Alan Pilkington
Alan Pilkington (born ca. 1964) is a British engineer, and Professor at the Copenhagen Business School, known for his on the Technology management,[1] Operations management,[2] Manufacturing strategy[3] and Enterprise engineering.[4]
Biography
Pilkington received his BA in engineering from De Montfort University in 1987, and his PhD from Aston University in 1992.[5]
After graduation in 1987 Pilkington started his career in industry as project manager in manufacturing engineering at the Rover Group, where from 1989 to 1993 he managed the Manufacturing Policy Unit. In 1996 he returned to the academia as Associate Professor in Operations and Technology Management at the Royal Holloway, University of London, where he stayed until September 2013. Pilkington has been Visiting Scholar at the University of California, Davis between 1997 and 2003; at the University of Western Australia between 2003 and 2005; and at Cesar Ritz Colleges in 2011–12. In 2009 he became Adjunct Professor at the Hult International Business School in London. Since September 2013 he is Professor at the Copenhagen Business School.[5]
At the IEEE Pilkington chairs the IEEE Technology Management Council for the UK and Republic of Ireland joint Chapter on Engineering Management.[5]
Work
Pilkington research interests are in the field of enterprise engineering and innovation, particularly disruptive innovation.
Innovation
Pilkington's approach to innovation concerned "product of individual, organisational and knowledge trajectories". His idea was that "modelling the relationships between observed typologies within each of these spheres, conditions for successful innovation can be identified and failures explained. This work is leading to tools which will help managers define successful and achievable technology strategies."[6]
Enterprise Engineering
Pilkington has initiated and directed the Pilkington research in Enterprise Engineering at Royal Holloway. According to Pilkington (2008/13):
- Enterprise Engineering is the application of engineering principles to the management of enterprises. It encompasses the application of knowledge, principles, and disciplines related to the analysis, design, implementation and operation of all elements associated with an enterprise.
In essence it is an interdisciplinary field which combines systems engineering and strategic management as it seeks to engineer the entire enterprise in terms of the products, processes and business operations. The view is one of continuous improvement and continued adaptation as firms, processes and markets develop along their life cycles. This total systems approach encompasses the traditional areas of research and development, product design, operations and manufacturing as well as information systems and strategic management.[4]
This Enterprise Engineering research had focussed on five types of management specialties:[4]
- Engineering Management : the application of engineering principles to business practice. It brings together the technological problem-solving savvy of engineering and the organizational, administrative, and planning abilities of management to oversee complex enterprises from conception to completion.[7]
- Innovation Management : discipline of managing processes in innovation. It can be used to develop both product and organizational innovation. Innovation management includes a set of tools that allow managers and engineers to co-operate with a common understanding of goals and processes.
- Operations Management : area of management concerned with overseeing, designing, and controlling the process of production and redesigning business operations in the production of goods or services.
- Service Management : integrated part of supply chain management, the intersection between the actual sales and the customer. The aim of high performance service management is to optimise the service-intensive supply chains, which are usually more complex than the typical finished-goods supply chain.
- Technology Management : set of management disciplines that allows organisations to manage their technological fundamentals to create competitive advantage. Typical concepts used in technology management are technology strategy (a logic or role of technology in organisation), technology forecasting (identification of possible relevant technologies for the organisation
At Royal Holloway[4] more specific topics of research in this field concerned Alternative fuel Technology, Bibliometrics and Patent analysis.[8]
Publications
Pilkington has authored and co-authored numerous publications in the field of Management of technology, Operations management, Manufacturing strategy and Enterprise engineering.[9] A selection:
- Pilkington, Alan. "Manufacturing strategy regained: evidence for the demise of best-practice." California Management Review 41 (1998): 31–42.
- Pilkington, Alan, and Catherine Liston-Heyes. "Is production and operations management a discipline? A citation/co-citation study." International Journal of Operations & Production Management 19.1 (1999): 7–20.
- Pilkington, Alan, Romano Dyerson, and Omid Tissier. "The electric vehicle:: Patent data as indicators of technological development." World Patent Information 24.1 (2002): 5–12.
- Pilkington, Alan, and Thorsten Teichert. "Management of technology: themes, concepts and relationships." Technovation 26.3 (2006): 288–299.
- Pilkington, Alan, and Jack R. Meredith. "The evolution of the intellectual structure of operations management—1980–2006: A citation/co-citation analysis." Journal of Operations Management 27.3 (2009): 185–202.
References
- ↑ Ma, Zhenzhong, Yender Lee, and Kuo-Hsun Yu. "Ten years of conflict management studies: themes, concepts and relationships." International Journal of Conflict Management 19.3 (2008): 234–248.
- ↑ Ramos‐Rodríguez, Antonio‐Rafael, and José Ruíz‐Navarro. "Changes in the intellectual structure of strategic management research: A bibliometric study of the Strategic Management Journal, 1980–2000." Strategic Management Journal 25.10 (2004): 981–1004.
- ↑ Dangayach, G. S., and S. G. Deshmukh. "Manufacturing strategy: literature review and some issues." International Journal of Operations & Production Management 21.7 (2001): 884–932.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Enterprise Engineering Research at Royal Holloway. Accessed 20 October 2013.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Alan Pilkington: Professor at Copenhagen Business School. Linked-in profile. Accessed 20 October 2013.
- ↑ Alan Pilkington, at Royal Holloway, University of London
- ↑ http://www.allengineeringschools.com/engineering-degree/all-degrees/engineering-management/california
- ↑ Pilkington, Alan, Romano Dyerson, and Omid Tissier. "The electric vehicle:: Patent data as indicators of technological development." World Patent Information 24.1 (2002): 5–12.
- ↑ Alan Pilkington: Copenhagen Business School, Google Scholar profile.
External links
- Alan Pilkington, at Royal Holloway, University of London
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