Results 291 to 300 of about 2,766,046 (331)
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Modelling seasonality in innovation diffusion
Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 2014Abstract The ability to forecast new product growth is especially important for innovative firms that compete in the marketplace. Today many new products exhibit very strong seasonal behaviour, which may deserve specific modelling, both for producing better forecasts in the short term and for better explaining special market dynamics and related ...
GUIDOLIN, MARIANGELA, GUSEO, RENATO
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International Journal of Social Ecology and Sustainable Development, 2014
The phenomenon of diffusion has been extensively studied from different disciplines in the natural and social sciences and has been used in the study of innovation dynamics. Diffusion plays also a central role to the study of disease-spread within a population, being an essential element of epidemiological research.
Nikolaos Evangelatos, Elias Carayannis
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The phenomenon of diffusion has been extensively studied from different disciplines in the natural and social sciences and has been used in the study of innovation dynamics. Diffusion plays also a central role to the study of disease-spread within a population, being an essential element of epidemiological research.
Nikolaos Evangelatos, Elias Carayannis
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2000
The study of urban systems accompanied the beginning of quantitative geography in the 1960s, and is quickly becoming one of the discipline’s most rapidly developing fields (Murayama 1982a). From concepts of the 1960s that emphasized an explanation of static spatial order in one time period such as King’s urban dimension (1966), Berry’s distribution ...
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The study of urban systems accompanied the beginning of quantitative geography in the 1960s, and is quickly becoming one of the discipline’s most rapidly developing fields (Murayama 1982a). From concepts of the 1960s that emphasized an explanation of static spatial order in one time period such as King’s urban dimension (1966), Berry’s distribution ...
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Invention, Innovation and Diffusion
1988In the twentieth century, competition between firms has been largely on the basis of product improvements and cost advantages generated by developments in methods of production and organisation. However, textbooks often ignore the process of change, concentrating instead on the beneficial effects of price competition.
Paul R. Ferguson, Glenys J. Ferguson
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The Diffusion of an Administrative Innovation
Management Science, 1980This paper examines the diffusion of a particular kind of multidivisional administrative structure—the “M-Form”—in two classes of large industrial firms. The M-Form organization is a multidivisional structure with quasi-independent divisions which are assigned profit center standing and which are monitored and guided by a headquarters organization.
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2018
Die durch Everett M. Rogers gepragte und bis heute von weiten Teilen der Diffusionsforschung eingenommene Perspektive erweist sich als zu eng, um die vielfaltigen Innovations- und Diffusionsphanomene zwischen Individuen, Netzwerken, Organisationen und diversen gesellschaftlichen Akteursgruppen zu erfassen.
Ralf Kopp+2 more
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Die durch Everett M. Rogers gepragte und bis heute von weiten Teilen der Diffusionsforschung eingenommene Perspektive erweist sich als zu eng, um die vielfaltigen Innovations- und Diffusionsphanomene zwischen Individuen, Netzwerken, Organisationen und diversen gesellschaftlichen Akteursgruppen zu erfassen.
Ralf Kopp+2 more
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The Process of Innovation and the Diffusion of Innovation
Journal of Marketing, 1967“Innovate or Perish” is the marketer's cry of the 1960s. And “Perish as You Innovate” could well be the marketing slogan of the 1970s. But several questions arise. Can innovation be programed to occur? What is the nature of the diffusion process? Can consumer “innovators” be identified and appealed to?
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2011
Imagine being the inventor of, say, a clock radio but not having enough money or marketing knowledge to introduce the product to the marketplace. This is supposedly what happened when GE developed the clock radio. Similarly, some 40 years ago there was a rumor that the inventor of the Xerox machine tried to sell his product for 10 years and died broke.
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Imagine being the inventor of, say, a clock radio but not having enough money or marketing knowledge to introduce the product to the marketplace. This is supposedly what happened when GE developed the clock radio. Similarly, some 40 years ago there was a rumor that the inventor of the Xerox machine tried to sell his product for 10 years and died broke.
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The Diffusion of an Innovation among Physicians
Sociometry, 1957problem is reported in this paper. The population is physicians in four cities; the item whose use was spreading was a new drug; and the study focused on the ongoing social processes which finally led to widespread adoption of the drug by these physicians.
James S. Coleman+2 more
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The Diffusion of Product Innovations
2018This chapter explores the patterns of adoption and use of original and new-to-market product innovations. Three levels of diffusion are identified: (i) the spreading of first use across countries (the extensive margin); (ii) the spreading of first use across users within countries (the intensive margin); and (iii) increasing intensity of use by ...
Paul Stoneman+2 more
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