The Organization and Architecture of Innovation
Managing the Flow of Technology
- 1st Edition - October 19, 2006
- Latest edition
- Authors: Thomas J. Allen, Gunter Henn
- Language: English
Building on his pioneering work on the management of technology and innovation in his first book, Managing the Flow of Technology, Thomas J. Allen of MIT has joined with… Read more
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Description
Description
Professor Thomas Allen is the originator of the Allen curve. In the late 1970s, Tom Allen undertook a project to determine how the distance between engineers’ offices coincided with the level of regular technical communication between them. The results of that research, now known as the Allen Curve, revealed a distinct correlation between distance and frequency of communication (i.e. the more distance there is between people — 50 meters or more to be exact — the less they will communicate). This principle has been incorporated into forward-thinking commercial design ever since, in, for example, The Decker Engineering Building in New York, the Steelcase Corporate Development Center in Michigan, and BMW’s Research Center in Germany.
Key features
Key features
*Gunter Henn is a renowned architect in Germany known for his innovative industrial building designs such as BMW projecthaus and the Skoda factory
*Shows in clear terms--based on actual research and implementation--how managers can organize the work, workers, and their physical space to maximize the potential for innovation
Readership
Readership
Table of contents
Table of contents
Organization and Architecture
Chapter 2
The Process of Innovation
Chapter 3
The Flow of Communication in Space
Chapter 4
Increasing Awareness
Chapter 5
Two Management Tools Employed Together
Product details
Product details
- Edition: 1
- Latest edition
- Published: October 19, 2006
- Language: English
About the authors
About the authors
TA
Thomas J. Allen
Specializing in organizational psychology and management, Tom Allen explores the relationship between organizational structure and behavior, the role of technological gatekeepers in technology transfer, and how a building’s layout influences communication. He is also an expert on international technology transfer, reward systems for technical professionals, and how organizational structure affects project performance. He has been engaged in long-term research on project management in several industries.
Prof. Allen’s book Managing the Flow of Technology (MIT Press, 1984) is the pioneering work in how people in technical organizations communicate. His work is widely cited in both the academic and general literature. For example, Malcolm Gladwell (author of the bestselling The Tipping Point) discusses Prof. Allen’s work in some detail in a December 2000 article published in The New Yorker.
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