Gay, Brigitte (2008): Firm dynamic governance of global innovation by means of flexible networks of connections. Published in: Journal of Innovation Economics , Vol. 2, No. 2 (2008): pp. 63-83.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_12525.pdf Download (2MB) | Preview |
Abstract
Today a plethora of inter-company alliances exists. Firms have networked value chains, disclosing consequently their strategy, which assets are internalized or externalized, and their ability to cope with fast change. The picture of all interfirm alliances in high tech sectors is that of an unstable complex network, or macrostructure, that evolves quickly and into which firms are differently entwined. Structural metrics borrowed from network research in sociology such as centrality and constraint (or lack of “structural holes”) can be used to assess dynamically a firm’s position in the macro structure and therefore the market: does the firm occupy a dominant or dominated position in an industry? How do its partners and competitors perform? Drawing also from recent theories on complex networks developed by statistical physicists, we show that firms are embedded in dynamic complex networks that have a ‘scale-free’ format, with only a few firms or “hubs” controlling the system, as well as a cohesive or ‘small-world’ structure. This small-world structure, which allows rapid diffusion of innovation along very short paths, also constrains firms continuously and can lead to a fast reversal of their position on the market. Taking as an example a major sector of the biopharmaceutical industry, this study offers insights for managers to assess effectively their environment and navigate under constant pressure within these ever-changing networks.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Firm dynamic governance of global innovation by means of flexible networks of connections |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Innovation; alliances; structural holes; centrality; complex networks; small world |
Subjects: | L - Industrial Organization > L6 - Industry Studies: Manufacturing > L65 - Chemicals ; Rubber ; Drugs ; Biotechnology L - Industrial Organization > L1 - Market Structure, Firm Strategy, and Market Performance > L14 - Transactional Relationships ; Contracts and Reputation ; Networks L - Industrial Organization > L2 - Firm Objectives, Organization, and Behavior > L24 - Contracting Out ; Joint Ventures ; Technology Licensing O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O3 - Innovation ; Research and Development ; Technological Change ; Intellectual Property Rights |
Item ID: | 12525 |
Depositing User: | B. Gay |
Date Deposited: | 06 Jan 2009 06:16 |
Last Modified: | 26 Sep 2019 23:12 |
References: | AHUJA, G. (2000), “Collaboration Networks, Structural Holes, and Innovation: A. Longitudinal Study”, Administrative Science Quarterly, n° 45, pp. 425-455 AHUJA, G. and KATILA, R. (2001), “Technological acquisitions and the innovation performance of acquiring firms: A longitudinal study", Strategic Management Journal, n° 22, pp. 197-220 ALBERT, R. and BARABASI, A.-L. (2002), “Statistical Mechanics of Complex Networks”, Reviews of Modern. Physics, n° 74, pp. 47—97 BAE, J. and GARGIULO, M. (2003), “Local action and efficient alliance strategies in the telecommunication Industry”, Working Paper, INSEAD, France BALA, I., LEE, C.