DocumentCode
570646
Title
Beyond niche thinking: Market selection in science-based ventures
Author
Lubik, Sarah ; Garnsey, Elizabeth ; Minshall, Tim
Author_Institution
Centre for Strategy & Performance, Univ. of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
fYear
2012
fDate
July 29 2012-Aug. 2 2012
Firstpage
785
Lastpage
789
Abstract
Matching a new technology to an appropriate market is a major challenge for new technology-based firms (NTBF). Such firms are often advised to target niche-markets where the firms and their technologies can establish themselves relatively free of incumbent competition. However, technologies are diverse in nature and do not benefit from identical strategies. In contrast to many Information and Communication Technology (ICT) innovations which build on an established knowledge base for fairly specific applications, technologies based on emerging science are often generic and so have a number of markets and applications open to them, each carrying considerable technological and market uncertainty. Each of these potential markets is part of a complex and evolving ecosystem from which the venture may have to access significant complementary assets in order to create and sustain commercial value. Based on dataset and case study research on UK advanced material university spin-outs (USO), we find that, contrary to conventional wisdom, the more commercially successful ventures were targeting mainstream markets by working closely with large, established competitors during early development. While niche markets promise protection from incumbent firms, science-based innovations, such as new materials, often require the presence, and participation, of established companies in order to create value.
Keywords
innovation management; market opportunities; market research; technology management; venture capital; ICT innovations; NTBF; ecosystems; information and communication technology innovations; market selection; market uncertainty; material university spin-outs; new technology-based firms; niche markets; science-based innovations; science-based ventures; technological uncertainty; value creation; Business; Commercialization; Educational institutions; Materials; Metals; Technological innovation; Uncertainty;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Technology Management for Emerging Technologies (PICMET), 2012 Proceedings of PICMET '12:
Conference_Location
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4673-2853-1
Type
conf
Filename
6304096
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