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Understanding creative business : values, networks, and innovation

By: Shorthose, Jim
Title By: Maycroft, Neil
Material type: BookPublisher: Surrey, England : Gower, c2012.Description: vi, 346 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.ISBN: 9781409407140; 1409407144 (hbk. : alk. paper); 9781409407157 (ebk.); 1409407152 (ebk.); 9781409460190 (epub); 1409460193 (epub)Subject(s): Creative ability in business | InnovationDDC classification: 658.4/094
Summary:
From authors used to operating between the commercial, public and independent sectors of the mixed cultural economy, Understanding Creative Business bridges the gap between creative practice and mainstream business organisation, entrepreneurship and management. Using stories, case studies and exercises it discusses the positioning of creative practice within professional and business development, cultural policy-making and the wider cultural economy, and suggests what the broader field of business and management studies can learn from the informal structure and working practices of creative industries networks. Consideration is given to how ethical and moral value orientations animate creative practice and how they play into the wider debate about social responsibilities within business and public policy. The authors also explore the way creative business practices often coalesce around emergent and self-organized networks and how this signals alternative approaches to management, entrepreneurship, business organisation and collaboration. Above all else this book is about relationships; the practical examples expose the ways creative business can professionalise research, develop and sustain routes to growth through 'open' collaborative innovation and the lessons this holds for more general business innovation and policy engagements with the public domain. Written in accessible language, this book will be useful to researchers, students, educators and practitioners within the creative industries; to those working within cultural policy, arts and cultural management; and to all with an interest in management and leadership.
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Includes bibliographical references (p. [329]-332) and index.

Values -- New spectacles for Juliette -- Why bother? : the expansion of care -- Taking part in the existence of things : an ecological lens -- Being good and doing right : a philosophical lens -- Everyday skills in care : contact lenses -- Seeing the right priorities : a professional lens -- Networks -- From a competitive economy to a creative ecology? -- How to make friend and influence people -- Who do i get into bed with? -- The nature of relationships -- Organising coral reefs -- Innovation -- Mozart and the innovation economy -- Thinking about the way to do thinking : epistemological choices -- Different methods : which tools to use, why, when, and how -- The flow of ideas : creative business innovation -- "The rules and peculiarities of various instruments" : innovation skills -- Houses of learning : cultural organizations for cultural innovation -- Summary -- Making a good dish of it : where is creativity? -- Creative business at a transformative moment?.

From authors used to operating between the commercial, public and independent sectors of the mixed cultural economy, Understanding Creative Business bridges the gap between creative practice and mainstream business organisation, entrepreneurship and management. Using stories, case studies and exercises it discusses the positioning of creative practice within professional and business development, cultural policy-making and the wider cultural economy, and suggests what the broader field of business and management studies can learn from the informal structure and working practices of creative industries networks. Consideration is given to how ethical and moral value orientations animate creative practice and how they play into the wider debate about social responsibilities within business and public policy. The authors also explore the way creative business practices often coalesce around emergent and self-organized networks and how this signals alternative approaches to management, entrepreneurship, business organisation and collaboration. Above all else this book is about relationships; the practical examples expose the ways creative business can professionalise research, develop and sustain routes to growth through 'open' collaborative innovation and the lessons this holds for more general business innovation and policy engagements with the public domain. Written in accessible language, this book will be useful to researchers, students, educators and practitioners within the creative industries; to those working within cultural policy, arts and cultural management; and to all with an interest in management and leadership.

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