Professor Giovanni Dosi, Part XI
Our review of the Preliminary Research Report, Professor Dosi’s paper “Sources, Procedures and Microeconomic Effects of Innovation” and the Draft Specification is providing evidence to answer two of our research questions. I think it is becoming clear that innovation can be the result, as our first research question asks, of a quantifiable and replicable process. What also is becoming clear is the lack of the processes that facilitate innovation, will most certainly lead to a lack of innovation. That to leave the process of innovation to chance is irresponsible, reckless and bound to fail.
The second research question we are seeing the answer to; is the Joint Operating Committee is the optimal organizational construct to identify and support innovation. Building the systems that support the legal, financial, operational decision making, cultural and communication frameworks of the JOC is our focus. However, what I am realizing is that innovation is also a framework of the JOC. That is to say we should be stating that the Joint Operating Committee is the legal, financial, operational decision making, cultural, communication and innovation framework of all producers. As a result of this realization I have changed the header to this blog to reflect this change.
Continuing with our review of Professor Dosi’s paper, he begins by summarizing that businesses commit to innovation stemming from exogenous scientific factors and endogenously accumulated capabilities developed by their respective firms. His general point is that “observed sectoral patterns of technical change are the result of the interplay between various sorts of market-inducements, on the one hand, and opportunity and appropriability combinations, on the other”. p. 1141
What opportunities are and will be constrained by not adopting a more innovative organizational structure? If the geological and engineering sciences progress in a substantial manner in the next few years, how will oil and gas companies adopt, employ, test, and prove these science's development without an enhanced capacity to innovate? How much of the drive towards innovation is the beginning of the understanding necessary to expand the science? How much of an inducement are the current commodity prices providing the global competition to innovate? Until producers capture these “appropriabilities” within their ERP systems, such as the Draft Specification does, innovation will be left to chance.
I am not asserting that efforts in the past were not innovative or moved the science substantially. The issue People, Ideas & Objects is raising is that the pace and speed of the science’s development in the near to mid-term, and particularly the long term, will accelerate based on the fact that, globally, reserve replacement continues to be progressively more challenging, and the prices realized for the commodities have begun to reflect these challenges. Professor Dosi (1988) concludes this section with “Finally, the evolution of the economic environment in the longer term, is instrumental in the selection of new technological paradigms, and, thus in the long term selection of the fundamental directions and procedures of innovative search.” p. 1142
For the industry to successfully provide for the consumers energy demands, it’s necessary to build the systems that identify and support the Joint Operating Committee. Building the Preliminary Specification is the focus of People, Ideas & Objects. Producers are encouraged to contact me in order to support our Revenue Model and begin their participation in these communities. Those individuals that are interested in joining People, Ideas & Objects can join me here and begin building the software necessary for the successful and innovative oil and gas industry.