TITEL
Designing R&D organisations in process industry: essays on context, process, and structure
FöRFATTARE
Bergfors, Markus
INSTITUTION
Industriell ekonomi och samhällsvetenskap / Industriell organisation
SAMMANFATTNING
This doctoral thesis reports on a research project in R&D organisational
design carried out at Promote - the Centre for Management of Innovation and
Technology in Process Industry. The thesis itself consists of six appended
papers and an extended summary covering the background of the project, the
theoretical frameworks and methodologies used in studying R&D organisations
in process industry, as well as a discussion of the research findings.
This project aims at furthering the understanding of how intrafirm
industrial R&D is organised in process industry through studying the
context of innovation process industry and the organisation of innovation
strategy formulation processes and intrafirm organisational structures for
product and process innovation. The research project employed several
different methodological approaches – including case studies in Swedish
process industry firms, an industry wide survey, and a workshop survey
consisting of a select group of R&D managers and industry experts.
In studying the issue of context, a ranking of critical management of
technology issues was composed through a survey of industry experts. The
ranking proposes that the top issue is involvement of manufacturing in new
product development and issues concerning integration of manufacturing in
product development. Discrepancies concerning critical issues in regard to
other manufacturing industries are also noted. In response to the issue of
strategy formulation processes two opposing methodologies for innovation
strategy formulation were studied. Findings from case studies suggest that
the level of diversification, the characteristics of industry boundaries,
customers, and competitors, and the role and organisation of R&D are key
contingencies for choosing between innovation strategy processes either
focusing on positions in the market or on internal resources. In response
to the third question two different studies were carried out. One case
study focuses on the centralisation versus decentralisation of product and
process innovation. It suggests that a distinction between product and
process innovation should be made and that the organisation of these depend
on how the firm views these activities. The second study, an industry
survey, looks closer at the organisational affiliation of process
innovation. It determines that the degree of newness is a key determinant
and that radical innovation will be organised in R&D while incremental
innovation will be organised in production. Pros and cons concerning
organisational choices are also discussed in light of these findings.
Overall, the research project and the thesis stress the importance of
context and how strategic choices should be reflected in the design of R&D
organisations. Implications for management and academia are discussed and
some avenues for further research are proposed.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--07/48--SE / NR 2007:48
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