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2008 | Buch

Determinants of Innovative Behaviour

A Firm’s Internal Practices and its External Environment

herausgegeben von: Cees van Beers, Alfred Kleinknecht, Roland Ortt, Robert Verburg

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan UK

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A rich overview of current research on determinants of innovative behaviour. It is a unique work as it illuminates these from different perspectives such as, economics, management and psychology. Using several methods of analysis, it shows what specific determinants are predominant in explaining firm performance on innovation.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

Introduction

1. Introduction
Abstract
This book is the result of a workshop on innovation systems at Delft University of Technology in October 2006. All chapters in this volume were presented and discussed at the workshop. After the workshop all chapters were critically judged in an additional anonymous review procedure. The main aim of the workshop was to provide an overview of the growing body of knowledge on innovation systems and their influence on the performance of firms. This book presents a multidisciplinary overview of research in the area of innovation with contributions from economics, management, marketing and psychology.
Cees van Beers, Alfred Kleinknecht, Roland Ortt, Robert Verburg

Internal Organization

Frontmatter
2. Business Strategy, Human Resource Management and Corporate Performance: Evidence from Small Firms in the UK and US
Abstract
There is a large and growing literature on the relationship between the use of human resource management practices on the one hand, and corporate performance on the other (see for example Appelbaum et al., 2000; Guest et al., 2000; Huselid and Becker, 1996; Ichniowski et al., 1994, 1997; Mac-Duffie, 1995; Way, 2002; Wood and de Menezes, 1998). This literature has mostly found some degree of positive association between the use of such human resource practices on the one hand and organizational outcomes and corporate performance on the other. However, the strength and significance of the associations found varies across studies. Thus the general claim from the HR literature — of a positive association between what might be termed ‘progressive’ human resource management practices on the one hand, and organizational outcomes and corporate performance on the other — is precisely that: a general claim that may not apply to any given firm, since that firm may not exhibit the specific characteristics — such as pursuing an innovating rather than cost-cutting strategy — that are found to be particularly associated with these positive outcomes.
Jonathan Michie, Maura Sheehan
3. Where People Provide the Impetus: HRM Practices, Employee Job Satisfaction and Innovation
Abstract
Successful organizations almost invariably exhibit an ability to change, adapt and on occasions reinvent themselves in order to survive in challenging circumstances. What does this intense commitment to innovation mean for the employment systems of these organizations? What is the logic behind assertions that certain HRM practices and work design features promote innovation while others suppress and constrain this result? And what is the impact of employee feelings and attitudes on an organization’s propensity to operate in this way? It is with these and other questions that we are concerned in this chapter. Our assertions are necessarily tentative, since there have been few empirical studies examining this topic. Nonetheless, there is a burgeoning literature concerned with understanding what organizations can do internally to promote innovation. Some of the studies that we describe below offer new empirical insights into this area.
Helen Shipton, Doris Fay
4. Skill Endowment and R&D Investment: Evidence from Micro Data
Abstract
History has seen periods of change biased in favour of the unskilled: this was the case during the transition from the artisan-based to the factory-based system of production (Marx, 1961, Book I, Chap. XIII; Goldin and Katz, 1998), and of the massive introduction of Tayloristic methods in the 20th century (Braverman, 1974).
Mariacristina Piva, Marco Vivarelli

