DocumentCode :
1819219
Title :
Innovation, capital and market capture
Author :
Betz, Frederick ; Youngrak Choi ; Min, Whasik
Author_Institution :
Korea Univ., Seoul, South Korea
fYear :
2013
fDate :
July 28 2013-Aug. 1 2013
Firstpage :
790
Lastpage :
799
Abstract :
From the beginning of management of technology, technological innovation has always been thought of as consisting of two concepts - invention and commercialization. And this definition of technological innovation does capture the short-term history of innovation and industrial competition but not the long term history. In the early history of any new radical technology and new industry built upon it as a core technology, the two ideas capture that early part - but not the later part in what Schumpeter had called `creative destruction´. For example, if invention and commercialization were sufficient to capture the long-term history of the semiconductor IC chip industry, then America would still be the dominant producers of memory chips; but it is not. American firms invented and commercialized DRAMS in the 1970s; and yet they were not significant producers of these after 1981. DRAM industrial dominance passed to Japanese firms. But by 2000, market dominance was captured by Korean firms, eliminating Japanese competition, although earlier Japanese firms had eliminated American competition. How did all that happen? It is well known that, as anticipated by `Moores´ Law´, DRAM products went through many next-generation-technology products (from 16K chips in the 1970s to 16G chips in the 2010s). At certain of these technology discontinuities, there occurred major changes in industrial dominance. How did these dominant industrial shifts occur, over the long-term of technological innovation? To explain this, we add a third basic idea to the definition of `technological innovation´ - which is the idea of `market capture´. In this way, one can think not only about `short-term´ technological innovation (as invention + commercialization) but also about `long-term´ technological innovation (as invention + commercialization + market
Keywords :
innovation management; market opportunities; market research; semiconductor industry; technology management; America; DRAM industrial dominance; DRAM products; Japanese firms; Korean firms; capital; commercialization; creative destruction; industrial competition; invention; market capture; market dominance; next generation technology products; semiconductor IC chip industry; technological innovation; technology discontinuities; technology management; Consumer electronics; DRAM chips; Industries; Integrated circuits; Next generation networking; Technological innovation; Transistors;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Technology Management in the IT-Driven Services (PICMET), 2013 Proceedings of PICMET '13:
Conference_Location :
San Jose, CA
Type :
conf
Filename :
6641656
Link To Document :
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