Latest Edition: From Knowledge Management to Strategic Competence: Assessing Technological, Market and Organisational Innovation (3rd Edition)
The business and academic communities pay much interest to the concept of knowledge management and strategic competencies or core capabilities; that is, how organizations define and differentiate themselves. This book attempts to establish the links between strategic competencies, knowledge management, organizational learning and innovation management — specifically, how an organization identifies, assesses and exploits its competencies, and translates these into new processes, products and services.
The contributors to the book include leading researchers and consultants in the field. Adopting a practical but rigorous approach to the subject, they focus on the measurement, management and improvement of organizational, technological and market competencies, and identify the relationships with strategic, operational and financial performance.
Contents:
- Strategic Competencies:
- The Competence Cycle: Translating Knowledge Into New Processes, Products and Services (J Tidd)
- What Are Strategic Competencies? (R Hall)
- Making Strategy Happen (P Hiscocks & D Riff)
- Market Competencies:
- Brands, Innovation and Growth: The Role of Brands in Innovation and Growth for Consumer Businesses (T Clayton & G Turner)
- Technological and Market Competencies and Financial Performance (J Tidd & C Driver)
- Technological Competencies:
- Technological Indicators of Performance (P Patel)
- Assessing Technological Competencies (F Narin)
- Organisational Competencies:
- Are There Any Competencies Out There? Identifying and Using Technical Competencies (D Griffiths & M Boisot)
- Assessing Performance in Supply (R Lamming)
- Improving Competencies:
- Innovation: A Performance Measurement Perspective (P K Ahmed & M Zairi)
- Learning and Continuous Improvement (J Bessant)
Readership: Practicing managers, consultants and academics interested or responsible for measuring and improving the management of technology and innovation.
Joe Tidd is a physicist with subsequent degrees in Economics and Business Administration. Since 1992 he has been Head of the Management of Innovation Specialisation at Imperial College, a 120-hour module for MBA students; since 1995 he has been Director of the Executive MBA Programme.
He was previously policy adviser to the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), responsible for industrial innovation and advanced manufacturing technologies. There he developed and launched the annual CBI Innovation Trends Survey, and presented expert evidence to three Select Committee Enquiries held by the House of Commons and House of Lords. Prior to working for the CBI, Dr Tidd was a researcher for the five-year, $5 million International Motor Vehicle Program organised by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in the US, and he has also worked at the Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU) in the UK.
Dr Tidd has written three books and more than fifty papers on the management of technology and innovation, his latest book being Managing Innovation: Integrating Technological, Market and Organizational change. He is Managing Editor of the International Journal of Innovation Management, and national coordinator of the ESRC Innovation Training Network. His current research and consulting interests include the measurement of innovation, and managing the process of identification, development and marketing of new products and services in sectors characterised by complexity and uncertainty, such as multimedia and telecommunications.