Paul Wiegmann
Department / Institute
RESEARCH PROFILE
Dr. Paul Wiegmann is an assistant professor in the ITEM group of the Department of Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences. His work is motivated by the observation that addressing major societal and economic trends (e.g. making things ‘smart’ and sustainable) is beyond the reach of individual organisations.
Paul’s PhD research (thesis title: “Setting the Stage for Innovation: Balancing Diverse Interests Through Standardisation”) focused on the functions of standardisation in this context. Building on this expertise, Paul’s current research investigates how standards fit among other explicit and implicit rules that govern ‘innovation ecosystems’. In particular, he aims to identify under which conditions these rules can support value creation and value capture in ecosystems.
Paul uses both qualitative (case studies, grounded theory) and quantitative (choice experiments, conjoint analysis) methods. His teaching and thesis supervision focus on topics related to standardisation, and to qualitative research methods.
ACADEMIC BACKGROUND
Paul holds a PhD from Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University, and further degrees from Erasmus University and the University of Warwick. He was a visiting researcher at TU Berlin (2014 & 2015), Yonsei University, Seoul (2018), and the University of California, Davis (2023). Paul also acts as president for the European Academy of Standardisation (EURAS).
Recent Publications
-
Forging a sharper blade
Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions (2023) -
Measuring societal impact of standards
(2023) -
Competing Standard-Setting Organizations: A Choice Experiment
Research Policy (2022) -
Measuring Societal Impact of Standards
(2022) -
Balancing Quality and Speed in the Market Approval of Diagnostic Tests
JAMA Health Forum (2021)
Ancillary Activities
- Lid van de Programmaraad, Stichting Onderzoek en Onderwijs Normalisatie en Standaardisatie (SOONS)
- Member of the board - president, European Academy of Standardisation - EURAS