Succeeding at open-source innovation: An interview with Mozilla's Mitchell Baker
Wednesday, January 30, 2008 at 1:22PM
Alphachimp

The company’s chairman and former CEO explains the power of the participatory, open-source model of collaboration.


As companies reach beyond their boundaries to find and develop ideas, they are exploring new models to manage innovation. In projects that tap external talent, questions quickly arise about process management, intellectual-property rights, and the right to make decisions. Some executives have been at this game longer than others. Mitchell Baker, chairman and former chief executive officer of Mozilla Corporation, has devoted the past ten years to leading an effort that relies extensively on people outside her company—not just for creative ideas, but also to develop products and make decisions. The result: Mozilla’s Firefox browser, with 150 million users, has become a rival of Microsoft’s market-leading Internet Explorer.


As Firefox flourished, the process that created it became a model for participatory, open-source collaboration.

Article originally appeared on Alphachimp Learning Systems LLC (http://alphachimp.squarespace.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.