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Page 1: Philips Nat.Lab
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Philips Nat.Lab.

Introduction

1) The Research Department in Context,

2) The Birth of Industrial Research Laboratories,

3) Philips Nat.Lab.’s Knowledge Management

Discussion

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The Philips Company

The start of Philips in Eindhoven 1891

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The Philips Company

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The Philips Company

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The Philips Company

The expansion and diversification in the 1900 - 1920

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The Philips Company

Philips Idezet Radio Tube

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The Philips Company

Radio as a commercial product – 1927

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The Philips Company

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The Industrial Research Laboratory

The historical context of scientific Research Institutes

Francis Bacon’s (1627) ideal:

- science as servant of society in Salomo’s House (Nova Atlantis)- knowledge is power

- science and technology as a siametic twin,- fundamental research versus applied research.

Industrial Research Instituties:

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The birth of University Research Labs

                                  

       

Johannes van der Waals

Heike Kamerlingh Onnes

Liquidization of Helium (~ 1905)

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The birth of Industrial Research Labs

- Scientific Research in Industry:

At the end of the nineteenth century: invention changed from an individual act into an outcome of an organizational process. Teamwork became important.

- Big industrial labs emerged around 1900:

- GE, Bell, Kodak, Siemens, Philips Nat.Lab.,- patents (outcome of scientific research) as market instruments,- scientists in servant of capitalism? - (Knowledge) Management problem.

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Science, technology: the researcher and the institute

Thomas Edison in his lab

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The Industrial Research Laboratory

Definition of an industrial research department:

‘…set apart from production facilities, staffed by people trained in science and advanced engineering who work toward deeper understandings of corporate-related science and technology, and who are organized and administered to keep them somewhat insulated from immediate demands yet responsive to long-term company needs’ (Reich, 1985).

Its importance:

The greatest invention of the nineteenth century was the invention of the method of invention (Whitehead).

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Philips Nat.Lab.

Period 1914 – 1945, director Gilles Holst.

- humble start as a small organization,

- diversification and organizational growth,

- ‘Knowledge Management’.

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Nat.Lab. Research and Products

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Nat.Lab. Products

Penthode tubeMetalix tube

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Philips Nat.Lab.

The Nat.Lab. Under Holst Early period (1914 – 1923)

- Patent Law, 1910,

- Hybrid character with respect to types of work,

- Small population,

- Organizational growth after 1923 due to the companies diversification strategy.

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total number of Nat.Lab. employees 1928 - 1946

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

year

emp

loye

es

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Philips Nat.Lab.

The Nat.Lab. under Holst Period 1923 – 1946

- Enabling Philips’ diversification program,

- Increase of means,

- Formal management with informal aspects,

- ORCO meetings, R&D networks.

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Knowledge Management at the Philips Nat.Lab.

K.M. at the Nat.Lab. on three levels:

- the individual researchers,

- groupwork,

- organizational embeddedness.

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Philips Nat.Lab.

R&D Knowledge Management on Three Levels

Individual researcher

professional scientists with colloquia and notebooks in a growing academic culture, increasing importance of scientific activities, R&D leadership.

Groups inside the laboratory

diversification of products and (selection of) research groups, group responsibilities, protocols for innovation patterns.

Organizatio-nal embedded-ness

participation in committees with other departments in the company and the upper management, contacts with universities for personnel and knowledge exchange, standardization activities, participation within R&D networks.

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Successful scientific research: teamwork and products

Shockley, Bardeen and Brattain: the invention of the transistor at the Bell labs.

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First Period: Embedded

A small Institute as a servant for the company with Holst as director:

- Anton Philips as dominant company leader,

- diversification and internationalization,

- publications and patents.

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Second Period: Isolated

A famous international research institute with Casimir as director:

- science as the endless frontier,

- growing company and lab with formal structure,

- fundamental research and scientific freedom,

- isolated from production, bad communication.

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Hendrik Casimir

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Booming Science at Philips

Philips Cyclotron

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Third Period: Contracted

Closely connected to the Company with Pannenborg as director:

- economic crisis, bad sides of industries (environmental polution),

- contract research (2/3 of the budget), free research (1/3 of the budget),

- technology roadmaps.

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The Philips Nat.Lab.

An industrial research laboratory as a paradox:

- an investment in uncertainty,

- organizational context:

- entrepreneurial behavior, - scientific research as a promising investment.

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