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Module code: WIB21-WPM-I-701 |
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4PA (4 hours per week) |
5 |
Semester: 5 |
Mandatory course: no |
Language of instruction:
English |
Assessment:
Project work
[updated 13.09.2018]
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Exam recurrence:
The information regarding exam recurrence is found within the exam policy of the study programme (ASPO).
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IBB-650 (P420-0542) International Business, Bachelor, ASPO 01.10.2020
, semester 6, optional course, general subject
WIB21-WPM-I-701 (P420-0542) Industrial Engineering, Bachelor, ASPO 01.10.2021
, semester 5, optional course, general subject
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60 class hours (= 45 clock hours) over a 15-week period. The total student study time is 150 hours (equivalent to 5 ECTS credits). There are therefore 105 hours available for class preparation and follow-up work and exam preparation.
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Recommended prerequisites (modules):
None.
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Recommended as prerequisite for:
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Module coordinator:
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Christian Köhler |
Lecturer: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Christian Köhler
[updated 09.02.2022]
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Learning outcomes:
Students who have successfully completed this module, ... ... are familiar with the theoretical basics of technology and innovation management ... can name the tasks of technology and innovation management in companies ... know phase models (Design Thinking, Cross-Industry Innovation) for the successful generation of innovations ... can apply selected systematic methods of technology and innovation management in practice ... can create an innovation-friendly atmosphere in teams ... have gathered a mindset that promotes innovation ... can translate an innovation into a business model and market it ... have experienced the ups and downs of an innovation project with Design Thinking themselves
[updated 04.02.2020]
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Module content:
1. Introduction to innvoation management 2. Introduction to Design Thinking 3. Disruption, structural and organizational aspects of innovation management 4. Design Thinking Phase 1: Inspiration 5. Deisgn Thinking Phase 2: Ideation 6. Deisgn Thinking Phase 3: Implementation 7. Basics of technology management The course is supported by innovation labs and self-study phases in which students work on a design thinking project.
[updated 12.06.2019]
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Teaching methods/Media:
Lectures with excercises Innovation labs Project work Project reporting Self-reflection
[updated 04.02.2020]
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Additional information:
Disruption was voted "Economic Word of the Year" by the FAZ in 2015 and is associated with the fact that companies and business models that have been successful for decades suddenly have no more future. In the meantime, companies have realised that good ideas alone are not enough to be innovative and thus, successful in the long term. Ideas only become innovations when they turn into products or services that are successful on the market. This elective teaches how this works, which obstacles must be overcome and how innovations are created systematically. Please register via the Moodle Learning Management System.
[updated 04.02.2020]
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Recommended or required reading:
Vullings/Heleven: Not invented here - Cross-Industry-Innovation, BIS Publishers, 2015 Brown: Change by Design, HarperCollins Bower/Christensen: Disruptive technologies - Catching the wave. in: Harvard Business Review, Jan/Feb 1995 Christensen: The Innovator´s Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail (Management of Innovation and Change), Harvard Business Review Press, 2013 Ries: The Lean Startup: How Today´s Entrepreneurs Use Continuous Innovation to Create Radically Successful Businesses, Currency, 2011 Dark Horse Innovation: Digital Innovation Playbook, Murmann Publishers, 2017 Lewrick/Link/Leifer: The Design Thinking Playbook, Wiley, 2018 … and additional reading material distributed during the course
[updated 27.01.2020]
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