|
|
|
|
|
|
Institute for Manufacturing |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Centre for Technology Management
|
Technology roadmapping - a planning framework for evolution and revolution, Technological Forecasting & Social ChangeR. Phaal, C. Farrukh and D. Probert
Centre for Technology Management, Institute for Manufacturing, Engineering Department, University of Cambridge, UK Abstract
Technology roadmapping is a flexible technique that is widely used
within industry to support strategic and long-range planning. The approach
provides a structured (and often graphical) means for exploring and communicating
the relationships between evolving and developing markets, products and
technologies over time. It is proposed that the roadmapping technique
can help companies survive in turbulent environments by providing a focus
for scanning the environment and a means of tracking the performance of
individual, including potentially disruptive, technologies. Technology
roadmaps are deceptively simple in terms of format, but their development
poses significant challenges. In particular the scope is generally broad,
covering a number of complex conceptual and human interactions.
This paper provides an overview of the origins of technology roadmapping,
by means of a brief review of the technology and knowledge management
foundations of the technique in the context of the fields of technology
strategy and technology transitions. The rapidly increasing literature
on roadmapping itself is presented in terms of a taxonomy for classifying
roadmaps, in terms of both organizational purpose and graphical format.
This illustrates the flexibility of the approach but highlights a key
gap a robust process for technology roadmapping. A �fast-start'
method for technology roadmapping developed by the authors is introduced
and described. Developed in collaboration with industry, this method provides
a means for improved understanding of the architecture of roadmaps and
for rapidly initiating roadmapping in a variety of organizational contexts.
This paper considers the use of the roadmaps from two main perspectives. The first is a company perspective: roadmaps that allow technology developments to be integrated with business planning, and the impact of new technologies and market developments to be assessed. The second perspective is multi-organizational: roadmaps that seek to capture the environmental landscape, threats and opportunities for a particular group of stakeholders in a technology or application area. Two short illustrative cases show the �fast-start' method in use in the context of disruptive technological trends from these two perspectives.
Keywords: Technology management; knowledge management; conceptual frameworks; management representations; technology roadmapping.
|
a-z site index | about the IfM | the Institute for Manufacturing is a part of the Department of Engineering | Go to top of page
This page is from the Institute for Manufacturing, Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge
www.ifm.eng.cam.ac.uk