• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

Vested

Based on research with…

HASLAM College of Business. The university of Tennessee, Knoxville
  • Home
  • What Is Vested?
    • Vested FAQ’s
    • The Story of the Vested Movement
    • About the Vested Faculty
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Speaking
  • Resources
    • Books
    • Vested Courses
    • Vested White Paper and Case Study Library
    • Workshops
    • Assessments
    • Vested Toolkit
    • Vested Certified Deal Architects
    • Vested Centers of Excellence Coaching and Consulting
  • Toolkit
  • Courses
    • Overview of Vested Courses
    • Online Courses
    • On Site Courses
    • Certified Deal Architect Program
    • Courseware FAQ
  • Login

The Changing Process of Invention

May 26, 2015 by Kate Vitasek

patent building 1920_JoshA recent Economist article explores how process of invention is changing.

Think back in time. Invention used to be more singular and more “heroic.” Inventors such as Stephenson, Morse and Goodyear were the “shock troops” of the Industrial Revolution, helping to bring “humanity from agrarian poverty to manufactured plenty. These days, though, inventor-superstars, while not absent, are fewer and farther between,” the article says.

While society may be missing today’s equivalent of innovation heroes, the good news is innovation has not slowed down. The article makes the point that the number of patents issued each year in the A.S. has remained steady. The difference is HOW the innovations come about.

A paper published in the Journal of the Royal Society Interface, by Youn Hyejin of Oxford University and her colleagues, provides some data that indeed the process of invention has changed. To put it a little simplistically, successful inventions can happen in two ways – through discovery and “recombination.”

By taking a technical dive into patent coding data since the 19th century, the balance between those two things may have changed, the Youn paper finds. About one-half the patents issued by the United States during the 19th century were for single-code inventions. These days, by contrast, nine-tenths are for inventions that combine at least two codes.

Basically, the evidence from U.S. patents indicates that invention has become a “combinatorial process.” The Economist concludes this suggests that “invention now proceeds mainly by recombining existing technologies and chimes with the idea that inventions were, in some sense, more fundamental in the past than they are today.”

Get Your Free Copy of THE VESTED WAY

Check out this Forbes article that shows how P&G approaches the art, science and practice of combining collaboration and innovation to create value.

Image: Patent Building 1920 by Josh via Flickr CC

Related posts:

  • Megatrends in the Future of Logistics
  • McDonald’s Honors Suppliers for Sustainability Innovations
  • Innovation as the Key to Resource Management
  • Parallel Tracks to Innovation

Filed Under: From the Blog Tagged With: collaboration, Forbes, innovation, invention, Kate Vitasek, The Economist, Vested

Vested 411

  • What is Vested
  • Vested FAQ's
  • Vested Faculty

Support

  • Technical Support

Join the Movement

  • Courses
  • Books
  • Speaking

Resources

  • Assessments
  • Books
  • Case Studies
  • White Papers
  • Toolkit
  • Centers of Excellence

Media

  • Contact

Privacy Policy

  • Privacy Policy
11410 NE 124th St. #311 Kirkland, WA 98034
Ph 762-475-8378
[email protected]
Vested

© 2025 Vested Outsourcing Inc. All Rights Reserved.