Innovation as Argumentation in Closed and Technology-mediated
Open Models
Emmanuel D. Adamides
1
, Nikos I. Karacapilidis
1
and Konstantinos Konstantinopoulos
1,2
1
Industrial Management and Information Systems Lab, MEAD, University of Patras, 26504 Rio Patras, Greece
2
Supply Unique S.A., Coffee Island, 26334 Patras, Greece
Keywords: Activity Theory, Open Innovation, Technology-mediated Argumentation, Food & Beverages Sector.
Abstract: The paper uses activity theory and Activity Based Analysis (ABA) for understanding the contradictions
developing, and the corresponding remedial actions required, in the transition of an organization from the
closed to the technology-mediated open mode of innovation production. We use activity theory to develop
nested representations of the innovation process in both business models, and concentrate on the
argumentation-in-innovation activity and its context. We demonstrate the application of ABA in the analysis
of contradictions developing in the argumentation processes of a firm in the food and beverages sector
adopting open innovation strategies implemented in the innovation community mode.
1 INTRODUCTION
In a process view, innovation is the result of a series
of coarse-grain interlinked activities (idea
generation, selection and conceptualization of
product/service/process, technical development,
launch, value appropriation, etc. (Tidd and Bessant,
2014)), in which “knowledgeable and creative
people and organizational units frame problems and
select, integrate, and augment information to create
understanding and answers” (Teece, 2001). These
activities constitute problem resolution tasks at-large
(Leonard and Sensiper, 2003) that combine emerged
and more concretely-defined fine-grain problems.
Propositions for resolving these problems and
evaluation of propositions are placed by diverse
stakeholders (managers, employees, technology
suppliers, customers) that act as knowledge sources
along the innovation process.
The innovation process is triggered by novel
ideas and propositions for novel technologies,
products, etc, or even strategic initiatives towards
innovative business models. These, contradicting
and in conflict with other explicit or indirect
proposals, are arguments with supporting evidence,
which have to be evaluated and accepted, or at least
accommodated, in a collective manner within the
specific organisational context (Wright, 2012).
Argumentation is thus a context-based knowledge-
creating activity and can be mediated by the
technological means employed for exercising it.
Specific forms of argument exercised frequently, or
by powerful actors, become dominant schemes,
characteristics of the organisational discourse (Potter
and Wetherell, 1987), in general, and of innovation
processes in particular.
The aim of this paper is to investigate how such
dominant argumentation schemes influence the
general context of the innovation production
process, and, in turn, how a dominant argumentation
scheme is influenced by the context of the
innovation process. Adopting a practice perspective
and using activity theory, the specific objective of
this paper is to investigate how the context of a
computer-mediated open innovation process
influences the dominant argumentation scheme of a
company, and vice versa. Argumentation is a very
important issue in the context of Open Innovation
(OI), as it enables active transparency (Adamides
and Karacapilidis, 2019) a capability that is
constituted by the capabilities of generative sensing
(Dong et al., 2016) and productive argumentation
and which should be in line with the changing
context of the innovation process.
Following, first we consider argumentation in the
innovation process. In section 3, we briefly discuss
the characteristics and role of argumentation in
organisations. We continue in section 4 with the
introduction of an activity-theoretic model of
Adamides, E., Karacapilidis, N. and Konstantinopoulos, K.
Innovation as Argumentation in Closed and Technology-mediated Open Models.
DOI: 10.5220/0010495100450054
In Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Finance, Economics, Management and IT Business (FEMIB 2021), pages 45-54
ISBN: 978-989-758-507-4
Copyright
c
2021 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
45
argumentation practices in innovation and a related
process for investigating the impact of interventions
in organisations. Then, in Section 5, this model is
employed for analysing the contradictions
developing between the argumentation scheme and
its context and the interventions for their potential
resolution in a coffee roaster and coffee shop
franchisor company that intends to switch to
technology-mediated open innovation strategy in the
innovation community mode. We conclude with a
brief discussion of the research presented in the
paper.
