Seminar
Series
Fall
2006 Schedule
DATE |
PRESENTER |
TITLE (& LINK TO PAPER) |
---|---|---|
09/18/06 |
Noam Wasserman (HBS) |
|
10/02/06 |
Jim Utterback (MIT) |
|
10/16/06 |
Rebecca Henderson (MIT) |
|
10/30/06 |
JoAnne Yates (MIT) |
|
11/06/06 |
Ajay Agarwal (Toronto) |
|
11/27/06 |
Anita McGahan (BU) |
|
12/04/06 |
Yasheng Huang (MIT) |
|
12/11/06 |
Steve Kahl (MIT) |
Utilizing Use: The Effect of Customer Learning and Evaluation on Technology and Industry Evolution |
Spring 2007 Schedule
DATE
|
PRESENTER
|
TITLE, ABSTRACTS, AND PAPERS
|
April 2
|
Irving Wladawsky-Berger, VP, Technology and Strategy, IBM
|
Advanced Technologies,
Business Transformation and Innovation
This
talk will discuss how to leverage major technology advances to significantly
transform a business in the marketplace, by examining the concrete
experiences of IBM’s major transformation in the second half of the 1990s,
when it aggressively embraced the Internet and came up with its e-business
strategy. The Internet and e-business
played a key role in helping IBM survive the near-death experience that it
went through in the early 1990s, reinvent just about all aspects of the
company including organizational and cultural aspects, and once more become a
leader in the IT industry.
By
placing a special emphasis on transformations that are caused by highly
complex, advanced technologies like the Internet, we will discuss how such
transformations require that managers have a very strong “systems” and
technical intuition to enable them to make major organizational or marketing
decisions. We will also explore how the
kind of “holistic” thinking that you would expect from good engineers might
translate into a business advantage in formulating and executing market
strategies.
|
April 9
|
Thomas Hughes, UPenn
|
Feedback Controls and
Dynamic Systems: The Art Of Invention
Biographies
of inventors often trivialize their creativity by attributing it to an
ineffable quality called genius. To explore inventive creativity more
deeply and complexly, I focus on two leading inventor-entrepreneurs, Elmer
Sperry from the period 1870 to 1920, when independent inventor-entrepreneurs
flourished, and Jay Forrester, from the decades after World War II, when
inventor-entrepreneurs in universities flourished. I will explore their
creativity as manifest by the problems they chose and the approaches they
took to choose and to solve problems.
|
April 23
|
Roger Bohn, UCSD
|
From Art to Science in Manufacturing: The
Evolution of Technological Knowledge
This
talk will trace the development of one technology over 200 years, and from
there generalize about the nature of technology and its progress. Rather than
trace how manufacturing methods changed, I will examine the underlying
knowledge. I propose a model of knowledge as a directed graph of
causal relationships: what affects what. New technology corresponds to growth
in the knowledge graph, enabling new and better methods as well as new
outcomes. There are many patterns in the evolution of knowledge, such as
growing "backwards" (from effects, to causes) and the fundamental
role of knowledge about how to measure. If there is time, I will discuss how
societies manage complex knowledge by partitioning it among organizations,
and by "encapsulating" it into devices.
|
April 30
|
Christopher Magee, MIT
|
A functional
approach for studying technological progress:
Application
to information technology
This
paper develops and assesses a broad functional category approach to arriving
at metrics for assessing technological progress. The approach is applied to
three functional categories of information technology— storage, transportation
and transformation by first building a 100 plus year database for each of the
three functional categories. The results indicate generally continuous
progress for each functional category independent of the specific underlying
technological artifacts dominating at different times. Thus, the empirical
results reported in this study indicate that the functional category approach
offers a more stable and reliable methodology for assessing longer time
technological progress trends. Therefore, this approach offers the promise of
being more useful in technological forecasting for large-scale change even as
its ability to forecast specific dominant technological trajectories has been
compromised.
|
May 7
|
Lori Rosenkopf, UPenn
|
Should Auld Acquaintance
Be Forgot…? The Reverse Transfer of Knowledge through Mobility Ties
A
host of studies have demonstrated that the mobility of technical employees
among firms is associated with some transfer of knowledge from their previous
firms to their new employers. To
separate the human and social capital mechanisms in this process, we
distinguish the “ inbound mobility” generated by hiring from the “outbound
mobility” generated by an employee leaving a firm. In contrast to most studies on mobility’s
effect on knowledge transfer, we focus on whether outbound mobility, rather
than hiring, is associated with knowledge transfer to firms losing
employees. In this situation, a social
capital approach would predict that the firm losing an employee would gain
access to the new employer’s knowledge, while a human capital approach would
not.
We
examine these phenomena in 154 semiconductor firms between 1980 and
1995. Results demonstrate that a firm
experiencing outbound mobility is more likely to cite the firm receiving the
mobile employee even after controlling for alternative mechanisms for
knowledge transfer, such as alliances. This effect is driven by geographically distant firms, suggesting that
the communication channels formed are more valuable when they provide access
to distant, presumably non-redundant knowledge. These results demonstrate the validity of a
social capital approach to knowledge transfer and call into question the
conventional wisdom that losing employees means losing knowledge.
|
May 14
|
Siobahn O’Mahony, HBS
|
The Selective
Synthesis of Competing Logics
Prior
social movement and organizational research has shown the difficulty of
maintaining participatory processes or social movement agendas as
organizations scale and mature. But
when it comes to creating a formal organization, little research has examined
how such groups select organizing practices, given competing logics about how
to organize. With ethnographic
studies, we compare how the Burning Man and Open Source production
communities addressed two competing logics of production and expression. By tracing the organizing practices that
these communities integrated, rejected, and contested, we show how competing
logics were selectively synthesized to support rather than impede organizing
efforts. This research shows how the
presence of co-existing but competing logics helps members to mindfully
select organizing practices that avoid either extreme.
|
Click here for details on Speakers in Fall 2005
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