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How does coopetition affect radical innovation? The roles of internal knowledge structure and external knowledge integration

Authors :
Elias G. Carayannis
Yanhong Yao
Ao Zan
Huanhuan Chen
Source :
Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing. 36:1975-1987
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Emerald, 2020.

Abstract

PurposeBuilding on the resource- and knowledge-based views, this paper aims to explore how coopetition affects radical innovation and the roles of knowledge structure and external knowledge integration in the relationship between coopetition and radical innovation.Design/methodology/approachThis study proposes a research model to examine the mediating role of external knowledge integration on the coopetition-radical innovation link, where the mediation is moderated by the firm’s knowledge structure (including component knowledge and architectural knowledge). The authors use regression and bootstrapping to test the proposed model with survey data from 241 Chinese technology firms.FindingsThis study finds that coopetition positively affects radical innovation and the effect is fully mediated by external knowledge integration. Additionally, component knowledge negatively moderates the coopetition-external knowledge integration link and architectural knowledge positively moderates this relationship. Further, the mediating effect of external knowledge integration is also moderated by component knowledge and architectural knowledge.Practical implicationsFirms should engage in coopetition to promote radical innovation. Further, it is necessary for firms to appropriately manage coopetition according to their internal knowledge structure.Originality/valueThis study explains why scholars have different ideas about the relationship between coopetition and radical innovation by exploring the mediating role of external knowledge integration and the moderating effect of knowledge structure. Firms possess increased possibilities for knowledge leakage and partner opportunism with high levels of component knowledge, which will reduce the positive effect coopetition on external knowledge integration; thus, they are less likely to realize radical innovation. Instead, firms possess increased opportunities for resource sharing with high levels of architectural knowledge, thus improving the positive effect coopetition on external knowledge integration and they are more likely to achieve radical innovation.

Details

ISSN :
08858624
Volume :
36
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Business & Industrial Marketing
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4812f5f6580968b474e71488aaf3cb65
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1108/jbim-05-2019-0257