2 THE MEDIATING ROLE OF
ARGUMENTATION IN THE
OPEN INNOVATION PROCESS
In today’s interconnected and dynamic world, open
innovation has received much attention in both
academic and business spheres, signifying a novel
business model that has already been considered at
different levels of analysis (Bogers, et al., 2017).
The adoption of open innovation (OI) (Chesbrough,
2006) by an organisation implies that its innovation
process becomes porous, and ideas, concepts,
design, products, services etc. flow in and out of its
boundaries. Different human and non-human
knowledge sources associated with internal and
external organization actors become interconnected
in many different ways, and information and
knowledge items of different forms flow between
them, and are transformed in many different ways,
for the development of the required capabilities ().
Clearly, in large complex organizational settings,
this is accomplished in a complex web of social
processes (Anderson and Hardwick, 2017), in which,
and in accordance with the OI model adopted
(innovation markets, communities, contests, or
toolkits (Möslein, 2013), agents of different views,
interests, cultures and power status, usually being
situated geographically and contextually at a
distance, are part of. As a result, the use of
Information and communications technology (ICT)
is inevitable and constitutes a crucial factor for its
implementation (Adamides and Karacapilidis,
2020).
In OI, external knowledge integration and
learning are associated with the organisation’s
dynamic capabilities (Teece et al., 2016) (sensing
the environment, seizing opportunities and
transforming its innovation process(es) and value
offerings), while their effectiveness depends on the
organization’s level of absorptive capacity (ACAP)
(Cohen and Levinthal, 1990), as well as on its
degree of “active transparency” (Adamides and
Karacapilidis, 2019), which may be defined as a
form of generative sensing (Dong et al., 2016).
Active transparency refers to an active
organisational interface that identifies, collects,
filters and distils internal and/or external knowledge
before it is integrated in the existing organisational
knowledge base. In this line, it supports the
collective development of hypotheses about
problems and their innovative solutions – in general,
hypotheses about the possible use and effects of
incoming and outgoing knowledge items – as well as
the testing for their validity. As it was already
mentioned, active transparency is a compound
capability that is constituted by the component
capabilities of generative sensing and
argumentation. Generative sensing, in turn, is
founded on the micro-capabilities of framing
problems/issues and selecting/inferring their
solutions using an abductive logic (abduction)
(Dong et al., 2016). On the other hand,
argumentation schemes influence the proposition-
setting and selection/decision-making processes by
regulating the relative power (positional and
rhetoric) of participants and their arguments
(dominant argumentation logic/repertoire).
In open innovation, once a proposition is framed
collectively in an argumentative fashion, its validity
then needs to be tested through abduction.
Abduction is a form of logical reasoning in which
hypotheses/propositions, which are intuitive
“guesses” (and not necessarily logically sound) are
introduced and then validated through testing (Dong
et al., 2016). The proposition is a hypothetical
mechanism (the product of abduction), which, if it
existed, would generate (would be responsible for)
the observed phenomenon/problem, or a
phenomenon different from what was normally
expected (Papachristos and Adamides, 2016). The
proposition may be the result of argumentation and
thus logically sound, as far as the collective process
is concerned. However, most likely, it will be
unfounded regarding its actual content, since most
participants have limited, or no, knowledge of the
specifics of the issue/problem and the context
around the issue (Androutsopoulou et al., 2018). In
this way, argumentation on these proposals produces
knowledge.
