Mark Dodgson

Mark Dodgson

Mark Dodgson (born 1 May 1957) is an Australian academic and author. His research on the innovation process has influenced innovation management and policy worldwide.

Biography

Born in Norwich, UK, he grew up in Wales and Uganda, where his father was pilot to Presidents Milton Obote and Idi Amin.[1] He is the brother of author, Philip Pullman.[2] After a number of years working as a lorry driver and drayman in London, Dodgson completed his PhD in two years at Imperial College London and worked at the Science Policy Research Unit at University of Sussex for eight years. During this period he developed expertise in technology and innovation management and policy in Europe. In 1993 he moved with his family to Australia where he became Professor and Executive Director of the National Graduate School of Management at the Australian National University. For the next ten years he developed expertise in technology and innovation management and policy throughout Asia. In 2003 he moved to become Director of the Technology and Innovation Management Centre at the University of Queensland. He continues to advise governments and major corporations around the world on innovation, and has worked in over 50 countries. Dodgson is the author of several key texts in the Management of Technological Innovation.[3][4] He was awarded the Eureka Prize for Leadership in Business Innovation in 2007. He has been director of the Think, Play, Do Group; non-executive director of Nestle Australia Ltd; and a member of the Advisory Board of ThIess pty ltd.

Views on innovation

Dodgson argues innovation management and policy depends on a comprehensive understanding of the innovation process and the ways it is changing. His early contributions on technology strategy identified the importance of focus and flexibility in technology investments and use. He conducted one of the first comprehensive studies of the emerging phenomenon of biotechnology firms by writing the history of the UK’s pioneering company, Celltech. As a result, he identified the importance of organizational and technological learning, and published a book in 1991 – The Management of Technological Learning[5] – on Celltech, and several highly cited articles in the journals Organization Studies and Human Relations.

Early research

His research in the early 1990s led him to write one of the first books on how technology was developed collaboratively, between firms and between firms and research organizations. He identified the consequences of increased collaboration for managers and policy-makers in his 1993 book, Technological Collaboration in Industry.[6] With Roy Rothwell, Dodgson edited one of the first comprehensive collections of writing on innovation in his Handbook of Industrial Innovation in 1994.[7]

The influence of technology

Dodgson became increasing convinced about the way technology was itself changing the innovation process. With colleagues David Gann and Ammon Salter at Imperial College London, he identified the emerging role of ‘innovation technology’ – a basket of technologies used to increase the speed and efficiency of innovation. Innovation technologies include eScience; modelling, simulation and visualization tools; and rapid and virtual prototyping. The technologies were used in an innovation process typified as one involving ‘thinking’, ‘playing’ and ‘doing’. The book that resulted from this work – Think, Play, Do: Technology, Innovation and Organization[8] – was the first to identify the role of play around emerging technologies to encourage innovation. Play includes experimenting, tinkering, and prototyping with new ideas.

Innovation policy

His research on the innovation process has informed government policies in Europe, Asia and Latin America. His 1996 book with John Bessant – Effective Innovation Policy [9] – identified the importance of intermediary organizations building bridges between business and the research base in nations. Dodgson has advised the Australian Government on its innovation policy since 1987, and was an advisor to its 2008 Review of Australia's National Innovation System.

References

  1. Who's Who in Australia, Crown Content, Melbourne, 2009..
  2. An article from The New Yorker about Philip Pullman with contribution from Mark Dodgson
  3. Dodgson, M., Gann, D., Salter, A., The Management of Technological Innovation: Strategy and Practice, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-19-920853-1.
  4. Dodgson, M., The Management of Technological Innovation: An International and Strategic Approach, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2000, ISBN 0-19-877536-9.
  5. Dodgson, M., The Management of Technological Learning, Berlin: De Gruyter, 1991, ISBN 3-11-012706-7.
  6. Dodgson, M., Technological Collaboration in Industry, London: Routledge, 1993, ISBN 0-415-08230-7.
  7. Dodgson, M., Rothwell, R., The Handbook of Industrial Innovation (Editor), Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 1994, ISBN 1-85278-655-8.
  8. Dodgson, M., Gann, D., Salter, A., Think, play, do: technology, innovation, and organization, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2005, ISBN 0-19-926808-8.
  9. Dodgson, M., Bessant, J., Effective Innovation Policy, London: Thomson International Business Press, 1996, ISBN 0-415-08231-5.
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