The Innovation Management course at the Master's level typically explores the strategies, processes, and methodologies involved in fostering innovation within organizations, especially in the context of digital transformation.

Innovation management is a crucial aspect of modern business strategy that focuses on promoting and implementing new and creative ideas within an organization. It involves the systematic management of innovation processes, from idea generation and development to market launch and commercialization. Innovation management aims to drive organizational growth and competitiveness by fostering a culture of continuous improvement and encouraging employees to think outside the box.

This course provides a comprehensive exploration of fundamental concepts and practical techniques in database management, with a strong focus on hands-on application. Students will acquire advanced proficiency in data modeling, relational databases, object-relational databases (especially with Oracle), SQL, distributed database architecture, and an introduction to parallel databases. The objective is to equip students with the skills needed to effectively handle complex data management challenges encountered in real-world.

The course content is the following: Internet legal and business architectures, digital legislations, digital neutrality, standards, the IBM and AT& lawsuits, Microsoft lawsuits from the 1990s, the EU v. Google cases from the 2010s, the Facebook, Apple, and Amazon FTC complaints from the 2020s, digital music and copyright, digital ethics, sustainability, and corporate social responsibility

Students will learn how to boost customer-centric innovation in the marketplace. Student

will explore the principles of business and customer orientation in depth and, in turn,

analyze the strategies that leading companies implement in a highly competitive and

dynamic economy. Student will learn how to create and capture customer value and engage

customers in new product development processes and adopt successful approaches

based on case studies.

The course provides to the student a broader view on all relevant aspects of Start-up and Innovation ,  Innovation policy and eco-system and the relationship of these elements to each other .

Short description:

This course introduces the Object-oriented Programming paradigm.

Target audience:

This course is intended for students in the Master 1 Specialty DTI

General objectives:

This module consists first of all in recalling the principles of imperative programming and
the C language before introducing object-oriented programming. This reminder will make it
possible to clearly show the contribution of the targeted programming object in the
development of software, and the study of the JAVA programming language widely used in
the computer industry, more particularly in WEB applications.a.

 



This course will explore the business models of software disruptors of the west such as Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon, and the east such as Xiaomi and weChat. The class uses a structured framework for analysing business models with numerous examples so that students can apply it to their own business or case study.