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New design business models: implications for the future of design management

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)

Published

Standard

New design business models: implications for the future of design management. / Cooper, Rachel; Evans, Martyn; Williams, Alex.
The handbook of design management. ed. / Rachel Cooper; Sabine Junginger; Thomas Lockwood. Oxford: Berg, 2011. p. 495-511.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter (peer-reviewed)

Harvard

Cooper, R, Evans, M & Williams, A 2011, New design business models: implications for the future of design management. in R Cooper, S Junginger & T Lockwood (eds), The handbook of design management. Berg, Oxford, pp. 495-511.

APA

Cooper, R., Evans, M., & Williams, A. (2011). New design business models: implications for the future of design management. In R. Cooper, S. Junginger, & T. Lockwood (Eds.), The handbook of design management (pp. 495-511). Berg.

Vancouver

Cooper R, Evans M, Williams A. New design business models: implications for the future of design management. In Cooper R, Junginger S, Lockwood T, editors, The handbook of design management. Oxford: Berg. 2011. p. 495-511

Author

Cooper, Rachel ; Evans, Martyn ; Williams, Alex. / New design business models: implications for the future of design management. The handbook of design management. editor / Rachel Cooper ; Sabine Junginger ; Thomas Lockwood. Oxford : Berg, 2011. pp. 495-511

Bibtex

@inbook{5dec9c647b6a43c1af72e92dcd54746c,
title = "New design business models: implications for the future of design management",
abstract = "Design management in the UK has developed significantly since the early 1990s, with design managers now operating across both design consultancies and within businesses. These organizations operate in a dynamic global environment; as such it is necessary to respond to changes, especially in the business environment in which the design industry itself operates. This chapter draws on the results of a study conducted by the authors and colleagues into the future of the UK design industry, which considers the implications for design management in the design consultancy sector as well as design management in its client base.The study described in this chapter, Design 2020, identifies challenges and opportunities that the UK design industry will face in the second decade of the twenty-first century and presents a framework to signpost and support change.1 The remainder of this chapter explains the research context, the findings of each stage of the study, followed by discussion of the results with implications and recommendations for those involved in design management.",
author = "Rachel Cooper and Martyn Evans and Alex Williams",
year = "2011",
month = aug,
language = "English",
isbn = "9781847884886",
pages = "495--511",
editor = "Rachel Cooper and Sabine Junginger and Thomas Lockwood",
booktitle = "The handbook of design management",
publisher = "Berg",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - New design business models: implications for the future of design management

AU - Cooper, Rachel

AU - Evans, Martyn

AU - Williams, Alex

PY - 2011/8

Y1 - 2011/8

N2 - Design management in the UK has developed significantly since the early 1990s, with design managers now operating across both design consultancies and within businesses. These organizations operate in a dynamic global environment; as such it is necessary to respond to changes, especially in the business environment in which the design industry itself operates. This chapter draws on the results of a study conducted by the authors and colleagues into the future of the UK design industry, which considers the implications for design management in the design consultancy sector as well as design management in its client base.The study described in this chapter, Design 2020, identifies challenges and opportunities that the UK design industry will face in the second decade of the twenty-first century and presents a framework to signpost and support change.1 The remainder of this chapter explains the research context, the findings of each stage of the study, followed by discussion of the results with implications and recommendations for those involved in design management.

AB - Design management in the UK has developed significantly since the early 1990s, with design managers now operating across both design consultancies and within businesses. These organizations operate in a dynamic global environment; as such it is necessary to respond to changes, especially in the business environment in which the design industry itself operates. This chapter draws on the results of a study conducted by the authors and colleagues into the future of the UK design industry, which considers the implications for design management in the design consultancy sector as well as design management in its client base.The study described in this chapter, Design 2020, identifies challenges and opportunities that the UK design industry will face in the second decade of the twenty-first century and presents a framework to signpost and support change.1 The remainder of this chapter explains the research context, the findings of each stage of the study, followed by discussion of the results with implications and recommendations for those involved in design management.

M3 - Chapter (peer-reviewed)

SN - 9781847884886

SP - 495

EP - 511

BT - The handbook of design management

A2 - Cooper, Rachel

A2 - Junginger, Sabine

A2 - Lockwood, Thomas

PB - Berg

CY - Oxford

ER -