Innovation Systems
in the Service Economy:
Measurement & Case Study Analysis
|
J. Stanley Metcalfe, Ian Miles (Editors)
Hardcover - 352 pages
Kluwer Academic Publishers;
ISBN: 0792377303
December 1999
Buy the book
|

|
Services have been largely overlooked by innovation researchers
- and largely neglected by innovation and technology policymakers.
Despite their diversity, the treatment of services in analyses of
economic and technological change has, until recently, been very
one-dimensional, if attempted at all. Services' roles in technological
change, in particular, were largely seen as so insubstantial as
to be barely worth examination. They were, and still generally are,
assumed to be innovative laggards - 'supplier-driven' industries.
The point that R&D and technology management activities are
themselves services was rarely noted - something that is much more
difficult today as specialised service firms carrying out such activities
have become more prominent.
Given the unarguable growth in the importance of service sectors,
increasing numbers of researchers and policymakers have taken a
fresh look at service activities. This includes questioning received
wisdom about the innovative capacity of these firms and sectors.
The changes that have taken place in some services have made it
evident that preconceptions about the sector as supplier-driven
and relatively slow in the uptake of innovation are no longer valid
- if they ever were. Of particular interest to the study of innovation
systems are Knowledge-Intensive Business Services (KIBS). KIBS are
among the most rapidly growing sub-sectors of the service economy.
These exemplify the general process of knowledge-intensification
in industrialised economies, and play, we argue, an important role
in innovation processes across the economy. Their growth reflects
increased demands for certain types of knowledge in the economy,
together with trends in the division of labour which lead to specialised
services emerging and playing prominent roles in knowledge accumulation
and transfer.
The essays in this book explore these themes from different perspectives.
The three chapters in Part I provide background discussion of the
innovation systems perspective, and consider conceptual frameworks
in relation to innovation systems and innovation in services. .Part
II contains a group of essays which either directly or by reflection
draw upon new databases in relation to innovation and services.
While providing an overview of recent results, they also point to
major challenges in data gathering which need to be faced and surmounted
if we are to have a clear understanding of the modus operandi of
innovation in the service economy. Finally, Part III contains a
group of case studies of different aspects of services and the innovation
process.
Taken together the essays demonstrate convincingly, contrary to
received opinion, that services are important loci of innovations
in their own right and they are an integral part of innovation systems
in modern economies. The essays also provide several pointers to
the nature of modern economies and the innovation processes they
contain the distributed nature of these innovation processes, the
extended division of labour and a strong degree of interdependence
between manufacturing and service activities, the heterogeneity
of service activities and functions, and the significance of knowledge
accumulation processes in relation to services.
Contents
List of Contributors
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction, Overview and Reprise
J.S. Metcalfe and I. Miles
PART I: CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORKS
Chapter 2: Distributed Innovation Systems and Instituted Economic
Processes
B. Andersen, J.S. Metcalfe and B.S. Tether
Chapter 3: Innovation as a Loosely Coupled System in Services
J. Sundbo and F. Gallouj
Chapter 4: Recombination and the Production of Technological Knowledge:
Some International Evidence
C. Antonelli
PART II: MEASURING SERVICE INNOVATION
Chapter 5: Innovation, Measurement and Services: The New Problematique
R. Coombs and I. Miles
Chapter 6: Rethinking Innovation Comparisons between Manufacturing
and Services: The Experience of the CBR SME Surveys in the UK
A. Hughes and E. Wood
Chapter 7: Service Innovation: What Makes It Different? Empirical
Evidence from Germany
B. Preissl
Chapter 8: Information Flows and Knowledge Creation in Knowledge-Intensive
Business Services: Scheme for a Conceptualization
C. Hipp
Chapter 9: Indicators of Manufacturing and Service Innovation: Their
Strengths and Weaknesses
A. Kleinknecht
Chapter 10: Structural Change and Technological Externalities in
the Service Sector: Some Evidence from Italy
G. Antonelli, G. Cainelli, N. De Liso and R. Zoboli
PART III: CASE STUDIES
Chapter 11: Information Technologies in Non-Knowledge Services: Innovations
on the Margin?
K. Ducatel
Chapter 12: Innovation in Services: The Dynamics of Control Systems
in Investment Banking
P. Nightingale and R. Poll
Chapter 13: Research and Technology Outsourcing and Systems of Innovation
J. Howells
Chapter 14: Horndal at Heathrow? Incremental Innovation Through Procedural
Change at a Congested Airport
B.S. Tether and J.S. Metcalfe
|
Innovation Systems in the Service Economy:
Measurement and Case Study Analysis
J. Stanley Metcalfe, Ian Miles (Editors)
Hardcover - 352 pages (December 1999)
Kluwer Academic Publishers;
ISBN: 0792377303
Buy the book
|
 |
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to CRIC Books
|