DocumentCode :
2925250
Title :
The absorptive capacity for complex, science-based innovation: The case of bio-pharmaceuticals
Author :
Dunne, Darcy ; Dougherty, Deborah
fYear :
2011
fDate :
27-30 June 2011
Firstpage :
587
Lastpage :
591
Abstract :
New products in sectors such as bio-pharmaceuticals, alternate energy, new materials, and complex products require an enormous amount of new knowledge. Yet this knowledge is widely distributed around the globe, so accessing and absorbing it can be very difficult. We focus on how can industrial scientists recognize, pull in, and apply so much new knowledge in their product innovation work. We frame our study with the knowing as practice perspective, which suggests how knowledge professionals draw on their embodied intuition, physical and sensory referents, and on their socially embedded interactions and work contexts. Based on 85 interviews with drug discovery scientists and managers, we develop empirically grounded theory for how these industrial scientists can access and absorb so much knowledge. We find that the collective sense of the scientist is a major medium for drawing on distributed know-how as needed to explore ill-structured problems. The collective sense of the scientist is a complex, intuitive sense that relies on the acting body of the scientist working in the lab with materials and apparatus and using all senses, similar to studies of academic scientists. However, the industrial sense of the scientist is collective - socially created, reinforced, and shared. Our analysis suggests that three social networks together produce and maintain this collective sense by creating a rich social context for knowing: 1) interactions among the sensory bodies of scientists in everyday practice; 2) connections with institutions of sciences; and 3) engagement with the overall innovation process in their firms. We describe each social network, how it works, and how it helps absorb so much knowledge.
Keywords :
drugs; innovation management; pharmaceutical industry; pharmaceutical technology; absorptive capacity; biopharmaceuticals product; drug discovery; ill structured problems; product innovation; science based innovation; social networks; Communities; Drugs; Interviews; Organizations; Presses; Technological innovation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Technology Management Conference (ITMC), 2011 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-951-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ITMC.2011.5996030
Filename :
5996030
Link To Document :
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