She tilted her head. “What title?”
Now, she was on a video call with him. Her face was pixelated, but her energy was 4K.
Until a notification pinged.
“Not ‘Professor’ or ‘Author’ or ‘Consultant’,” he said. “Chief Innovation Architect. And my first project? We’re rewriting Chapter 11. The one on ‘Scaling Disruptive Ideas.’ Because I just realized—I got the scaling part wrong.” entrepreneurship and innovation management r. gopal pdf
Then came the email from a venture capital firm in Bangalore. The subject line: We built our entire investment thesis on your Chapter 9.
R. Gopal looked at his laptop, then at the dusty framed degree from a mediocre B-school on his wall. For eleven years, he had believed his value was in the selling of the PDF. But Meera, and the thousands like her who had downloaded, annotated, and applied his framework, had taught him something his own book’s chapter on “Open Innovation” had stated but he’d never internalized:
The problem? No publisher wanted it.
She laughed. “What’s the new version called?”
She didn’t ask for permission. She didn’t ask for equity. She just did it.
He had spent eleven years writing it. Not the entire eleven years, of course—he had a wife, two kids, a mortgage, and a dead-end job as a “Strategy Associate” at a middling consulting firm. But in stolen hours, between PowerPoint decks and budget spreadsheets, he had poured every hard-won lesson into 412 pages. She tilted her head
R. Gopal adjusted his glasses. Chapter 9 was titled: Innovation Ambidexterity: Exploiting Today, Exploring Tomorrow. It was his favorite. And apparently, a 24-year-old founder named Meera had used it to pivot her failed food delivery startup into a cloud kitchen AI that reduced waste by 40%.
“Too academic for entrepreneurs, too practical for academics,” one editor had written. Another said, “The market for ₹999 business books is dead.” So the PDF sat, a ghost in the machine, collecting digital dust on a hard drive.
He smiled for the first time in years. “ When the Student Becomes the Case Study. ” Until a notification pinged