There have been direct and indirect calls for
embedding argumentation and productive conflict
resolution in open innovation processes and their
technology-mediated implementation (Battistella
FEMIB 2021 - 3rd International Conference on Finance, Economics, Management and IT Business
46
and Nonino, 2012; Cui et al., 2015; Malhotra and
Majchrzak, 2016; Bogers et al., 2017; Osorno and
Medrano, 2020). Argumentation is a knowledge
integration/combination and creation activity that
needs to be part of platforms supporting different
forms of open innovation and the associated
dynamic capabilities (Adamides and Karacapilidis,
2019). As argumentation and conflict resolution
processes (e.g. voting) are inscribed in the
technology, the adoption of such systems by an
organisation implies the adoption of the specific
form of argumentation supported in the system, and
the introduction of its logic into the specific
organisational context. Obviously, this may lead to
contradictions between the existing structures and
practices and the structures and practices inscribed
in the system. Hence, prior to the introduction of
computer-supported OI, the form of argumentation
inscribed should be analysed and the appropriate
modifications in organisational practices and
structures must be made. Alternatively, the OI
supporting ICT system may need to be designed
taking into account the institutionalised practices, if
change is not desirable.
3 ARGUMENTATION SCHEMES
AND ORGANISATIONAL
CONTEXTS
In general, the purpose of an argument is to show
that a non-trivial assertion (a proposition whose
validity is not obvious without further details and
cannot be proved or verified easily by evidence)
may claim validity (von Werder, 1999).
Argumentation is a context-based sense-making
process, which varies according to (socially)
constructed rules and the structure of related (social)
groups. In the context of this paper, argumentation is
considered as a logic- and evidence-based
persuasion activity that differs from persuasive
discourse which is a purely verbal exercise
(Karacapilidis and Gordon, 1995; Jarzabkowski and
Silince, 2007; Balogun et al., 2014; Bednarek et al.,
2017). According to Bloor (1980), in a specific
social/organisational setting, standing out by their
frequency (e.g. seeking argument justification with
reference to a specific report, or with reference to
what the industry leaders do, etc.), characteristic
forms of argument will emerge. Inevitably, this
gives each social (organisational) structure its
dominant argumentation repertoire of explicit
legitimation, which solidifies and increasingly
constrains social and organisational behaviour, and
is used for characterising and evaluating actions,
events and other organisational phenomena “which
are often organised around specific metaphors and
figures of speech” (Potter and Wetherell, 1987). As
a result, institutionalised justifications exist as
objective, widely available rules, and, directly or
indirectly, tell organisation members how to argue
effectively (Sillince, 1999).
Clearly, the institutionalization of an
argumentation form/scheme is not a positional- and
rhetorical-power-neutral process, neither a static
one. Frequently, in innovation production processes,
in proposing innovations and solutions to issues,
organisation members with high positional power
need not justify their arguments extensively, while
those with rhetorical power, which is frequently
related to the positional power, as far as access to the
audience is concerned, may bias the organisation
discourse, both in short and long term, towards
specific forms that have more affinity with the
institutionalised argumentation forms, undermining
other forms which may include more substantive
arguments. In fact, this is one of the drawbacks of
“closed”, organic innovation and at the same time a
sign for caution for open innovation.
Argumentation for postulating (innovative)
propositions should encourage external actors to
contribute providing them with sufficient power to
support their arguments by using a variety of
justification/claim logics. ICT can contribute to this
objective by sealing off and objectifying these
processes from their actual social/organisational
context and power distribution in a controlled
manner (Kallinikos, 2011. In this direction, different
OI platform designs of varying complexity and
features have been proposed, mainly to capture ideas
in different formats. However, so far, only few, in
specific modes of OI, such as crowdsourcing and
innovation contests that involve end-
customers/consumers, support more complex tasks,
such as productive cooperation and knowledge
integration (Malhotra and Majchrzak, 2016), not
mere expression of ideas.
