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Quotes About Innovation

In this subsection I offer an explanation for the puzzle by pointing out that free revealing is often the best practical option available to user innovators. Harhoff, Henkel, and von Hippel (2003) found that it is in practice very difficult for most innovators to protect their innovations from direct or approximate imitation. This means that the practical choice is typically not the one posited by the private investment model: should innovators voluntarily freely reveal
~ Eric von Hippel
Innovation by users tends to be widely distributed rather than concentrated among just a very few very innovative users. As a result, it is important for user-innovators to find ways to combine and leverage their efforts. Users
~ Eric von Hippel
increase the ease with which innovators can build larger systems from interlinkable modules created by community participants. Free and open source software projects are a relatively well-developed and very successful form of Internet-based innovation community. However, innovation communities are by no means restricted to software or even to
~ Eric von Hippel
The collective or community effort to provide a public good-which is what freely revealed innovations are-has traditionally been explored in the literature on "collective action." However, behaviors seen in extant innovation communities
~ Eric von Hippel
The whole sport of high-performance windsurfing really started from that. As soon as I did it, there were about ten of us who sailed all the time together and within one or two days there were various boards out there that had footstraps of various kinds on them, and we were all going fast and jumping waves and stuff. It just kind of snowballed from there. (Shah 2000) By 1998, more than a million people were engaged
~ Eric von Hippel
1 Introduction and Overview When I say that innovation is being democratized, I mean that users of products and services-both firms and individual consumers-are increasingly
~ Eric von Hippel
Why does a user wanting a custom product sometimes innovate for itself rather than buying from a manufacturer of custom products? There is, after all, a choice-at least it would seem so. However, if a user with the resources and willingness to pay
~ Eric von Hippel
begin this chapter by reviewing the evidence that many users indeed do develop and modify products for their own use in many fields. I then show that innovation is concentrated among lead users, and that lead users' innovations often become commercial products.
~ Eric von Hippel
The evidence on user innovation frequency and pervasiveness is summarized in table 2.1. We see here that the frequency with which user firms and individual consumers develop or modify products for their own use range from 10 percent to nearly 40 percent in fields studied to date.
~ Eric von Hippel
frequency with which user firms and individual consumers develop or
~ Eric von Hippel
this chapter by reviewing the evidence that many users indeed do develop and modify products for their own use
~ Eric von Hippel
informal user group. High-performance windsurfing involves acrobatics such as jumps and
~ Eric von Hippel
its core a problem-solving process. Research into the nature of problem solving shows it to consist of trial and error, directed by some amount
~ Eric von Hippel
It is becoming progressively easier for many users to get precisely what they want by designing it for themselves.
~ Eric von Hippel
the ongoing shift of product-development activities from manufacturers to users is painful and difficult for many manufacturers.
~ Eric von Hippel
different products or innovations. For example, Boeing is a manufacturer of airplanes, but it is also a user of machine tools. If we were examining innovations developed by
~ Eric von Hippel
for themselves. User-centered innovation processes offer great advantages over the manufacturer-centric innovation development systems that have been the mainstay of commerce for hundreds of years. Users that innovate can develop exactly what they want, rather than relying on manufacturers to act as their (often very imperfect) agents. Moreover, individual
~ Eric von Hippel
Moreover, individual users do not have to develop everything they need on their own:
~ Eric von Hippel
the innovate-or-buy decision follows. This model shows in a quantitative way that user firms with unique needs
~ Eric von Hippel
When I say that innovation is being democratized, I mean that users of products and services-both firms and individual consumers-are increasingly able to innovate for themselves. User-centered innovation
~ Eric von Hippel
than relying on manufacturers to act as their (often very imperfect) agents. Moreover, individual users do not
~ Eric von Hippel
Later, I collaborated with a number of wonderful co-authors, all of whom are friends as well: Stan Finkelstein
~ Eric von Hippel
Pamela Morrison, William Riggs, John Roberts, Stephan Schrader, Mary Sonnack, Stefan Thomke, Marcie Tyre
~ Eric von Hippel
user-centered innovation process just illustrated is in sharp contrast
~ Eric von Hippel