Название: Innovation in Sport
Автор: Bastien Soule
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Спорт, фитнес
isbn: 9781119881490
isbn:
Take, for example, the stormy history of kitesurfing. This is not one of a brilliant intuition and first prototypes progressively perfected to the point of performance for a public captive to this invention (Boutroy et al. 2014). From the elaboration of the first inventions by lead users to an undeniable commercial success, it took two decades of reversals, failures and transformations to laboriously extend, through translations of heterogeneous interests, a socio-technical network associating pioneer users, capricious wind, fickle journalists, patents, tourist actors (agencies, service providers), irreducible waves, board and sail manufacturers, fickle sports federations, political elected officials and Kevlar threads, among other factors. Rech and Paget (2018) pointed out that the socio-technical approach allowed for a consolidated understanding of innovation networks in the outdoor sports sector, for example the difficult territorial innovation and practices in a small winter sports resort (Rech et al. 2009); or the creation of a company and the uncertain launch of innovative services (Paget et al. 2010). The success of these innovations is each time linked to the consolidation of an extended chain of human actors (managers, supervisors, elected officials, athletes, etc.) and non-human elements (slope, wall, snow, wind, etc.). This work also reminds us that innovation often goes hand in hand with the emergence of controversies that need to be resolved (see, for example, the case of the development of motorized recreation in a natural park (Haye and Mounet 2014)).
A comparison between the manufacture of ultra-light mountaineering equipment (backpack or harness, see (Soulé and Lefèvre 2015)) and that of a new adjustable kayak seat within two different very small businesses (VSBs) shows varying levels of success. Yet failure or success can be explained symmetrically according to similar principles: growing interest and attachment (or not) of multiple allies, strength or fragility of ties (likely to produce continuous reconfigurations of the network), and ability (or not) to compromise – especially on technical perfectionism (Soulé et al. 2014). If, in all cases, contingency and unpredictability are prevalent, the question of the capacity of the innovation’s project owners to compromise on their initial project or program appears essential. It is in particular with regard to this aspect that it is possible to understand the contrasting fates of innovations carried by a pole manufacturing company, whose different ages testify to very different abilities to compromise (technical, commercial, entrepreneurial) in order to achieve a successful operation (Hallé et al. 2016; Vignal et al. 2018).
The socio-technical approach nevertheless sometimes struggles to shed light on what, from a normative point of view, makes possible (favors, hinders, weakens, etc.) the associations between actors in innovation. Quéré (1989) was quick to point out this limit on the clearance of regulations (collective norms, interpersonal relations) and regularities (structure). However, innovation activities can be considered as dependent on and determined by different kinds of social characteristics.
For example, in line with the sociology of networks developed by the new economic sociology (Cochoy and Grossetti 2008), it is possible to take better account of the dynamics of pairing between actors. Grossetti (2006) suggests strengthening “the explicitness of what makes up the network, the relationships”, including in innovative activities (innovation networks, business creation) (Grossetti 2008a, 2008b; Grossetti and Barthe 2008). The first phases of innovation are thus characterized by a strong dependence on prior interpersonal relationships (we speak of social embedding). However, the expansion of the network will inevitably (and sometimes abruptly) involve enrolling new actors by escaping from personal relationships, sometimes by detaching oneself from one’s “close friends” (known as decoupling). This allows us to understand the difficulties in making a success of switching between the exploration and exploitation of an innovation, or the importance of the many mediation mechanisms (objects and professionals involved in putting people in touch with each other) that proliferate around innovation activities: clusters, incubators, economic agencies, directories, etc. This interpretive framework thus is drawn upon to understand the role and changing weight of interpersonal relationships in an innovation trajectory of a novel sliding device (Hallé and Boutroy 2017).
KEY POINTS – At first sight difficult to access, particularly due to its innovative and radical character, the socio-technical analysis of innovations has the merit of “hammering the nail in” by breaking down most of the commonplaces that are frequently trotted out about innovation. It invites us to study failures as well as successes; to avoid focusing on the inventor and to substitute a collective or even systemic interpretation; and to avoid isolating the social and technical dimensions of the processes being studied. Indeed, innovation implies dealing with complex material elements (technologies, practice spaces, materials, objects, production systems, etc.) that will have a determining influence on the future of an invention. Three principles of symmetry summarize the foundations of this approach: “equal attention paid to successes and failures, to humans and non-humans, but also to associations and dissociations” (Goulet and Vinck 2012, p. 219). This reticular interpretive framework allowing detailed and realistic accounts of innovation dynamics will constitute the central approach mobilized in this handbook. Innovation – whether it starts in an R&D office or in a lead user’s garage – is never a solitary process. From the invention phase onwards, it is important to surround oneself with support and resources in order to make an idea or a prototype exist, evolve and become more reliable. An innovation trajectory is a collective journey involving human and non-human actors, because to succeed, the invention must be socialized and appropriated by increasingly large and heterogeneous groups.
THE LIMITS OF THESE APPROACHES – By enriching, almost infinitely, the parameters and entities to be taken into consideration, this model undeniably makes the analysis more complex. It provides a valuable “education of the eye” that helps us to avoid many simplifying traps, but at the same time requires adjustments. Without questioning the status of material elements as “acting entities”, there are obviously differentiated properties between the domain of humans and non-humans, which this theory tends, if applied unqualifiedly, to level out excessively (Quéré 2015). Moreover, because of its anchoring in actor-network theory (Akrich et al. 2006), socio-technical analysis proposes a theory of action (what moves actors) that risks being reduced to strategic rationality; it is indeed largely about tactics, enrolments, interest, etc. (Quéré 1989). The danger is then that we cut ourselves off from certain contributions of the classical social sciences, which are nonetheless capable of taking into account the external determinants that precede innovation activities. By giving them their rightful place, it is possible to better understand how actors link or associate (types of social relations, structures), or – by mobilizing the achievements of more traditional sociologies (lifestyle, dispositions, cultures, etc.) – the phenomena of attraction or resistance to a particular enlistment or innovation (Gaglio 2012).
In this respect, the recent revivals of economic sociology around attachments (Cochoy 2012a) and market arrangements (Callon et al. 2013) provide promising support for understanding the establishment of links in innovation processes. Above all, it is important to remember “that these positions and programs complement and enrich each other more than they contradict each other” (Cochoy 2012b, p. 37).
1.4. Critical innovation studies
In recent years, a still heterogeneous set of approaches СКАЧАТЬ