model, expanding its research facilities globally. Headquartered on a 525-acre site in Niskayuna, New York, GE Global Research now also has centres in China, India and Germany. This gives the company about 3,000 researchers across the four facilities, with expertise ranging from electronics and computing to chemistry and biosciences.

Opening up

Opening up: How R&D is changing in the telecommunications sector today investigates how technology and telecommunications firms are dealing with the process of innovation. The report was commissioned by SAS.

Crowd wisdom

Talent for innovation: Getting noticed in a global market incorporates case studies of 39 companies selected as Technology Pioneers in biotechnology/health, energy/environmental technology, and information technology.

Beyond Cash: China’s Emerging Payments Market

Research Methodology

Talent for innovation

Leonardo Da Vinci unquestionably had it in the 15th century; so did Thomas Edison in the 19th century. But today, "talent for innovation" means something rather different. Innovation is no longer the work of one individual toiling in a workshop. In today's globalised, interconnected world, innovation is the work of teams, often based in particular innovation hotspots, and often collaborating with partners, suppliers and customers both nearby and in other countries.

Leveraging the power of global innovation

Our research drew on two main initiatives. We conducted a global online survey in September 2008 of 197 executives. Of them, 28% are based in the Asia-Pacific region, 25% in North America, 22% in Western Europe and 15% in the Middle East and Africa. Twenty-three per cent of respondents come from financial services, 13% from professional  services, 8% from information technology (IT) and technology, and 8% from manufacturing; the remainder work in a variety of industries, including energy, construction and education.

The intelligent enterprise

The intelligent enterprise: creating a culture of speedy and efficient decision-making is an Economist Intelligence Unit report sponsored by CSC and Oracle.

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