650 Management und unterstützende Tätigkeiten
Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (7) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (3)
- Postprint (3)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Keywords
- academic entrepreneurship (2)
- Bewerbungsgespräche (1)
- Einstellungsinterviews (1)
- Gründungsmotivation (1)
- Gründungsmotive (1)
- Innovationsmanagement (1)
- Kultur (1)
- Netzwerke (1)
- Personalauswahl (1)
- Spin-off-Gründer (1)
Real options are widely applied in strategic and operational decision-making, allowing for managerial flexibility in uncertaincontexts. Increased scholarly interest has led to an extensive but fragmented research landscape. We aim to measure andsystematize the research field quantitatively. To achieve this goal, we conduct bibliometric performance analyses and bibliographiccoupling analyses with an in-depth content review. The results of the performance analyses show an increasing interest in realoptions since the beginning of the 2000s and identify the most influential journals and authors. The science mappings reveal sixand seven research clusters over the last two decades. Based on an in-depth analysis of their themes, we develop a researchframework comprising antecedents, application areas, internal and external contingencies, and uncertainty resolution throughreal option valuation or reasoning. We identify several gaps in that framework, which we propose to tackle in future research.
One of the most striking features of recent public sector reform in Europe is privatization. This development raises questions of accountability: By whom and for what are managers of private for-profit organizations delivering public goods held accountable? Analyzing accountability mechanisms through the lens of an institutional organizational approach and on the empirical basis of hospital privatization in Germany, the article contributes to the empirical and theoretical understanding of public accountability of private actors. The analysis suggests that accountability is not declining but rather multiplying. The shifts in the locus and content of accountability cause organizational stress for private hospitals.
Culture-driven innovation
(2017)
This cumulative dissertation deals with the potential of underexplored cultural sources for innovation.
Nowadays, firms recognize an increasing demand for innovation to keep pace with an ever-growing dynamic worldwide competition. Knowledge is one of the most crucial sources and resource, while until now innovation has been foremost driven by technology. But since the last years, we have been witnessing a change from technology's role as a driver of innovation to an enabler of innovation. Innovative products and services increasingly differentiate through emotional qualities and user experience. These experiences are hard to grasp and require alignment in innovation management theory and practice.
This work cares about culture in a broader matter as a source for innovation. It investigates the requirements and fundamentals for "culture-driven innovation" by studying where and how to unlock cultural sources. The research questions are the following: What are cultural sources for knowledge and innovation? Where can one find cultural sources and how to tap into them?
The dissertation starts with an overview of its central terms and introduces cultural theories as an overarching frame to study cultural sources for innovation systematically. Here, knowledge is not understood as something an organization owns like a material resource, but it is seen as something created and taking place in practices. Such a practice theoretical lens inheres the rejection of the traditional economic depiction of the rational Homo Oeconomicus. Nevertheless, it also rejects the idea of the Homo Sociologicus about the strong impact of society and its values on individual actions. Practice theory approaches take account of both concepts by underscoring the dualism of individual (agency, micro-level) and structure (society, macro-level). Following this, organizations are no enclosed entities but embedded within their socio-cultural environment, which shapes them and is also shaped by them.
Then, the first article of this dissertation acknowledges a methodological stance of this dualism by discussing how mixed methods support an integrated approach to study the micro- and macro-level. The article focuses on networks (thus communities) as a central research unit within studies of entrepreneurship and innovation.
The second article contains a network analysis and depicts communities as central loci for cultural sources and knowledge. With data from the platform Meetup.com about events etc., the study explores which overarching communities and themes have been evolved in Berlin's start up and tech scene.
While the latter study was about where to find new cultural sources, the last article addresses how to unlock such knowledge sources. It develops the concept of a cultural absorptive capacity, that is the capability of organizations to open up towards cultural sources. Furthermore, the article points to the role of knowledge intermediaries in the early phases of knowledge acquisition. Two case studies on companies working with artists illustrate the roles of such intermediaries and how they support firms to gain knowledge from cultural sources.
Overall, this dissertation contributes to a better understanding of culture as a source for innovation from a theoretical, methodological, and practitioners' point of view. It provides basic research to unlock the potential of such new knowledge sources for companies - sources that so far have been neglected in innovation management.
Academic entrepreneurship
(2013)
Research on entrepreneurial motivation of university scientists is often determined by quantitative methods without taking into account context-related influences. According to different studies, entrepreneurial scientists found a spin-off company due to motives like independency, market opportunity, money or risk of unemployment (short-term contracts). To give a comprehensive explanation, it is important to use a qualitative research view that considers academic rank, norms and values of university scientists. The author spoke with 35 natural scientists and asked professors and research fellows for their entrepreneurial motivation. The results of this study are used to develop a typology of entrepreneurial and non-entrepreneurial scientists within German universities. This paper presents the key findings of the study (Sass 2011).
Entscheidungsträger in Forschungseinrichtungen werden oftmals mit der Auswahl von Mitarbeitern im Technologietransfer konfrontiert. Mitarbeiter im Technologietransfer sind wichtige Wissenschaftsmanager, die den anwendungsorientierten Transfer von Forschungsergebnissen und forschungsbasiertem Know-how unterstützen. Zu ihnen zählen Mitarbeiter in den Bereichen Auftragsforschung, Patent- und Gründungsmanagement und Mitarbeiter in transferorientierten Drittmittelprojekten. Für eine professionelle Personalauswahl qualifizierter Technologietransfermitarbeiter ist ein systematisches Bewerbungsgespräch grundlegend. Der vorliegende Artikel gibt einen Einblick in die Struktur und in die einzelnen Phasen eines Bewerbungsgespräches. Dabei wird die Grundstruktur des erfolgreich etablierten Multimodalen Interviews (MMI®) aufgegriffen. Es werden acht verschiedene Interviewphasen erläutert und mit Beispielfragen zur Beurteilung des Bewerbers ergänzt.
Neugierde und Wettkampfsport
(2013)
Ausgründungen aus der Wissenschaft (spin-offs) gehören zu den anspruchsvollsten Instrumenten des Wissens- und Technologietransfers. Die Initiatoren erfolgreicher Gründungsvorhaben sind oftmals engagierte Hochschullehrer, die nicht nur Anerkennung in der Scientific Community suchen, sondern ihre Forschungsergebnisse ebenso in anwendungsorientierte Produkte und Dienstleistungen überführen. Was treibt diese Wissenschaftler an? In welchem Zusammenhang steht die Gründungsmotivation mit der ursprünglichen wissenschaftlichen Motivation? Ist das Initiieren einer Ausgründung mehr als das Lösen eines herausfordernden Rätsels? Der vorliegende Artikel gibt eine Antwort auf diese Fragen und gewährt einen Einblick in die Gründungsmotivation von Hochschulprofessoren aus den Naturwissenschaften. Mit Hilfe einer qualitativen Untersuchung werden verschiedene Gründertypen gebildet.
Flexibilisierung und Individualisierung der Arbeitszeit setzt sich immer mehr durch. Arbeitsmarktpolitische und individuelle Gründe sprechen jedenfalls dafür. Auch die Tarifpartner zeigen sich immer aufgeschlossener, obwohl der rechtliche Geltungsrahmen vielfach noch gar nicht klar abgesteckt ist. Die zahlreichen Praxisbeispiele machen Mut, auf dem begangenen Weg fortzufahren. In diesem Buch werden wertvolle Informationen geliefert, die sowohl aus individueller als auch aus betrieblicher Sicht den Entscheidungsprozeß für eine zunehmende Arbeitszeitindividualisierung und -flexibilisierung erleichtern.