-H. and VENKATRAMAN, N. (2006), “Managing small world ecosystems: Some lessons from the software sector”, California Management Review, n° 48(3), pp. 28-47 BARNEY, J. (1991), "Firm resources and sustained competitive advantages", Journal of management, n° 17, pp. 99-120 BAUM, J.A.C., Shipilov, A.V. and Rowley, T.J. (2003) “Where Do Small Worlds Come from?”, Industrial and Corporate Change, n° 12, pp. 697-725 BAUM, J. A. C. and ROWLEY, T. J. (2008), “Evolving webs in network economies”, Baum, Joel A.C. and Tim J. Rowley (eds.), Advances in Strategic Management (JAI/Emerald) BAVELAS, A. (1950), “Communication patterns in task oriented groups,” Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, n° 22, pp. 271-282 BOLLOBAS, M. (2001), Random Graphs, 2nd Edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press BORGATTI, S.P. (1995), “Centrality and AIDS”, Connections, n° 18(1), pp. 112-114 BOUVIER-PATRON, P. (2001), “Analysis of Change Within and Between Firms embedded in their environment in the context of increasing interactions: understanding complexity of organizations”, European Journal of Economic and Social Systems, n° 15(1), pp. 1-38 BURT, R.S. (1997), Structural holes: The social structure of competition, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Davis and Greeve BURT, R.S. (2000), The Network Structure of Social Capital. R.I. Sutton and B.M. Staw (Eds.), Research in Organizational Behavior, Greenwich, CT: JAI Press CARTWRIGHT, H. (2005), “Deal making in the biotech sector”, white paper, BioPartnering Today COLWELL, K.A. (2003), “The structure of alliance networks in nascent organizational fields: The case of nanotechnology”, Doctoral dissertation, University of Oregon, Eugene CORIAT, B. and DOSI, G. (1998), “Learning how to Govern and Learning How to Solve Problems : On the Co-Evolution of Competences, Conflicts and Organizational Routines”, in The Dynamic Firm : The Role of Technology, Strategy, Organization and Regions. Edited by Alfred D. Chandler, JR., Peter Hagström and Orjan Sölvell COWAN, R. and JONARD, N. (2004), “Network Structure and the Diffusion of Knowledge”, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, n° 28(8), pp. 1557-1575 COWAN, R. and JONARD, N. (2008), “If the Alliance Fits ... : Innovation and Network Dynamics" forthcoming in J.A.C. Baum and T.J. Rowley (eds.) Network Strategy: Advances in Strategic Management, 25. Oxford UK: JAI/Elsevier DEGENNE, A. and FORSE, M. (1994), « Les Réseaux sociaux » , Paris, Armand Colin DEEDS, D.L. and HILL, C.W. (1996), “Strategic Alliances and the Rate of New Product Development: An empirical Study of Entrepreneurial Biotechnology Firms”, Journal of Business Venturing, n° 11(1), pp. 41-55 DOROGOVTSEV, S.N. and MENDES, J.F.F. (2003), Evolution of Networks: From Biological Nets to the Internet and WWW. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press FREEMAN, L.C. (1979), “Centrality in networks: I. Conceptual Clarification,” Social Networks, n°1, pp. 215-39 GIRVAN, M. and NEWMAN, M. E. J. (2002), “Community structure in social and biological networks”, Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci., n° 99, pp. 7821-7826 GOMES-CASSERES, B., HAGEDOORN, J. and JAFFE, A. (2006), “Do Alliances Promote. Knowledge Flows?”, Journal of Financial Economics, n° 80, pp. 5-33 GRANT, R..M. (1996), “Towards a knowledge-based theory of the firm,” Strategic Management Journal, n°17, pp. 109-122 GULATI, R. (1998), “Alliances and networks”, Strategic Management Journal, 19, 293-317 GULATI, R., and GARGIULO, M. (1999), "Where Do Interorganizational Networks Come From?", American Journal of Sociology, n° 104, pp. 473-506. HAMDOUCH, A. (2008), "Conceptualizing Innovation Clusters and Networks", Forum The Spirit of Innovation III : Innovation Networks, Tacoma-Seattle, 14-16 May 2008, 27 p. JACKSON, M.O.and WOLINSKY, A. (1996), "A strategic model of social and economic networks", Journal of Economic Theory, n° 71(1), pp. 44 -74 KALMBACH, C.JR. AND ROUSSEL, R. (1999), “Dispelling the Myths of Alliances”, Accenture Outlook Special Edition KOGUT, B. (2000), “The Network as Knowledge: Generative Rules and the Emergence of Structure,” Strategic Management Journal, n°21, pp. 405-425 KOPUT, K. and POWELL, W.W. (2003), “Organizational growth and alliance capability: science and strategy in a knowledge-intensive industry”, Working paper, College of Business and Public Administration. University of Arizona LEVINTHAL, D., MARCH, A. and JAMES, G. (1993), “The Myopia of Learning”, Strategic Management Journal, n°14, pp. 95-112 METCALFE, J.S. (2002), “Knowledge of Growth and the Growth of Knowledge,” Journal of Evolutionary Economics, n°12, pp. 3-15 MOWERY, D.C., OXLEY, J.E. and SILVERMAN, B.S. (1996), “Strategic Alliances and Inter-firm Knowledge Transfer", Strategic Management Journal, n°17, pp. 77-91 MOWERY, D.C., OXLEY, J.E. and SILVERMAN, B.S. (1998), “Technological Overlap and Inter-firm Cooperation: Implications for the Resource-based View of the Firm”, Research Policy, n° 27, pp. 507-523 NOOTEBOOM,, B. (2000), Learning and Innovation in Organizations and Economics, Oxford University Press OWEN-SMITH, J. AND POWELL, W.W. (2004), “Knowledge Networks as Channels and Conduits: The Effects of. Spillovers in the Boston Biotechnology Community”, Organization Science, n°15(1), pp. 5–21 POWELL, W.W. (1996), “Inter-organizational collaboration in the biotechnology industry,” Journal of Institutional theoretical Economics, n° 152, pp. 197-215 POWELL, W.W. (1998), “Learning from Collaboration: Knowledge and networks in the biotechnology and pharmaceutical industries”, California Management Review, n° 40, pp. 228-240 POWELL, W.W., WHITE, D. R., KOPUT, K. W., and OWEN-SMITH. J. (2005), “Network Dynamics and Field Evolution: The Growth of Interorganizational Collaboration in the Life Sciences,” American Journal of Sociology, n° 110, pp. 1132–1205 SABIDUSSI, G. (1966): “The centrality index of a graph,” Psychometrika, n° 31(4), pp. 581-603. SCHILLING, M. and PHELPS, C. (2007), "Interfirm collaboration networks and knowledge creation: The impact of large scale network structure on firm innovation", Management Science, n° 53, pp. 1113-1126 SCHOENMAKERS, W. and DUYSTERS, G. (2006), “Learning in strategic technology alliances”, Technology analysis and strategic management, n° 18, pp 245-264 SCHUMPETER, J.A. (1912/1934) Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung. Leipzig: Duncker and Humblot. English translation published in 1934 as The Theory of Economic Development. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press STUART, T. E. (1998), "Producer Network Positions and Propensities to Collaborate: An Investigation of Strategic Alliance Formations in a High-technology Industry", Administrative Science Quarterly, n° 43(3), pp. 668-698 STUART, T. E. (2000), “Interorganizational alliances and the performance of firms: A study of growth and innovation rates in a high-technology industry”, Strategic Management Journal n° 21, pp. 791-811 TEECE, D.J. (1992), “Competition, cooperation, and innovation: Organizational arrangements for regimes of rapid technological progress”, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, Elsevier, n° 18(1), pp. 1-25 USHER, D. (1980), The Measurement of Economic Growth, Blackwell, Oxford UZZI, B. (1996), “The Sources and Consequences of Embeddedness for the Economic Performance of Organizations”, American Sociological Review, n° 61, pp. 674–98 WALKER, G., KOGUT, B. and W. SHAN (1997) “Social Capital, Structural Holes and the Formation of an Industry Network”, Organization Science, n° 8, pp. 108-125 WASSERMAN, S. and FAUST, K. (1994), Social Network Analysis, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press WATTS, D.J. and STROGATZ, S.H. (1998), “Collective dynamics of ‘small-world’ networks”, Nature, n° 393, pp. 440–442 WHITE, D. R., OWEN-SMITH, J., MOODY, J. and POWELL, W. W. (2005), "Networks, Fields and Organizations: Micro-Dynamics, Scale and Cohesive Embeddings." Computational and Mathematical Organization Theory, n° 10, pp. 95-117 |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/12525 |