Many argumentation models (formalisms) have
been proposed in the literature, especially in
connection to computer-supported argumentation
systems (Bentahar et al., 2010). Gürkan et al. (2010)
integrated three such formalisms (IBIS, the Toulmin
framework, and the concept of argument schemes of
Walton) in an inclusive model, which consists of the
problem/issue in hand, the ideas/proposals/positions
for its solution, and pro and contra arguments
related to proposals. Pro and contra arguments are
Innovation as Argumentation in Closed and Technology-mediated Open Models
47
justified by claims consisting of grounds and
warrants. Pairs of grounds and warrants define four
main argument schemes (which are related to the
argumentation repertoires mentioned above),
namely, arguments based on expert opinion (accept
claim because someone is an expert), popular
opinion (something is generally accepted as true
because it is generally accepted as true), analogy (A
works because it resembles B that have been proven
to work in the past) and causal associations (A
works because B works, and there is a positive
correlation between the two). Argument schemes as
parts of dominant argumentation repertoires
influence decision-making in many organisational
aspects, including the innovation process.
In the innovation process, the quality of
propositions and the knowledge/insights produced is
a function of the argumentation rationality and
process, i.e. the thoroughness of the proposition
preparation as revealed by the arguments put
forward to support it (von Werder, 1999).
Connecting the issue of power to the aforementioned
argumentation models, abuse of positional power
means that the proponent does not justify claims
and/or pro/contra arguments, or does not justify the
selection of a specific argumentation scheme, or
does not justify the issue of specific rhetoric
arguments, or even does not justify the truth of
warrants.
Similarly, the abuse of rhetorical power implies
that the proponent knows how others react to
rewards and practices rhetoric argumentation
accordingly, giving little emphasis on the validity
and truth of arguments and statements (“populist”
behaviour). Such behaviours result in effectively
weak arguments and shaky propositions distorted by
power relations associated to the different forms of
capital (economic, bureaucratic, organisational,
technical, informational) that each actor possesses
(Bourdieu, 1990). As a result, the outcome of the
knowledge integration effort and innovation will not
necessarily match the organisation’s strategic needs.
The selection of an appropriate argument scheme,
which is consistent with the organisational context,
i.e. objectives, power structure, and decision
processes, is crucial in mitigating these distortions.
Following, we discuss how Activity Based
Analysis (ABA) can be employed for the assessment
of this match, as well as to indicate areas of
intervention for improving it.
4 ACTIVITY THEORETIC
PERSPECTIVE OF
ARGUMENTATION
PRACTICES
In a practice perspective, the analysis of innovation
process (activities and their context) can be
accomplished using the properties of Cultural and
Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) (Engeström,
2000a), which is an upgrading of the original
activity theory, by introducing a more systemic
construct, the activity system, which includes the
context in which activity/practice take place. The
central tenets in CHAT are mediation, which means
that all practices/activities, at all levels of analysis,
are accomplished through a range of ideational
constructs and material artefacts that originate from
a cultural heritage of social milieu (the context)
(Nicolini, 2013), and contradictions, which are the
means through which activities change and lead to
innovations in practices and mediating tools.
Each activity system has a subject that carries
(and is carried out by) the activity (depending on the
level of analysis, a person, organisation, etc.).
Object(ive) is the problem space to be transformed
by the activity into an outcome. Tools/instruments
are the mediating means (technological artefacts or
other “softer” means, such as language, signs, or
argument schemata in our case) through which the
activity is carried out. The transformation of the
object is possible only through these historically
developed means, which also participate in the
construction of the identity of the subject. Rules are
the cultural norms, rules, etc. governing the
performance of the activity. The community denotes
those who have interest and are involved in the
activity, while the division of labour signifies who is
responsible for what, who does what, and how roles
and power hierarchies are organised. Activities are
long term phenomena with no clear-cut beginning
and end. They produce (lower-level) activities and
are realised by means of actions, but, as an emergent
phenomena, are not reducible to actions and
operations (Engström, 2000b). Contradictions are
historically accumulating structural tensions,
principally originating from interaction with, and
influence from, other activity systems. They are
identified as tensions in, or between, the elements of
the activity (e.g. between objectives and
instruments), or between activities, and are
responsible for disturbances at the level of activity.
