• DocumentCode
    1744689
  • Title

    Application of a sectoral taxonomy to explore contingencies in the theory of determinants of innovation

  • Author

    Souitaris, Vangelis

  • Author_Institution
    Manage. Sch., Imperial Coll. of Sci., Technol. & Med., London, UK
  • Volume
    1
  • fYear
    2000
  • fDate
    2000
  • Firstpage
    339
  • Abstract
    Pavitt (1984) identified different patterns of technological change (technological trajectories) in four categories of industrial firms. This paper tests the applicability of Pavitt´s model for the development of a contingency approach on the determinants of technological innovation. An empirical test in a sample of 105 Greek companies, showed that firms in different trajectories of Pavitt´s taxonomy had differences in the rate of technological innovation. `Specialised suppliers´ and `science-based´ firms were found to have higher rates of innovation than `supplier dominated´ and `scale intensive´ ones. Most importantly, different variables proved to be significantly associated with innovation for each category of firms: innovation for `supplier dominated´ firms was related with the market environment, acquisition of information, technology strategy, risk attitude and internal communication. For `scale intensive´ firms the important determinants were related with the ability to raise funding and the education of personnel. For `specialised suppliers´ innovation was associated with high growth rate and training and incentives offered to the employees to contribute towards innovation. Science-based firms depended upon technical and general qualifications of personnel, licensing and customer feedback. The application of Pavitt´s model can explain the apparent problem of inconsistent results in the research on the determinants of technological innovation
  • Keywords
    research and development management; Greek companies; contingency approach; customer feedback; funding; high growth rate; information acquisition; innovation determinants theory; internal communication; market environment; personnel education; risk attitude; scale intensive firms; science-based firms; sectoral taxonomy; specialised suppliers; supplier dominated firms; technological change; technological trajectories; technology strategy; training; Chemical technology; Educational institutions; Flexible manufacturing systems; Innovation management; Manufacturing industries; Marketing management; Personnel; Taxonomy; Technological innovation; Testing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Management of Innovation and Technology, 2000. ICMIT 2000. Proceedings of the 2000 IEEE International Conference on
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-6652-2
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICMIT.2000.917361
  • Filename
    917361