Empty Innovation: Causes and Consequences of Society's Obsession with Entrepreneurship and Growth

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Innovation is generally viewed as something inherently good, a source of progress and prosperity in our society. But innovation can also have negative, unintended, and wasteful effects, if policies are misdirected and organizations pursue innovation to look good and convey a message, rather than to actually achieve improvements of technologies, services, and products. This book makes the case that innovation has become a buzzword, a political cure-all, and increasingly an empty phrase, and that this has become detrimental to innovation itself.
Governmental (and supra-governmental) innovation policy is often unrealistically phrased and shaped, and corporate innovation projects are not seldom meaningless acts of window-dressing. The book describes the problems this presents for society, organizations, and individuals, and seeks explanations for why it has come to be this way. Giving way to a more realistic view of what innovation really is, and how it can be accomplished, the book develops a multifaceted sociological and historical argument where several complementary reasons for the prevalence of “empty innovation” are proposed. The book will be of great interest to scholars and students of innovation, entrepreneurship, sustainability, and all those with an interest in the failures of current innovation strategies.
This is an open access book.

Author(s): Olof Hallonsten
Publisher: Palgrave Pivot
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 116
City: London

Contents
Chapter 1: The Innovation Society
The Problem
Conceptual Starting Points
Aims and Purpose
Chapter 2: From Forbidden to Cure-All
Introducing the x-factor
Innovation Policy and Its Roots
Mission Economy
Chapter 3: Economization
Thinking Like an Economist
Imbalanced Rationalization
Managerialism
No Size Fits All
Chapter 4: We’re All Entrepreneurs Now
The Entrepreneurship Industry
The Me Generation
What Entrepreneurship Really Is
Chapter 5: Faster, Better, Stronger
Selling Promises
The Entrepreneurial State
The Innovationists
Move Fast and Break Things
Chapter 6: Empty and Real Innovation
Consequences
Misunderstandings
Real Innovation
The Alternative
Acknowledgments
Literature
Index