Innovation & Immitation Flashcards
Large incumbents need to erly on small firms to innovate
Markides & Geroski (2004)
- Radical & Strategic change
- Publisher analogy
- Innovation is a waste of resources
Blue Oceans
Kim & Mauborgne (2005)
- Blue oceans are when firms take advantage of existing technologies in order to create new markets
- Cirque Du Soleil example
Trade-off between differentiation and legitimacy
Deephouse (2000)
- Inverse U between the payoffs of differentiating, which will give a product legitimacy, and differentiation, which will
- Differentiation will help determine a points of difference that classify a product as superior.
Parameters that can be used to define innovative success
Buisson & Siblerzahn (2010)
Breakthroughs in the following will define innovative success
1) Technological
2) Business Model
3) Design
4) Process
Innovation STRATEGY
Winter (2000)
- Innovation Strategy is more important that innovation itself, as it will help determine who can capture the rents.
VHS & Betamax
Cusumano et al. (1992)
- VHS launched a year later, but ended up winning due to superior distribution, manufacturing and clever marketing.
- By 1984, VHS had outsold Betamax 4:1
Patents
Levin et al. (1987)
- Patents are an important way of appropriating intellectual property rights, which serve to appropriate revenue.
Patent’s are only a ‘weak protection’
Leiberman & Montgomery
Complementary assets
Teece (1986)
- Complementary assets fundamentally determines who wins/loses out form innovation.
Technological lock-in
Arthur (1989)
- Different technologies will compete for a market of potential adopters , then when the market has matured there will be a technological lock in.
Dominant Design
Shapiro & Varian
Pneumonic
Since All Winter Months Bring Trouble, Can’t Kim Lick Lick Dick