Studying innovation processes in real-time: the promises and challenges of ethnography
Journal article, Peer reviewed

View/ Open
Date
2011Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Scientific articles [2147]
Original version
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.indmarman.2011.06.036Abstract
This paper discusses the promises and challenges of innovation ethnographies. We depart from the notion that innovation processes are highly contingent, messy and non-linear and examine ways in which these processes have been studied. Our focus is on the challenges posed by the use of ethnographic methods to study innovation in-the-making. Our discussion is illustrated by an example culled from a longitudinal, real-time study of an innovation process in the food industry, inspired by actor-network theory (ANT) and its injunctions to focus on controversies and follow the actors. We conclude that although innovation ethnographies pose plenty of theoretical, methodological and practical challenges, they remain a promising and powerful method to map out the complex and tortuous paths of these processes.
Description
This is the authors’ final, accepted and refereed manuscript to the article