Moving from Open Innovation to Innovation Ecosystems

Building Innovation Ecosystems can tackle unique challenges

How do we differentiate (traditional) approaches of Innovation to (evolving) Innovation Ecosystems?

Is your innovation process closed only to you? Or have you gone to being more open in innovation with outside selected partners? Well we do need to move beyond both of these and start thinking and designing with Innovation Ecosystems.

I would argue we need to adapt to thinking and designing in Innovation Ecosystems. True differentiation comes from solving unique challenges in ways others will find difficult and expensive to attempt to replicate as it is the combined value, experience, diversity and knowledge within a network of partners that can be unique.

For me, innovation ecosystems in their ability to provide added value are important to recognize.

In recent years we have been moving away from open innovation but not at the accelerated rate I would have expected, taking this into Innovation Ecosystem design and thinking.

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Buttons and Threads: A Modern Ecosystem Perspective

Buttons & Threads: Applying a Modern Ecosystem Perspective

In today’s rapidly evolving digital landscape, the “buttons and threads” concept perhaps is a powerful metaphor for understanding and designing interconnected business ecosystems.

This updated perspective integrates technological advancements and business practices to illustrate how organizations can thrive in a network-centric world.

I was first introduced to the “Buttons & Threads” concept while working within one alliance I had in consulting while living in Singapore back in 2003. This concept was envisaged, in my view, before its time and ability to deliver due to the constraints of not having technology sufficiently capable and developed to be scaled and connected up, to fully gain the value that this concept offered from an Ecosystem perspective.

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