Incumbent Firm Invention in Emerging Fields: Evidence from the Semiconductor Industry
Strategic Management Journal, 32 (1): 55-75, 2010
21 Pages Posted: 14 Feb 2010 Last revised: 12 Feb 2017
Date Written: February 13, 2010
Abstract
Incumbent firms are often thought to focus on incremental innovations and only respond to a major technological change once its impact on established markets and/or dominant designs becomes clear. We argue, however, that incumbent firms have many reasons to proactively invent early in cycles of technological change. Our interest is in the strategies that allow incumbents to be successful in this endeavor during the infancy of an emerging field – the period before it is clear how the field will affect dominant designs. Our evidence counters the stereotypical view that incumbent firms play a passive role in major technological changes by adhering to incremental inventions in the existing dominant designs. Rather, we find significant inventions by incumbents outside the existing dominant designs and relate their success to their willingness to search novel areas, explore scientific knowledge in the public domain, and form alliances with a balanced portfolio of partners. We find support for our hypotheses using data from the global semiconductor industry between 1989 and 2002.
Keywords: Emerging Technology, Nanotechnology, Incumbent Firm, Technological Change, Public Science, Inventive Output
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