TY - JOUR T1 - Editorial: Managing Innovation for Tangible Performance (October 2013) JF - Technology Innovation Management Review Y1 - 2013 A1 - Chris McPhee A1 - Sorin Cohn KW - applied research KW - boundary management KW - commercialization KW - company culture KW - competitiveness KW - firm-level innovation management KW - innovation literacy KW - innovative capabilities KW - managing innovation KW - market lifecycle PB - Talent First Network CY - Ottawa VL - 3 UR - http://timreview.ca/article/730 IS - 10 U1 - Technology Innovation Management Review Chris McPhee is Editor-in-Chief of the Technology Innovation Management Review. Chris holds an MASc degree in Technology Innovation Management from Carleton University in Ottawa and BScH and MSc degrees in Biology from Queen's University in Kingston. He has over 15 years of management, design, and content-development experience in Canada and Scotland, primarily in the science, health, and education sectors. As an advisor and editor, he helps entrepreneurs, executives, and researchers develop and express their ideas. U2 - BD Cohnsulting Inc. Sorin Cohn has 35 years of international business and technology experience, having been involved in most facets of innovation development: from idea to research and lab prototype, from technology to product, and then to market success on the global stage. He has developed new technologies, created R&D laboratories, started new product lines, and initiated and managed new business units. Sorin has several essential patents in web services, wireless, and digital signal processing, as well as over 70 publications and presentations. He has also been Adjunct Professor at the University of Ottawa. He is a Killam Scholar, and he holds a PhD in Electrical Engineering, an MSc in Physics, and an MEng in Engineering Physics. Sorin is President of BD Cohnsulting Inc. As well, he acts as Leader of Innovation Metrics at The Conference Board of Canada and as Chief Program Officer of i-CANADA. He is also Member of the Board of Startup Canada as well as the Board of the Centre for Energy Efficiency. ER - TY - JOUR T1 - Using Boundary Management for More Effective Product Development JF - Technology Innovation Management Review Y1 - 2013 A1 - John Thomson A1 - Vince Thomson KW - boundary management KW - collaborative product development KW - outsourcing KW - partnering KW - product development KW - review-approve process AB - Twenty years ago, most companies developed their own products in a single location and brought them to market themselves. Today, original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) are enlisting partners on a global scale as subsystem designers and producers in order to create and deliver new products into the market more rapidly and more frequently. This is especially true for large, complex products from the aerospace, telecommunications, electronics, and software industries. To assure the delivery of information across organizational boundaries, new coordination mechanisms need to be adopted (boundary management). In this article, best practices are described on how OEMs and partners self-organize and use agile, cooperative techniques to maintain daily communication among numerous internal and partner engineers to better coordinate product design and system integration. This article focuses on examples from the aerospace industry; however; these tactics can be applied in any organization to innovate at faster rates, to make delivery times more predictable, and to realize shorter product development timelines. PB - Talent First Network CY - Ottawa VL - 3 UR - http://timreview.ca/article/734 IS - 10 U1 - Thoven Consulting John Thomson is a Senior Researcher at Thoven Consulting, and he graduated with a BA in Religious Studies and Psychology from the University of Toronto, Canada. He has contributed to research and writing projects in the areas of Lean, Six Sigma, healthcare, the food supply chain, and manufacturing. He has also developed programs for training how to use social media in a job search and for teaching computer technology to non-technical adults. U2 - McGill University Vince Thomson is a post-retirement professor at the Department of Mechanical Engineering, McGill University, Canada. He has been involved in research related to manufacturing and information technology for the past 35 years at McGill University and the National Research Council Canada. His research interests include manufacturing, real-time control, and process management. In process management, he has focused on new-product development, where he is currently working with many aerospace companies on issues such as change management, collaboration among partners, performance measurement, and the reduction of time to market. ER -