Information Sharing in Innovation Networks

Author(s):  
Jennifer Lewis Priestley ◽  
Subhashish Samaddar

Innovation networks help members develop new products at a faster rate with lower investment commitments. The R&D consortium named Semiconductor Manufacturing Technology (SEMATECH), with member firms such as Motorola, Texas Instruments, and others, is an example of such a network. In a study of this network, Lim (2000) found that the network members were able to develop an innovative copper-based semiconductor that rivaled a similar product developed by (at the time) an independently operating IBM. The SEMATECH consortium experienced a significantly abbreviated time line and collectively invested significantly less money than did IBM with almost identical results. Lim attributed the innovative success of SEMATECH to the “connectedness” of the firms. Researchers engaged in studies examining interorganizational alliances generally agree with the findings of Lim and others that innovation network alliances represent a potential solution to mitigate environmental uncertainty, in part through the sharing of information (e.g., Gulati & Gargiulo, 1999). Van de Ven (2005) refers to this strategy for dealing with environmental uncertainty as “Running In Packs.” The basic logic is that as a network grows in membership, the amount of information any individual firm can access grows, and the value of membership in that network grows. Consequently, firms engaged in networks typically realize superior economic gains from their increased access to information relative to independent or nonaligned firms (e.g., Carlsson, 2002; Van de Ven, 2005). Since organizations join networks to mitigate costs and uncertainties, the question of how network characteristics affect (or not) the transfer of information is relevant to both practitioners as well as researchers in knowledge management and/or organizational learning. For instance, some innovation networks are composed of members engaged in similar activities while other networks are composed of members engaged in very different activities. Some networks tolerate more competition among their members than others. Finally, some networks are more centrally governed than others. These differences in how an innovation network is formed and governed raises an important question—Given that firms embedded within organizational networks experience greater exchange of information relative to firms operating outside of a network, how do the different characteristics of these networks impact the movement of that information? In this chapter, we will first review the two primary factors that have been demonstrated to influence the transfer of information—absorptive capacity and causal ambiguity. We then review three characteristics of multi-organizational networks—governance structure, scope of operations, and intensity of competition—with particular attention to the issue of information transfer. We develop six testable propositions regarding how these network characteristics would be expected to affect absorptive capacity and causal ambiguity among networked firms. Finally, we discuss future and emerging trends related to the transfer of information among networked firms.

2021 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 598-623
Author(s):  
Peizhen Jin ◽  
Hongyi Wu ◽  
Desheng Yin ◽  
Yupeng Zhang

PurposeBased on the perspective of technology supply chain, this study explores the effect of macroeconomic uncertainty regarding the spatiotemporal evolution of urban innovation networks to establish causality.Design/methodology/approachIt collects patent trading data for 283 cities in China (2005–2017) and employs the spatial econometric model to investigate the causal relationship.FindingsThe regional transfer of advanced technology in China is rising sharply, and the innovation network based on patent trading is typically high-density, multi-direction and wide-spreading. Further, macroeconomic uncertainty has a negative effect on the scale of innovation flows and the absorptive capacity in eastern cities. However, it has no significant impact on the innovation network characteristics in developed cities. In contrast, macroeconomic uncertainty is detrimental for the absorptive capacity and node importance in inland and undeveloped cities.Practical implicationsAs macroeconomic uncertainty increases, it is important to improve the quality of the urban innovation network with a better understanding of heterogeneity to promote further suitability innovation at the region-level.Originality/valueThis study highlights a clear and distinctive view that macroeconomic uncertainty not only directly affects the evolution of the urban innovation network but also indirectly affects the characteristics of other city nodes via the spatial spillover mechanism.


2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charlotte Reypens ◽  
Annouk Lievens ◽  
Vera Blazevic

The prominence of inter-organizational networks for innovation raises questions about how to support collaboration between multiple, diverse stakeholders. We focus on network orchestration and examine the practices that support orchestrators in dealing with the challenges brought by the number and diversity of stakeholders. Using qualitative, longitudinal data from an innovation network of 57 stakeholders, we identify three types of orchestration practices – connecting, facilitating and governing – and observe how they underlie innovation trajectories over time, each supporting the achievement of distinct network outcomes. Within and across trajectories, we observe how orchestrators rely on hybrid orchestration: they switch between dominating and consensus-based orchestration modes, in response to emergent network challenges. By switching between modes, orchestrators address the complexities of simultaneously and temporally dealing with a large number and diversity of stakeholders. With these findings, we present a toolbox of practices for network orchestrators to address distinct challenges in different types of networks and underscore that network research should consider the plurality of networks, rather than treat them as universalistic. Orchestrators play a key role in managing this plurality: they act as environmental scanners who address emergent network challenges through hybrid orchestration. This realization opens new avenues for network research, for example, relating to the skills and capabilities of orchestrators.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
Ibrahim Baghdadi

The growing exposure to globalization, since 1990s, has initiated some significant alterations to the Lebanese economy, society, and culture. For the last two decades, it has been observed that international cuisines and eccentric menu items have been invading the local market and taking over ethnic and traditional cuisines, what threatens, if this trend continues, the identity of traditional cuisine and, consequently, the sustainability of local food culture. Departing from the case of Lebanon, this paper studies the impact of globalization on traditional cuisine and highlights the role of networks in sustaining local food culture. The findings of our empirical study revealed the necessity to modernize the traditional cuisine through a coordinated set of heterogeneous and professional actors who collectively take part in the process. The ability of these actors to innovate is found related to the organizational conditions of the networks to which they belong, and to the ability of these networks for innovation, what refers us to the concept of “innovation network” that we are proposing, through this study, as a solution to the dilemma of food - culture preservation and sustainability.


Author(s):  
Jennifer Priestley ◽  
Subhashish Samaddar

Organizations join multi-organizational networks in part to mitigate environmental uncertainties and to access knowledge. However, the transfer of knowledge cannot be assumed simply as a function of network membership. Researchers in the area of knowledge management have identified several factors that have been found to affect the transfer of knowledge within, between, and among organizations. This chapter investigates specifically how organizational ambiguity impacts the transfer of knowledge within multi-organizational networks. The authors explore the effects of causal ambiguity, defined as the ambiguity related to inputs and factors, in a multi-organizational context, and discuss the existence of a previously undefined ambiguity, the ambiguity related to outcomes or “outcome ambiguity.” The authors provide a discussion on why outcome ambiguity is particularly relevant when multiple organizations are engaged in a network, where the objective is access to knowledge.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 551-561 ◽  
Author(s):  
António Abreu ◽  
José Moleiro Martins ◽  
João M. F. Calado

Abstract Currently, companies to be competitive must achieve high rates of innovation and respond quickly to market needs. According to a number of managers and researches innovation is crucial for companies to stay “alive." Taking into account several reports, the development of co-innovation networks based on a collaborative environment is the best strategy to support innovation projects. However, the absence of mechanisms to detect and even anticipate potential risks of innovation based on a collaborative approach is an obstacle to the proliferation of this way of working. To address this issue, this paper discusses an approach based on fuzzy reasoning for analyzing the level of risk in co-innovation projects. It is discussed how this approach can be applied to co-innovation projects within the context of a collaborative ecosystem. At last, it is discussed the benefits, and challenges found on experimental results from a Portuguese co-innovation network.


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