管理中的创新生态系统:组织类型学

Llewellyn D. W. Thomas, E. Autio
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引用次数: 71

摘要

“生态系统”的概念在管理和商业中越来越多地用于描述异质但互补的组织集体,这些组织共同创造某种系统级产出,类似于自然生态系统提供的“生态系统服务”,它超越了生态系统中任何个体参与者的产出和活动。由于其吸引力和弹性,生态系统概念已被广泛应用于各种学术观点和不同的绰号,如“创新生态系统”、“商业生态系统”、“技术生态系统”、“平台生态系统”、“创业生态系统”和“知识生态系统”。这种概念和应用程序的异质性导致了概念和术语的混淆,这可能会破坏概念在支持累积洞察力方面的效用。在本文中,我们试图通过回顾生态系统概念如何应用于各种重叠现象,并通过强调关键术语和概念上的不一致及其来源,重新引入一些秩序到这种概念异质性中。我们发现,生态系统术语中概念上的不一致涉及两个关键维度:分析的“单位”和“生态系统服务”的类型——即生态系统共同产生的产出。然后,我们认为,尽管在应用中存在相当大的异质性,但该概念仍然提供了其潜力,以支持与描述组织集体的其他概念(如“工业”、“供应链”、“集群”和“网络”)相关的独特见解。我们还发现,尽管如此,这个概念仍然描述了独特的集体,因为它们独特地结合了参与者的异质性、生态系统产出的一致性、参与者的相互依存和非分层治理。基于我们确定的概念异质性维度,我们提供了不同生态系统概念的类型学,从而帮助重新组织这个激增的领域。该类型学基于三个不同的生态系统产出——为特定受众提供的生态系统级价值、商业模式创新的集体产生和基于研究的知识的集体产生——以及与分析的替代“单元”产生共鸣的三个研究重点——社区动态、产出热电联产和相互依存管理。总之,这些使我们能够清楚地区分创新生态系统、商业生态系统、平台生态系统、技术生态系统、创业生态系统和知识生态系统的概念。基于三种不同类型的生态系统产出,我们的类型学将生态系统划分为三种主要类型:创新生态系统、创业生态系统和知识生态系统。在“创新生态系统”的标题下,我们进一步区分了商业生态系统、模块化生态系统和平台生态系统。最后,我们考虑了创新生态系统动力学,强调了数字化的重要作用,并回顾了我们的模型对生态系统出现、竞争、共同进化和恢复力的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Innovation Ecosystems in Management: An Organizing Typology
The concept of an “ecosystem” is increasingly used in management and business to describe collectives of heterogeneous, yet complementary organizations who jointly create some kind of system-level output, analogous to an “ecosystem service” delivered by natural ecosystems, which extends beyond the outputs and activities of any individual participant of the ecosystem. Due to its attractiveness and elasticity, the ecosystem concept has been applied to a wide range of phenomena by a variety of scholarly perspectives and under varying monikers such as “innovation ecosystems,” “business ecosystems,” “technology ecosystems,” “platform ecosystems,” “entrepreneurial ecosystems,” and “knowledge ecosystems.” This conceptual and application heterogeneity has contributed to conceptual and terminological confusion, which threatens to undermine the utility of the concept in supporting cumulative insight. In this article, we seek to reintroduce some order into this conceptual heterogeneity by reviewing how the ecosystem concept has been applied to variably overlapping phenomena and by highlighting key terminological and conceptual inconsistencies and their sources. We find that conceptual inconsistency in the ecosystem terminology relates to two key dimensions: the “unit” of analysis and the type of “ecosystem service”—that is the ecosystem output collectively generated. We then argue that although there is considerable heterogeneity in application, the concept nevertheless offers promise in its potential to support insights that are distinctive relative to other concepts describing collectives of organizations, such as those of “industry,” “supply chain,” “cluster,” and “network.” We also find that despite such proliferation, the concept nevertheless describes collectives that are distinctive in that they uniquely combine participant heterogeneity, coherence of ecosystem outputs, participant interdependence, and nonhierarchical governance. Based on our identified dimensions of conceptual heterogeneity, we offer a typology of the different ecosystem concepts, thereby helping reorganize this proliferating domain. The typology is based upon three distinct ecosystem outputs—ecosystem-level value offering for a defined audience, the collective generation of business model innovation, and the collective generation of research-based knowledge—and three research emphases that resonate with alternative “units” of analysis—community dynamics, output cogeneration, and interdependence management. Together, these allow us to clearly differentiate between the concepts of innovation ecosystems, business ecosystems, platform ecosystems, technology ecosystems, entrepreneurial ecosystems, and knowledge ecosystems. Based on the three distinct types of ecosystem outputs, our typology identifies three major types of ecosystems: innovation ecosystems, entrepreneurial ecosystems, and knowledge ecosystems. Under the rubric of “innovation ecosystems,” we further distinguish between business ecosystems, modular ecosystems, and platform ecosystems. We conclude by considering innovation ecosystem dynamics, highlighting the important role of digitalization, and reviewing the implications of our model for ecosystem emergence, competition, coevolution, and resilience.
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