The Innovation, Technology Entrepreneurship & Marketing group is a research group at TU/e. Follow us to stay up to date about our events and publications!
and ‘living labs in the knowledge economy.’ We discuss how these futures expand the opportunity space for novel production and consumption systems, drawing on distinct sustainability conceptualizations and different actors.
🚨 New Publication Alert! 📄
Our colleagues @BrittSmulders latest paper, "Imagining alternative futures for the Dutch poultry industry," is now published in the Futures journal! 📑
Want to learn more: https://t.co/krTL5zGFJg
We constructed and visualized six coherent future images depicting alternative contexts for this industry: ‘zero-emission policy agenda,’ ‘farmers as entrepreneurial innovators,’ ‘collaborative ecosystem,’ ‘retail as an orchestrator,’ ‘happy animals, healthy humans,’
📢 Out in TFSC! Joint work with @MMazaheri_UB, Jaime Bonnin Roca, @elena_m_tur, and @bobwalrave.
Patent classes are unevenly distributed across clusters and no correlation between the number of patents in a class and the predicted level of maturity.
https://t.co/HiIIN8hMQi
Are you looking for effective ways to develop your ideas into a top management journal article? Check out this insightful new editorial in the Academy of Management Journal (@AOMConnect) by Sinziana Dorobantu, @MarcBGruber, Davide Ravasi, and Ned Wellman. They introduce the "AMJ Management Research Canvas," a valuable tool for mapping out your paper ideas. You can read it here: https://t.co/4maZPDf8BU.
Our study contributes to the literature on blockchain governance by presenting a guideline that helps practitioners create effective governance arrangements for blockchain ecosystems. The underlying design propositions can inform future theoretical work in this area.
🚨 New Publication Alert! 📚
Our colleagues Sjoerd Romme and Jaime Bonnin's latest paper, "Creating and Testing a Guideline for Governing Blockchain Ecosystems: A Study Informed by Design Science" is now published in She Ji Journal 👉 https://t.co/yfLahZGEVz
The resulting guideline, called GOBLET, is characterized by enterprise-centricity, stage-specific guidance, interdependencies between various blockchain layers, and pivotal behavioral drivers.
Specifically, our model is particularly valuable for OEMs that service systems with high shutdown costs, rely heavily on customer satisfaction, and favor more attractive policies for their service engineers (i.e., reducing the number of emergency corrective interventions).
🚨 New Publication Alert! 📚
Our colleague Néomie Raassens's latest paper, "Condition-based maintenance for multi-component systems: A scalable optimization model with two thresholds," is now published in Reliability Engineering & System Safety! 👉 https://t.co/KarVqckPZc
From a practical standpoint, our findings offer valuable insights for OEMs seeking to enhance their after-sales service contracts while concurrently reducing maintenance-related costs.