ABA (Yamagata-Lynch, 2010) is an
organisational change analysis method, in which the
FEMIB 2021 - 3rd International Conference on Finance, Economics, Management and IT Business
48
activity construct is applied to activities at different
levels of detail for identifying contradictions and
initiating remediating actions to facilitate change.
Activity-based analysis of organisational phenomena
is based on a number of ontological and
epistemological assumptions. The main ontological
assumption is associated with its underlying practice
perspective, i.e. the assumption that the world is
made and remade in practice, using tools, discourse
and our bodies. In addition, practice theories
emphasize the role of interests in human behaviour
and hence they take explicitly into account power,
conflict and politics in the analysis of social reality
(Nicolini, 2013). Hence, activity theory maintains
that these are the determining factors of change and
innovation in organisations and may be employed
strategically to induce change.
There has been a debate concerning the structure
and the constituent parts of organisational activities,
focused on the nature of the subject of activities, i.e.
whether individual or collective (Blacker et al., 2000;
Thomson, 2004). However, the constructivist episte-
mology and the “systemness” of the activity construct
transcends this debate and implies that the principal
unit and departing point of analysis should be a single
activity corresponding to the emerging behaviour of
an organisational unit/function or process (with a
collective subject) (Engeström, 2000b), e.g. the
activity of argumentation in the innovation process
exercised by those involved in the process.
As the analysis proceeds by considering the
historical development of activity and questioning
whether changes are, or will be, the result of the
multi-voiceness characteristic of the activity
(endogenously emergent deviant practices), or have
been introduced by other connected activities, which
participate in the construction of the elements of the
focal activity, activities unfold. If the sources of
change are internal, the process continues by
considering activities of specific actors. The
contradictions developed are identified and the
mitigating actions are investigated in relation to the
subjects involved. It is important to understand the
conflicts and the power distribution among those
involved in activities. On the other hand, if the
sources of change are external activities, first, it is
important to investigate their relation with the
central activity, then to define their elements and
find out which of them have been changed, and how
these changes influenced the central activity. The
inquiry continues by investigating whether these
changes were the result of internal developments or
were caused by another activity, and the process
continues as above. The whole process follows an
abductive inference mode (Papachristos and
Adamides, 2016) trying to identify the contradictions
and remedial actions that lead to a plausible causation
for the final/current state of activity. In more
analytical inquiries on the role of (information)
technology in organisational interventions and
strategic change, the methodological aspects of the
philosophy of science of critical realism can be
employed along with activity theory (Allen, et al.,
2013; Simeonova, 2018).
Obviously, the above process is more suitable for
investigating organisational change and information
systems strategy retrospectively. However, activity
theory can also be used when an organisation is
planning change; either because a number of issues
have arisen with the existing structure and practices
(and their relation to technology), or because changes
are planned to improve operations. In both cases, the
basic procedures of the Change Laboratory
(Engeström, 2007) and Activity Based Analysis
(Yamagata-Lynch, 2010) can be employed. Both
methods begin with an analysis of the existing
situation, drawing and examining related activities in
a top-down or/and bottom-up fashion, as the inquiry
unfolds, and then proposing new forms of activity and
testing them. When the process concerns planned
change, changes are mapped into activity models of
the existing practices, possible contradictions are
identified, and changes are proposed, discussed and
finally decided to be implemented. Change
Laboratory is a participative synchronous method
whose main objective is learning from the process per
se. ABA, on the other hand, aims at results, and parts
of it can be accomplished off-line.
In the context of innovation, an activity
representation of the entire innovation process
(Figure 1) would have, for instance, the Innovation
Executives Council or the R&D department as
subject and the specific innovation issue/problem as
the objective. The task of innovation as a (re)solution
of an issue (object(ive)) would be carried out by
decisions taken by the subject in an argumentative
manner employing the organisation’s dominant
argumentation repertoire (e.g. based on expert
opinion) and other tools, such as Powerpoint slides,
documents, prototypes, etc., influenced by the
division of labour (distribution of expertise and
power), in a community of stakeholders (top
executives, other departments, suppliers, etc.), and in
accordance with a set of formal and informal
(organisation) rules (e.g. proposals should be in
written form, confidentiality should be guaranteed).
