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 Anna Brattström. Photo.

Anna Brattström

Senior lecturer

 Anna Brattström. Photo.

Can innovation be measured? A framework of how measurement of innovation engages attention in firms

Author

  • Anna Brattström
  • Johan Frishammar
  • Anders Richtnér
  • Dane Pflueger

Summary, in English

Many firms manage the innovation process by using metrics. Yet, whether measurement supports or hinders innovation continues to be a topic of debate. To shed new light on this debate, this paper presents a conceptual framework of how measurement engages attention in firms. We draw on attention based theory and conceptualize innovation measurement as an attention-focusing device. We identify two ideal types of measurement practices. i) Directional Measurement: which is based on few and unidirectional metrics and encourages exploitative innovation efforts. ii) Conversational Measurement: which is based on multiple and ambiguous metrics and encourages exploration. We extend theory building in the technology and accounting literatures by theo- rizing the role of metrics and measurement for attention and by discussing the implications of such attentional engagement for innovation performance. In so doing, we engage closely with the managerial task of managing innovation while simplifying its conditions, thereby providing ac- tionable advice.

Department/s

  • Department of Business Administration

Publishing year

2018-04-13

Language

English

Pages

64-75

Publication/Series

Journal of Engineering and Technology Management

Volume

48

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Business Administration

Keywords

  • innovation management
  • key performance measurement
  • measuring innovation
  • attention
  • attention based theory
  • process model
  • exploration and exploitation
  • conversational measurement
  • directional measurement

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0923-4748