An incubation perspective on social innovation: the London Hub as a social incubator
An incubation perspective on social innovation: the London Hub as a social incubator
In the context of incubators, particularly those that are driven to achieving social objectives, this paper investigates core processes that support the development of social innovation. Social innovation as this paper argues is underpinned by a new form of social collaboration and engagement built upon strong forms of sharing knowledge and learning. Coupled with this is the element of social capital reinforced by entrepreneurship and leadership that promotes sustainability in the community. These factors drive innovative thinking and ways of engaging among stakeholders in order to create new forms of socio-economic impact. Such value-creating activity occurs in firms that operate within incubators involving a wide range of stakeholders who work through networks to co-create and meet social challenges. Through a case study of a social incubator and an incubatee, we demonstrate the core processes that irradiate the argument on social innovation. The contribution of this paper is threefold: firstly, social innovation is an emerging area of research, of which there is a dearth in terms of examining the processes empirically. We address the gap in this field by demonstrating the value of social collaboration and engagement using different innovation models. Secondly, we establish links between social innovation and incubation using the concept of social capital. This allows us to achieve our third contribution: exemplification of a dyadic value-based partnership and collaboration processes between an incubator and an incubatee, through activities driven by social innovation which aim to have social impact. The paper concludes with practice implications and suggests directions for future research.
social innovation, social incubation, networks, impact
368-384
Nicolopoulou, Katerina
0931ff44-b81a-41e9-892d-4974d080d861
Karatas-Ozkan, Mine
f5b6c260-f6d4-429a-873a-53bea7ffa9a9
Vas, Christopher
167dd192-1f23-4d72-885f-1a078632b958
June 2017
Nicolopoulou, Katerina
0931ff44-b81a-41e9-892d-4974d080d861
Karatas-Ozkan, Mine
f5b6c260-f6d4-429a-873a-53bea7ffa9a9
Vas, Christopher
167dd192-1f23-4d72-885f-1a078632b958
Nicolopoulou, Katerina, Karatas-Ozkan, Mine and Vas, Christopher
(2017)
An incubation perspective on social innovation: the London Hub as a social incubator.
R&D Management, 47 (3), .
(doi:10.1111/radm.12179).
Abstract
In the context of incubators, particularly those that are driven to achieving social objectives, this paper investigates core processes that support the development of social innovation. Social innovation as this paper argues is underpinned by a new form of social collaboration and engagement built upon strong forms of sharing knowledge and learning. Coupled with this is the element of social capital reinforced by entrepreneurship and leadership that promotes sustainability in the community. These factors drive innovative thinking and ways of engaging among stakeholders in order to create new forms of socio-economic impact. Such value-creating activity occurs in firms that operate within incubators involving a wide range of stakeholders who work through networks to co-create and meet social challenges. Through a case study of a social incubator and an incubatee, we demonstrate the core processes that irradiate the argument on social innovation. The contribution of this paper is threefold: firstly, social innovation is an emerging area of research, of which there is a dearth in terms of examining the processes empirically. We address the gap in this field by demonstrating the value of social collaboration and engagement using different innovation models. Secondly, we establish links between social innovation and incubation using the concept of social capital. This allows us to achieve our third contribution: exemplification of a dyadic value-based partnership and collaboration processes between an incubator and an incubatee, through activities driven by social innovation which aim to have social impact. The paper concludes with practice implications and suggests directions for future research.
Text
An incubation perspective on social innovation_the London Hub as a social incubator
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 14 August 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 17 December 2015
Published date: June 2017
Keywords:
social innovation, social incubation, networks, impact
Organisations:
Southampton Business School, Strategy, Innovation & Entrepreneurship
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 410816
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/410816
ISSN: 0033-6807
PURE UUID: c9157172-ef1c-4d74-85b7-4e2fa3d9dcf5
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Date deposited: 09 Jun 2017 09:41
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:09
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Contributors
Author:
Katerina Nicolopoulou
Author:
Christopher Vas
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