The product of the innovation process (product, servi-
ce, process, etc.) would be the outcome of the activity.
Innovation as Argumentation in Closed and Technology-mediated Open Models
49
Figure 1: Activity-theoretic representation of (closed)
innovation.
The argumentation activity (Figure 2) is a lower
level activity within the innovation activity (or
within a specific innovation phase activity, e.g.
commercialisation and value appropriation). The
person or the collective entity (the subject of the
activity) is engaged in the argumentation activity
(practices argumentation) in the innovation process
to persuade her audience that her proposition is right
and has value. This is the object(ive) of the activity
and its successful accomplishment produces the
outcome of the activity. The subject uses an
argumentation scheme/logic to transform the object.
This is the instrument/tool of the activity and
mediates the relationship between the subject and
her object to persuade, i.e. persuasion is through
argumentation. The context of the argumentation
activity includes the process or argumentation, i.e.
how arguments are placed, evaluated and selected
(the rules of the activity). These may be formal rules
or just habitual rules. It also includes the community
of all interested parts (principally the audience of the
arguing subject), and the division of labour that
determines who has the right to place arguments,
who to support arguments, etc.
The activity theoretic representation of
argumentation and its context includes all the
elements of the context-embedded argumentation
model of Sillince (2002), however in a systemic and
theory-grounded way that can be easily employed
for analysis in empirical settings. The subject of the
activity is the arguer, the rules are the setting, and
the community is the audience of Sillince’s model,
respectively. The object of the activity is the topic,
whereas the content, form and integration in the
model of Sillince are represented in a compact form
in the instrument/tools element and its cultural
historical development. The strength of the
argument is the outcome that denotes its
effectiveness.
Figure 2: Activity-theoretic perspective of argumentation.
In the following section, we present a case study
of an organisation adopting an Open Innovation
strategy. ABA is employed for understanding the
role of the alignment of argument schemes/dominant
argumentation repertoires with the OI model
adopted, so that active transparency is enabled.
5 A CASE STUDY OF
ARGUMENTATION
PRACTICES IN OPEN
INNOVATION
5.1 General
The case concerns the introduction of open
innovation though the adoption of an ICT platform
by C
OFFEE ISLAND S.A. a company operating in the
food and beverages sector in Greece. The reason for
the development of the case was to learn and gain
understanding about the relationship between the
context of the innovation process and the (dominant)
argumentation scheme(s) implemented in an open
innovation platform to be adopted by the company.
C
OFFEE ISLAND was established in Patras,
Greece, in 1999. From the very beginning, the vision
of the company was to introduce an innovative,
brand-new coffee concept, which would not be
centered on just selling coffee products, but would
provide a unique coffee experience to the end-
customer and would turn the art and craft of making
artisan coffee into science. C
OFFEE ISLAND is
currently one of the most established coffee chains
in Europe; as of today, it runs more than 470 stores
in 6 countries, performs direct green coffee trade
with 10 countries and retains 3 proprietary
production units. The company offers a successful
and valid business model through fair practices and
by targeting win-win collaborations. As proud
supporters of fair company practices, this model is
FEMIB 2021 - 3rd International Conference on Finance, Economics, Management and IT Business
50
based on collaboration between the investors and the
franchisees that want to start a new enterprise.
C
OFFEE ISLAND has gained a unique positioning
by strategically developing a differentiated concept
and by combining the premium quality of a specialty
coffee grindery with the accessibility and
affordability of the modern, all day coffee shop that
provides unique coffee to unique people. C
OFFEE
ISLAND’s shops reflect the brand’s ethos, culture and
evolution throughout the whole coffee journey and
are the customers’ favorite place for their morning
cup of fresh-roasted specialty coffee, lunch break,
light meals and leisure home consumption coffee
experience.
