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Tedious tasks of innovation get a boost from slack time, suggests Rotman research

August 17, 2015

Toronto – There’s a whole lot more to innovation than thinking up a great new idea. A new study from the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management suggests that when budding entrepreneurs get time off of their normal activities to work on other things – dubbed “slack” time – they use it to complete the less exciting jobs needed to bring a novel project to life.

That could shed more light on the value of giving potential innovators downtime, such as Google’s famous perk of allowing employees to spend 20 percent of their hours on interesting side projects.

“Slack time does something more than what we thought,” said researcher Avi Goldfarb, the Patricia Ellison Professor of Marketing at the University of Toronto’s Rotman School of Management. “You need a creative idea for sure, but you also need to tell people about it and you need to put some effort into raising money.  Slack time may give you the opportunity to do those mundane, execution-oriented tasks.”

Working with fellow Rotman researcher Ajay Agrawal, a Professor of Strategic Management, and Christian Catalini, an Assistant Professor of Technological Innovation, Entrepreneurship, and Strategic Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management, Prof. Goldfarb and the team examined data from the crowdfunding site Kickstarter over a five-year period to track the ebb and flow of new projects going online for donations during and outside U.S. college breaks.

They found a 49% increase in projects posted in known college towns during vacation times.  There were also correlations between the types of projects and the types of schools: more artistic projects were posted when arts schools went on breaks, while more tech projects got posted during breaks for top engineering schools.

However, projects tended to be posted during the first part of the breaks, not towards the end, suggesting that the creative front-end development of the project had already been completed and what was left was the drudge work.

Underscoring this, the researchers found an even greater spike in design and technology projects posted during school breaks after Kickstarter made requirements for the documentation of a project’s viability more stringent in 2012.

“If it’s ideation that’s happening, then these projects should be posted at the end of breaks so that people have time to put things together and they should be newer projects,” said Prof. Goldfarb. “Our results rejected all of those possibilities very strongly.”

The complete study is available at: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2599004 It was published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, the leading non-profit economic research organization in the United States.

For the latest thinking on business, management and economics from the Rotman School of Management, visit www.rotman.utoronto.ca/FacultyAndResearch/NewThinking.aspx.

The mission of the Rotman International Centre for Pension Management (Rotman ICPM) is to be an internationally-recognized, high-impact catalyst for fostering effective pension design and management. Some of the tools used to achieve this goal include the funding of objective and transformative research, the organization of interactive, action-oriented discussion forums, and the delivery of the globe's leading governance education program for Board members of pension and other long-horizon investment institutions. Further details on the Centre are available at www.rotman.utoronto.ca/icpm/.

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