When to commit more to a technological entry: Evidence of the follow-up patenting action of bearings manufacturers
Journal
Journal of Engineering and Technology Management
Journal Volume
31
Journal Issue
1
Pages
1-20
Date Issued
2014
Author(s)
Abstract
While consistently making forays into new domains is common practice, a follow-up action represents a greater realization of the value of a prior entry. Subsequent to technological entries into new domains, why and when to follow up, in terms of a follow-up patenting action in the newly entered domain, is relatively sidelined in the technology management literature. This paper departs from the knowledge-based view on follow-up patenting action to the moderating roles of competitive intensity and learning speed in order to explore persistent innovation behavior under uncertainty. In a sample of 474 technological entries of fifteen top bearings manufacturers during 1990-2004, the study serves as a multilevel account of the interplay between patent, firm and field. Our results show not only the contrasting influences of a firm's knowledge depth and breadth on its propensity to follow up on prior entries but also the boundary conditions of such causal relationships. As a response to the recent call for more empirical inquiry into the dynamics of R&D investment, our evidence identifies the theoretical sensitivity of the knowledge-based view to contextual factors and sheds new light on the complex nature of follow-up patenting, particularly when firms are subject to external uncertainty caused by competitive rivalry and internal uncertainty due to learning speed. © 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Subjects
Asset specificity; Follow-up patenting; Learning speed; Technological deepening
SDGs
Other Subjects
Asset specificity; Causal relationships; External uncertainties; Follow-up patenting; Knowledge-based views; Learning speed; Technological deepening; Technology managements; Industry; Manufacture; Patents and inventions
Type
journal article