Business Innovation Analysis originates entirely from tacit knowledge, observations and analyses within the innovation profession. It builds on our unique access to data not available to others. Initiated at the General Electric Company in the 1970's and advanced at McKinsey & Co. in the 1980's, its subsequent integration with Economics at Technology Matters now enables it to answer many contemporary quests, as follows |
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In 2005 the consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton published a survey which showed no relationship between R&D spending and the primary measures of economic or corporate success Business Innovation Analysis shows what was overlooked Here In 2006 the National Science Foundation issued a prospectus on the Science of Science Innovation Policy Business Innovation Analysis contributes to these objectives -here- In 2007 the Department of Commerce published twenty-four questions in the Federal Register to the Measuring Innovation in the 21st Century Economy Advisory Committee but when its final report appeared none of them had been answered Business Innovation Analysis answers these unanswered questions -here (2 pages) Business Innovation Analysis achieves what other analyses cannot by tapping into commercial knowledge; an underestimated source whose impact is described in Working Paper No.5 Innovation Metrics For Economic Growth HERE (16 pages) referencing 'How to Measure Innovation in the Products and Services of Firms and Use it to Explain GDP Growth for the Second Half of the 20th Century' the paper submitted in support of the Department of Commerce's Innovation Metrics initiative. |
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