1. From innovation-as-usual towards unusual innovation: using nature as an inspiration
- Author
-
John P. Ulhøi
- Subjects
lcsh:HF1021-1027 ,Economics and Econometrics ,Entrepreneurship ,Design ,Sociology and Political Science ,Computer science ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,02 engineering and technology ,lcsh:Business ,Business studies ,Management Information Systems ,Bombardier Beetle ,Biomimetics ,Management of Technology and Innovation ,Phenomenon ,ddc:650 ,Bombardier beetle ,Natural (music) ,Scientific translation ,Innovation ,Management practices ,021106 design practice & management ,O31 ,O32 ,M13 ,Management science ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Nature ,lcsh:Commercial geography. Economic geography ,Key (cryptography) ,lcsh:HF5001-6182 ,0210 nano-technology ,Information Systems - Abstract
Innovation-as-usual employs synthetic input as the key source of inspiration to bring about innovations, whereas unusual innovation is inspired by designs in nature. The use of nature as a key stimulus for innovation represents a fundamental shift in management and business studies. It involves the translation of natural designs into cross-domain and ad hoc synthetic designs. This paper examines and discusses the phenomenon of biomimetics and different examples of its application. Efficient translation of biomimetics involves the critical processes of exploration, explanation and exploitation. This paper discusses a practical case of biomimetic translation and identifies some critical and greatly understudied translational processes. The paper proposes techniques to correct existing translational imperfections and to establish theoretical bridging points to responsible management practices. Before concluding, research and managerial implications are briefly addressed.
- Published
- 2021