Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Section I Introduction
- Section II Learning to flip coins
- Section III Tailoring fits
- 5 Cognition and capabilities: Opportunities seized and missed in the history of the computer industry
- 6 Changing the game of corporate research: Learning to thrive in the fog of reality
- 7 Environmental determinants of work motivation, creativity, and innovation: The case of R&D downsizing
- Section IV Remembering to forget
- Section V (S)Top management and culture
- Section VI Clearing the fog
- Author Index
- Subject Index
7 - Environmental determinants of work motivation, creativity, and innovation: The case of R&D downsizing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Section I Introduction
- Section II Learning to flip coins
- Section III Tailoring fits
- 5 Cognition and capabilities: Opportunities seized and missed in the history of the computer industry
- 6 Changing the game of corporate research: Learning to thrive in the fog of reality
- 7 Environmental determinants of work motivation, creativity, and innovation: The case of R&D downsizing
- Section IV Remembering to forget
- Section V (S)Top management and culture
- Section VI Clearing the fog
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
Innovation, even technological innovation, has a distinctly human face. It is a serious technological oversight to ignore the human side of innovation – the motivation driving those who create new technologies. In particular, it is important to consider the impact of the work environment surrounding these individuals, an environment that emerges from management attitudes toward technological progress and risk-taking. Such attitudes are likely to be significantly affected by major organizational change. In this chapter we consider the effects of the work environment on innovation and, in particular, the effects of organizational downsizing on the work environment for innovation. What happens to entrepreneurial, risk-taking activity among scientists and technicians during periods of turbulence? If there is an impact on such behaviors, it is likely that technological innovation itself will be affected as well.
In chapter 3 in this volume, Garud, Nayyar, and Shapira treat technological oversights and foresights as consequences of choices by firms to invest or withhold investment in a particular technology. The focus is on risk-taking behavior by key managers in the firm. At a more microscopic level, however, the creation and development of new ideas for technological innovations depends on appropriate risk-oriented thinking among the inventors themselves. Garud, Nayyar, and Shapira briefly suggest that such behavior depends, at least in part, on the organizational environment that top management has established in the firm. This is the central thesis that we present here.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Technological InnovationOversights and Foresights, pp. 111 - 126Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
- 18
- Cited by