Abstract

While open innovation and university–industry collaboration contribute significantly to innovation in industrialized countries, it is less clear how these create value in emerging economies and new application contexts. This study examines the introduction of global practices into the Nicaraguan context. Adopting a service-dominant logic perspective of value co-creation through interaction on multiple levels, we noted the importance of systemic orchestration or staging of the ecosystem, organizations, and challenge project delivery. We also recognize the importance of enabling activities and spaces that promote innovation. While our findings indicated that the expected and perceived value creation did not fully match, we found encouraging signs of the build-up of foundational practices to support national development agendas. There is evidence of shifted mindsets and looped learning across the system. We propose a model for the systemic development of enabling structures, value creation, and innovation spaces when transferring practices into new application areas. We expect this model to be useful for practitioners when planning and engaging in transferring open innovation practices across application contexts. The study contributes to our knowledge and practice of creating value through applying open innovation within university–industry collaboration in emerging economies, a little-studied theme.

Highlights

  • Received: 13 December 2021Open innovation (OI) is often touted as a universally positive proposition that leads to value creation and positive impacts in multiple contexts

  • We argue that the nature of OI within university–industry collaboration (UIC) is such that concurrent co-evolution is necessary in systems, value creation, and spaces, and that expected value is translated into perceived benefits through a multilevel iterative process

  • This study initially identifies both open innovation and university–industry collaboration as significant knowledge areas with practices that contribute to innovation in industrialized countries

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Summary

Introduction

Received: 13 December 2021Open innovation (OI) is often touted as a universally positive proposition that leads to value creation and positive impacts in multiple contexts. Seen as a key driver of innovation, it emphasizes the flow of resources, knowledge, and practices across organizations and places [1,2,3]. University–industry collaboration (UIC) has become a significant approach to innovation that links students, academia, and firms within collaborative initiatives [4,5]. The idea that one should exploit external resources to innovate appears to be an inherently attractive and valuable endeavor, within UICs. That said, it is acknowledged that the outcomes linked to the application of new innovation practices are highly dependent on the context, application approaches, and prevalent conditions [6,7]. A particular concern is related to the application of industrialized country innovation practices in emerging economies with less well-developed industrial bases, markets, and related economic institutions and structures [8]

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