5.2 Methods
The case is the result of an action research project in
which both company executives and academic
personnel, informally acting as consultants, were
involved. The research followed the generic
procedures of Change Laboratory (Virkkunen et al.,
2010) and Activity Based Analysis (Yamagata-
Lynch, 2010). Activity diagrams were developed
off-line after five structured discussion sessions took
place. Notes were taken and were used in the
analysis. The current situation of closed innovation
activities was based on information provided by the
company executives, whereas the open innovation
ones on the features and use scenarios of an
innovative OI platform under development, which
was presented to, and discussed with, the company
executives and technical consultants. The
interventions which are discussed below were
proposed by the company executives.
5.3 Description of the Case
COFFEE ISLAND is the leader domestic coffee roaster,
as well as the owner and franchisor of brand corner
coffee shops, operating more than 400 shops in
Greece and abroad. Although the child of a single
entrepreneur, the company operates as a multi-
shareholder private company with a formal R&D
and Innovation department, involving actively in its
operations and innovation initiatives shop managers
and suppliers (in a variety of product and service
aspects). Innovations mainly concerned products
(flavours and mixes), outlet layout and operations.
The company intended to switch to the open
innovation model through the use of an ICT
platform for supporting the entire innovation
process. Currently C
OFFEE ISLAND keeps open
channels with, and listens to, external partners and
stakeholders, such as suppliers, franchisees,
consultants, consumers etc., for ideas concerning the
innovation process. However, all ideas and
proposals are mainly filtered by the management of
the company in a top-down fashion without much
interaction between proponents and management.
Limited feedback is provided and only short
discussion of ideas takes place. Therefore, in actual
fact, no diverse external knowledge is used, the
active transparency of the company is weak and the
decision making process is not clear enough. For the
management of C
OFFEE ISLAND, this is the main
reason for embracing the open innovation model
though the introduction of an open innovation ICT
platform that will engage and support the productive
cooperation of internal and external stakeholders in
the innovation process.
As far as the argumentation used in innovation is
concerned, the existing dominant scheme is close to
the forms of causal association and analogy. The
argument for accepting a novel proposal, idea, etc. is
that it is in accordance with the values, the vision
and the strategy of the company, as they are
expressed in the documents and the discourse of the
company, and monitored by its executives. This
secures the closeness of the innovation with the
Brand DNA and scores as one of its main priorities.
This scheme can be considered as causal association
because claims are associated with the above
triptych (values, vision and strategy) which was the
claim and the reason that other innovative ideas
proved to be effective for the company. It is also
close to the scheme of analogy because frequently
reference is made to other resembling situations of
products, processes, etc. that are in line with the
values, the vision and the strategy of the company
and proved to work (assuming the existing values,
vision and strategy contribute to the wellbeing of the
company).
In a move to a more open innovation model,
C
OFFEE ISLAND is intending to adopt a mixed
contest/crowdsourcing and innovation community
model that will take advantage of the company’s
presence in the social media as well. The
crowdsourcing model will engage end customers,
whereas the innovation community will be
addressed to more commercial partners, such as
suppliers, advertising agencies, consultants, etc. As
the critical mass of participants of the innovation
process will be increased, it becomes apparent that
an argumentation scheme consistent with increased
participation, direct interaction and well-defined
processes need to be introduced. Gradually an
argumentation scheme based on popular opinion will
Innovation as Argumentation in Closed and Technology-mediated Open Models
51
become the core of COFFEE ISLAND’s open
innovation process argumentation repertoire. In this
way, it will enable active transparency and result in
successful innovations in the enhancement of
customer experience in the shops, in novel products
and business, but also in the operational processes of
the company. Activity Based Analysis was used to
identify the possible contradictions that will arise
between the characteristics of the new
argumentation scheme and the innovation context in
which argumentation is exercised.
Figure 3: Argumentation in innovation process before and
after.
