edited by Dietmar
Harhoff and Karim R. Lakhani
The last two decades have
witnessed an extraordinary growth of new models of managing and organizing the
innovation process that emphasizes users over producers. Large parts of the
knowledge economy now routinely rely on users, communities, and open innovation
approaches to solve important technological and organizational problems. This
view of innovation, pioneered by the economist Eric von Hippel, counters the
dominant paradigm, which cast the profit-seeking incentives of firms as the
main driver of technical change. In a series of influential writings, von
Hippel and colleagues found empirical evidence that flatly contradicted the
producer-centered model of innovation. Since then, the study of user-driven
innovation has continued and expanded, with further empirical exploration of a
distributed model of innovation that includes communities and platforms in a
variety of contexts and with the development of theory to explain the economic
underpinnings of this still emerging paradigm. This volume provides a
comprehensive and multidisciplinary view of the field of user and open
innovation, reflecting advances in the field over the last several decades.
The
contributors -- including many colleagues of Eric von Hippel -- offer both
theoretical and empirical perspectives from such diverse fields as economics,
the history of science and technology, law, management, and policy. The
empirical contexts for their studies range from household goods to financial
services. After discussing the fundamentals of user innovation, the
contributors cover communities and innovation; legal aspects of user and
community innovation; new roles for user innovators; user interactions with
firms; and user innovation in practice, describing experiments, toolkits, and
crowdsourcing, and crowdfunding.