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Summary lecture patents and innovation: innovation

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Summary of lecture 2 of the course 'patents and innovation'

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  • October 21, 2024
  • 14
  • 2024/2025
  • Summary
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Innovation, introduction to
claims and patent systems
Principles of innovation
Different classifications and typologies
Different types of innovation
 Disruptive vs. sustaining (market)
- Disruptive: creates a new value chain (e.g. cell phone, netflix)
- Sustaining: supports an existing value chain (e.g. new car type)
 Radical vs. incremental (product)
- Radical: completely destroys existing market
- Incremental: small changes

From a product point of view
 Architectural vs. modular (product)
- architectural: changes the configuration of the product (e.g. i-watch)
– often aimed at targeting a new market
- modular: changes a module within a product (e.g. type of battery) –
often aimed more at existing market
Source of innovation




 Business innovation: Enable businesses to become more efficient and
profitable
 Marketing innovation: New ways of interacting with clients
- Tesla makes it possible to buy cars online
 Technology innovation: new ideas based on technology (producing a
solution to a real/perceived need)
-> most great innovations are based on new technology
-> important aspects for competing and increasing profit


Dynamics of innovation
Relates to industries where the performance of the product and the cost of
production are dominant (and where publicity and/or trends are less dominant)!!

By studying examples of innovation in the market, it is possible to recognize a
general model in the development of a product:

The first ‘fluid phase’
- The introduction of 1 original product

1

, - Many competitors develop their own alternative product
- The production process is still inefficient

Fluid phase  dominant design
• It then moves to a ‘transitional phase’
- Efficient production becomes more important
- Need for standardization
- Producers start providing innovative production processes
• The last phase: ‘specific phase’:
- The cost of efficient production becomes more and more important
- There are improvements on the product itself
- The price of the product gives a competitive advantage
- There are few competitors

Factors affecting dynamics
 Established technologies are often improved as a reaction to competing
innovations: you can get “defensive innovation” by established
technologies.
 Innovators often change into conservative defenders of a status quo as
they invested a lot in their own innovation.
 The appearance of a dominant design favors companies having the know-
how to innovate the production process  difficult to enter the industry

Conclusion for industry
-> keep innovating
-> Introducing new competences in a company is important for the long-term
survival of the company
-> find balance between improving your own products and introducing new
competences
-> strong technology, good knowledge of the market and competition is
important

How do non-traditional innovation occur
• Innovations arise by looking for opportunities, via bright ideas
• Opportunities occur:
- Accidentially (penicillin)
- When addressing market demands

Stimulation of innovation
1. Government
-> subsidies
-> by creating knowledge clusters
-> by requiring standards for certain products
2. Competition
3. Entrepreneurial inventors

Problems of innovation
-> basic research does not generate money
AND
-> money is not enough to make inventions


Patent system
How does this contribute to dynamics of innovation?

2

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