Figure 3 presents the employment of Activity
Based Analysis in the argumentation sub-activity of
the innovation process/activity. The secondary
contradictions between the subject(s) and the rules
(more partners in workshops need to place
arguments in a sort of synchronous manner),
between the subject(s) and the division of labour
(more partners need to have the power to place and
support arguments), and between the subject and the
tools (the argumentation of a wider multitude should
be supported and taken into consideration in a
different way) in the initial argumentation activity,
after the decision for more open innovation, are
depicted as bold dotted lines. In effect, the three
contradictions will be remediated by
institutionalizing a different argumentation scheme
based on popular opinion. This implies that the
company has to open and democratize its innovation
process. This can be accomplished in different ways
with the help of the ICT platform. In addition to
objectifying the rhetoric of argumentation, by
assigning different weights to different positions and
roles, a power structure with respect to
argumentation can be inscribed into the platform.
Again, bold letters in the labels of the elements of
the activities indicate the new state of the elements
that resulted in the resolution of the contradictions.
6 CONCLUDING REMARKS
As innovation is in fact the result of propositions and
argumentation, successful innovation relies on the
quality argumentation. Argumentation of high
quality means that the way propositions and
arguments are placed and the way they are evaluated
and selected are consistent with the context of
argumentation, which, in turn, is contingent to the
innovation strategy chosen. In the case of Open
Innovation, argumentation is a constituent part of the
active transparency capability that determines the
way external knowledge is selected and integrated in
the innovation process. Argumentation is a
complementary capability to the generative sensing
capability which employs abductive inference logic
that depends on evidence. Hence, it differs from
pure discourse-based rhetorical acrobatics, and its
process should be supported by its contextual
elements in a consistent way.
In this paper, we introduced an activity-theoretic
representation of argumentation practice and its
context. The importance and distinct features of
activity theory, and its corresponding activity-based
analysis (ABA) (and Change Laboratory), lie in the
concepts of mediation and contradiction. Mediation
is the manifestation of an inclusive relation between
agency acting towards an objective (persuasion) and
the (material and ideational) artefacts (argument
scheme) and the social context that surrounds this
agency in action (when arguing). This means that
this activity cannot be considered independent of the
technology and artefacts associated with, neither
from the social context (the stakeholders with their
power relations and division of labour) in which it
takes place. Hence, in considering argumentation in
the innovation process, structure and agency are
interlinked into a single inseparable construct
(activity).
In addition to offering a holistic and symmetrical
perspective to think and know about argumentation
schemes and dominant argumentation repertoires in
(open) innovation, activity theory is associated with
structured inquiry processes (activity-based analysis
and Change Laboratory). The inquiry is based on a
compact operational unit of analysis (the activity
(triangle)) with internal and external causality
relations (mediation) and does not rely on just
correlated parameters and metrics. Through the
identification of contradictions, the structure of
activity and its relations with other activities, leads
to assessing the consistency of the argumentation
scheme exercised and the context defined by the
innovation strategy and diagnosing any
FEMIB 2021 - 3rd International Conference on Finance, Economics, Management and IT Business
52
contradictions. This logic can operate in the reverse
direction, when a change in strategy is planned and
needs to be managed. Artefacts, or more generally
contextual mediating elements, can be used
strategically to bring about change in a manageable
way.
Through the presentation of a case study of
argumentation in the adoption of open innovation
strategy, our objective was not to provide a data-rich
extensive presentation of the development of the
relations and contradictions between argumentation
schemes and OI models in particular settings, but to
highlight methodological issues, i.e. how to think
about these relationships when adopting an
innovation strategy and open innovation in
particular.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The work presented in this paper is supported by the
inPOINT project (https://inpoint-project.eu/), which
is co-financed by the European Union and Greek
national funds through the Operational Program
Competitiveness, Entrepreneurship and Innovation,
under the call RESEARCH CREATE
INNOVATE (Project id: T2EDK- 04389).
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