Linking Internal to External Organization

Frontmatter
5. Designing the Organization for Innovation
Abstract
The external environment in which firms have been competing in the last decades has profoundly changed, both in high-technology and in more mature industries. Accordingly, a significant evolution in the way in which the technological innovation process is managed has occurred as well. Since innovation is often the single most important driver of economic value creation, most innovative and successful firms have adapted their approach to innovation management to the changing external environment, in an attempt to protect or nurture their competitive advantage.
Vittorio Chiesa, Federico Frattini
6. Exploring Knowledge Flows and Losses in the ‘Open Innovation’ Age
Abstract
The management of innovation has a large and diverse body of literature. It recognizes that while there is much complexity and uncertainty in managing innovation and new-product development, much is known. There is considerable agreement on many of the factors that contribute to success and the activities and processes that need to be undertaken if innovation is to occur and a firm’s performance is to improve (Table 6.1 captures some of the key studies that have influenced our understanding from the past 50 years; see References, pp. 144–50).
Paul Trott
7. The Role of Knowledge Clusters in R&D Acquisition and Innovation Success
Abstract
The information and telecommunication (ICT) industry as well as the media industry are fertile parents to a plethora of electronic (‘e’) and mobile (‘m’) products and applications (Sorenson et al., 2002, Brodt and Heitmann 2004). A common denominator of these industries is that they are based on fast-paced and converging technology development. Winners in the market are in most cases also technology leaders or capable of turning a base technology into a superior product meeting customer needs. While access to technology and market know-how becomes increasingly important to succeed in the competition, size, history and equity become less and less critical requirements. On the one hand this allows e-and m-start-ups to realize tremendous growth rates and on the other hand it spurs the quest for external knowledge sourcing both at established players and start-ups.
Torsten Brodt, Sebastian Knoll
8. E-collaboration in the Automotive Supply Chain: Determinants and Impacts on Performance
Abstract
This chapter explores one specific aspect of the ‘open-innovation’ paradigm (Chesbrough, 2003) by analysing collaborative new-product development (NPD) among business partners involved in one supply chain. By definition, ‘open innovation assumes that useful knowledge is widely distributed, and that even the most capable R&D organization must identify, connect to, and leverage external knowledge sources as a core process in innovation’ (Chesbrough, 2006, p. 2). Implicitly, the open-innovation paradigm therefore implies that interorganizational networks or supply chains play a salient role in the innovation process. However, our common understanding of open-innovation practices remains limited (West et al., 2006, p. 294).
Elisabeth Lefebvre, Louis A. Lefebvre, Amal Amarouch, Luc Cassivi, Gaël le Hen
9. Innovation and Labour Productivity in the Swiss Manufacturing Sector: An Analysis Based on Firm Panel Data
Abstract
This chapter investigates: 1) the determinants of innovation performance: and b) the impact of innovation performance on labour productivity of Swiss manufacturing firms in the period 1994–2002. The studyis in the spirit of the paper by Crépon, Duguet and Mairesse, published in Economics of Innovation and New Technology (Crépon et al., 1998).
Spyros Arvanitis
10. Financial Constraint and R&D Investment: Evidence from CIS
Abstract
The connection between finance and investment starts with any violation of the Modigliani-Miller theorem (Modigliani and Miller, 1958), usually modelled formally via imperfect information. According to Ross, Westerfield and Jordan (1993) about 80 per cent of all financing is done with internally generated funds. Explanations for this behaviour usually highlight the role of information asymmetries (Myers and Majluf, 1984) and agency issues ( Jensen and Meckling, 1976) in raising the costs of external funds.
Amaresh K. Tiwari, Pierre Mohnen, Franz C. Palm, Sybrand Schim van der Loeff

External Organization

Frontmatter
11. Technology Diffusion and Innovation: The Importance of Domestic and Foreign Sources
Abstract
Recent work in economic growth using aggregate data suggests that variation in cross-country productivity is at least as much due to foreign as to domestic innovation (Keller and Yale, 2003). At the same time, a vast majority of scholars now agree that proximity afforded by locating in large urban regions creates an advantage for firms by facilitating information and knowledge flows for innovation activities, according to arguments presented earlier by Vernon (1962), later by Glaesner (1999) and Feldman and Audretsch (1999).
Hans Lööf
12. Industry Specialization, Diversity and the Efficiency of Regional Innovation Systems
Abstract
Innovating firms are not isolated, self-sustained entities but rather are highly linked to their environment. This embeddedness can have a considerable effect on innovation processes, and it is not very far-fetched to assume that not all kinds of environment are equally well suited to a certain type of research and development (R&D) activity. There are two prominent hypotheses that pertain to the sectoral structure of the regional environment. One of these hypotheses states that the geographic concentration of firms that belong to the same industry or to related industries is conducive to innovation. The other hypothesis assumes that it is the diversity of industries and activities in a region, not the concentration of similar industries, that has a stimulating effect.
Michael Fritsch, Viktor Slavtchev
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Determinants of Innovative Behaviour
herausgegeben von
Cees van Beers
Alfred Kleinknecht
Roland Ortt
Robert Verburg
Copyright-Jahr
2008
Verlag
Palgrave Macmillan UK
Electronic ISBN
978-0-230-28573-6
Print ISBN
978-1-349-30236-9
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230285736

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