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This book examines key issues, challenges, opportunities and trends in innovation processes and supply chain management. It proposes ways for organizations to improve their performance by developing business strategies, establishing business innovation activities, and aligning business and innovation activities among firms. Further, it showcases and analyzes the implementation of inter- and intra-organizational process improvement activities and the implementation of organizational innovation solutions to address new product and process-related collaborative relationships across the supply chain. The book is useful for researchers, academics and professionals, presenting some of the most advanced research, concepts, and case studies on the relationship between innovation and supply chain.
Presents recent developments and best practice in the fields of innovation and supply chain management Showcases the implementation of organizational innovation solutions across the supply chain Presents ways to improve a firm's performance by aligning innovation and supply chain management activities
Auteur
António Carrizo Moreira obtained a Bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering and a Master's degree in Management, both from the University of Porto, Portugal. He received his PhD in Management from UMIST-University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, England. He has a solid international background in industry leveraged working for a multinational company in Germany as well as in Portugal. He has also been involved in consultancy projects and in research activities. He is Assistant Professor at the Department of Economics, Management, Industrial Engineering, and Tourism, University of Aveiro, Portugal, where he headed the Bachelor and Master Degrees in Management for five years. He is member of GOVCOPP research unit.
Luís Miguel D. F. Ferreira is currently Assistant Professor of Logistics and Supply Chain Management at the Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Coimbra, Portugal. He obtained a Bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Coimbra. He received his master degree and PhD from Instituto Superior Técnico University of Lisbon, Portugal. His research interests include topics related to supply chain management, supply chain risk management, sustainable supply chain management and international purchasing. His research has been published in Supply Chain Management: an International Journal, Production Planning and Control, among others. He has also been deeply involved in consultancy projects with public institutions and private companies. He is member of CEMMPRE research unit.
Ricardo A. Zimmermann is a research fellow at the Department of Economics, Management, Industrial Engineering, and Tourism in the University of Aveiro, Portugal and is a member of the Research Unit on Governance, Competitiveness and Public Policies (GOVCOPP). His research interests have been focused on Supply Chain Management, Innovation Management and Strategic Management. Ricardo haswork experience in companies in Brazil and Portugal in areas such as Strategic Management, Quality Management, Risk Management, Project Management, Budget and Costs Management and Corporate Governance. He has also experience as a consultant and as an assessor in quality awards.
Contenu
Part I. Innovation and Supply Chain Management.- Chapter 1. The Intellectual Structure of the Relationship between Innovation and Supply Chain Management.- Part II. The importance of supplier-client relationships.- Chapter 2. Coordination of New Product Development and Supply Chain Management.- Chapter 3. An Investigation of Contextual Influences on Innovation in Complex Projects.- Chapter 4. Necessary Governing Practices for Success and Failure of Client-supplier Innovation Cooperation.- Chapter 5. Collaborative new Product Development in SMEs and Large Industrial Firms. Relationships Upstream and Downstream in the Supply Chain.- Chapter 6. It's Time to Include Suppliers in the Product Innovation Charter (PIC).- Chapter 7. Mission Impossible: How to Make Early Supplier Involvement Work in New Product Development?.- Part III. Strategies and implications for innovation.- Chapter 8. Purchasing Involvement in Discontinuous Innovation: An Emerging Research Agenda.- Chapter 9. National Culture as an Antecedent for Information Sharing in Supply Chains: A Study of Manufacturing Companies in OECD Countries.- Chapter 10.- Risk allocation and supplier development in Automotive Supply Chains: A Study of Nissan Europe.- Chapter 11. Does Supply Chain Innovation Pay Off?.- Part IV. Information and Technology.- Chapter 12. Technological Innovations in Supply Chains.- Chapter 13. The Role of Informational and Human Resource Capabilities for Enabling Diffusion of Big Data and Predictive Analytics and Ensuing Performance.- Chapter 14. Adoption of Industry 4.0 Technologies in Supply Chains.- Chapter 15. Advanced Supply Chains: Visibility, Blockchain and Human Behaviour.