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innovation
(redirected from Incremental innovation)

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.15 sec.

innovation

Creating something new. Process innovation is a new way of doing something, and product innovation is the introduction of a new product or the modification of an existing one. Product innovation often brings competitive advantage in product markets that are relatively static, such as the ‘air’ training shoe developed by Nike that transformed the training shoe from sports accessory to mainstream street fashion. Process innovation, such as the development of production line manufacturing, can lead to significant cost reductions and licensing opportunities.

Innovation needs to be protected to have economic value and this is done by obtaining a patent. The practice of reverse engineering (taking an existing product and deconstructing it to learn how to build a similar product) has reduced the timescale in which the benefits of innovation can be enjoyed.



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Then you have to define whether you're talking about incremental innovation, such as a brand extension of toothpaste, or more radical, breakthrough ideas.
To clarify the relationship between innovation, corporate strategic scope and organizational capabilities, four different perspectives of innovations ranging from incremental innovation to innovations leading to drastic change have been offered (Hickman & Raia, 2002).
While incremental innovation is about improvements in either cost or features of an existing product, the authors describe a "radical innovation" as "a product, process, or service with either unprecedented performance features or familiar features that offer potential for significant improvements in performance or cost.
 
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