Technology Innovation Strategy
Internet of Things and Product Design
A webinar from MIT SMR covers how IoT is changing the way companies can think about what their customers want and how to design the products they need.
A webinar from MIT SMR covers how IoT is changing the way companies can think about what their customers want and how to design the products they need.
In this webinar, James Heppelmann, CEO of PTC, discusses how companies can organize for IoT.
What’s happening this week at the intersection of management and technology.
In a recent webinar, MIT professor Carlo Ratti discussed future workspace design.
In a free webinar, James Heppelmann of PTC discusses how companies can organize for IoT.
What’s happening this week at the intersection of management and technology.
Data and analytics promise to improve urban living but require new collaborative skills.
Industry expert Gerhard Kress discusses how the transportation industry is capitalizing on the opportunities that Internet of Things data offers.
The key lessons from Kodak’s failure to adapt to digital disruption aren’t what you think they are.
Amsterdam’s Smart City Initiative offers insights into its challenges for city managers.
Our biweekly exploration of new business ideas from the corridors of MIT.
The success or failure of bringing the IoT into an organization depends on the commitment of its leadership.
Our biweekly exploration of new business ideas from the corridors of MIT.
Webinar: Siemans’ Gerhard Kress discusses how the transportation industry is capitalizing on IoT.
What’s happening this week at the intersection of management and technology.
The authors of MIT SMR‘s 2016 Data & Analytics Research Report present their findings.
How companies can organize to accommodate the new age of product design.
In an on-demand webinar, Wolfgang Gruel and Frank Piller detail new experiments in personal transportation.
Digital technology is empowering patients to participate in developing their own treatment plans.
Our biweekly exploration of new business ideas from the corridors of MIT.