DocumentCode
110446
Title
Innovation and Performance: The Role of Environmental Dynamism on the Success of Innovation Choices
Author
Perez-Luno, Ana ; Gopalakrishnan, S. ; Valle Cabrera, Ramon
Author_Institution
Dept. of Manage., Pablo de Olavide Univ., Sevilla, Spain
Volume
61
Issue
3
fYear
2014
fDate
Aug. 2014
Firstpage
499
Lastpage
510
Abstract
Innovation has become the cornerstone for achieving competitive advantage and is currently one of the principal topics of debate in the management literature. Innovations can be internally generated or can be adopted from external sources. Innovations also vary in terms of degree of radicalness. In this study, we examine the nature of innovation (in terms of where it is generated and its degree of radicalness) and an external environmental factor (dynamism) to identify the types of innovation that are more likely to succeed in different environments. Organizations expend substantial financial and human resources innovating. While some innovations succeed in enhancing organizational performance, many fail and may affect performance adversely in the short term. A sample of 381 Spanish firms was used to analyze how organizations, in order to be competitive, need to identify the appropriate type of strategies-in terms of innovation generation versus adoption, and extent of radicalness-that are consistent with the environmental conditions that they operate in. First, we find that in dynamic environments, the more radical and internally generated the innovations, the higher the company´s perceived and objective performance. Second, we find that in stable environments, the less radical and more internally generated the innovations, higher the company´s objective performance. Implications for theory and practice are discussed.
Keywords
innovation management; organisational aspects; Spanish firms; company objective performance; dynamic environments; environmental dynamism; external environmental factor; external sources; financial innovation; human resource innovation; innovation adoption; organizational performance enhancement; radical-internally generated innovations; radicalness degree; stable environments; Companies; Databases; Industries; Reliability; Technological innovation; Uncertainty; Environmental dynamism; innovation; newness; performance; radicalness;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9391
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TEM.2014.2318085
Filename
6812182
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