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Driving environmental innovation with corporate storytelling: is radical innovation possible without incoherence?

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  • Oivind Hagen

Abstract

Concepts that until recently have been antagonistic to common business language, such as industrial ecology, are now being used in the stories that companies use to express their identity. In this article the relationship between the new, bold business language and environmental innovation is discussed. The analysis is based on a longitudinal case study of HAG – Norway and Scandinavia's leading office-chair manufacturer. The study suggests that incorporating industrial ecology into the corporate saga stimulates the incremental environmental innovations implied by the concept by contributing to the coherence of the story. The radical environmental innovation implied by industrial ecology is, however, hindered by such integration. Radical innovation takes discontinuity and confrontation with the dominating story of what a company is, has been and will be.

Suggested Citation

  • Oivind Hagen, 2008. "Driving environmental innovation with corporate storytelling: is radical innovation possible without incoherence?," International Journal of Innovation and Sustainable Development, Inderscience Enterprises Ltd, vol. 3(3/4), pages 217-233.
  • Handle: RePEc:ids:ijisde:v:3:y:2008:i:3/4:p:217-233
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    Cited by:

    1. Cuomo, Maria Teresa & Tortora, Debora & Foroudi, Pantea & Giordano, Alex & Festa, Giuseppe & Metallo, Gerardino, 2021. "Digital transformation and tourist experience co-design: Big social data for planning cultural tourism," Technological Forecasting and Social Change, Elsevier, vol. 162(C).
    2. Rogério João Lunkes & Fabricia Silva da Rosa & Januário José Monteiro & Daiane Antonini Bortoluzzi, 2020. "Interactions among Environmental Training, Environmental Strategic Planning and Personnel Controls in Radical Environmental Innovation," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 12(20), pages 1-13, October.
    3. Siri Carson & Øivind Hagen & S. Sethi, 2015. "From Implicit to Explicit CSR in a Scandinavian Context: The Cases of HÅG and Hydro," Journal of Business Ethics, Springer, vol. 127(1), pages 17-31, March.

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