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Do Pre-existing Standards and Regulations Hamper or Stimulate the Development and Diffusion of Radically New High-tech Products?. J. Roland Ortt (Delft University of Technology) T ineke M. Egyedi (DIRoS). Introduction Theory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion. Introduction
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Do Pre-existing Standards and Regulations Hamper or Stimulate the Development and Diffusion of Radically New High-tech Products? J. Roland Ortt (Delft University of Technology) Tineke M. Egyedi(DIRoS)
Introduction Theory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion • Introduction • Research question • Do pre-existing standards and regulations hamper or stimulate the development and diffusion of radically new high-tech products? • Does the effect depend on the degree of radicalness of the technology in the product? • Does the effect depend on the degree of interrelatedness of the technological system? • Radically new high-tech products • New type of performance and/or technology principle • Development and diffusion • Length of phases in innovation trajectory (Ortt, 2010) • 1. Development (1), invention to first introduction • 2. Adaptation (2), first introduction to large-scale production • 3. Stabilization (3), start of large-scale production • Pre-existing Standards and Regulation • set of standards, rules, laws and conventions available prior to the development of a new product Length phase 2 Length phase 1 Pre-existing standards & regulations
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion • Theory Standardization • Debate ‘Do standards and regulations hamper and/or stimulate innovation?’ • Reviews: Swann, 2000, 2010; Blind, 2004; SOU, 2007 • Constrain innovation: freeze technology development, limit product variety and choice • Enable innovation: codify knowledge, focus innovation, help create critical mass and economies of scale • False antithesis (Swann and Lambert, 2010) • Aim: Further clarify relation between standards/regulations and innovation & diffusion • What is new in our approach? • Look at different types of standards & regulations (timing)Pre-existing standards and regulations (specifying timing; Sherif, 2006) • Look at different effects on early innovation and diffusionEffect on speed of early innovation (development phase) and early diffusion (adaptation phase)(pre-diffusion phases) • Look at many cases in different industriesDifferent type of data: Many cases from different industries
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion Hypotheses Radicalness of the technology in product 3 1 Length of development phase Length of the adaptation phase Pre-existing standards and regulations 2 Interrelatedness of the technological system for the product
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion Method (1) Sample
Analyzed data Pattern Characteristics product technological system IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion • Method (2) Data gathering • 50 historical cases of RNHP • For each case careful tracking of what happened over time • Establish pattern over time • For the first 25 cases we listed actors factors important for pattern • We specified these actors and factors (and the values for them) • We re-analyzed the first 25 cases using this coding scheme and • And then analyzed another 25 cases • Coding of the information regarding • the product, • the technological system • the (pre-existing) standards and regulations • 4 industries Timeframe:1850-2000 • Chemicals, metals and materials • Medicines • Telecommunication equipment • Electronic equipment Lit search Define unit Time table Pre-existing standards and regulations
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion • Method (3) Measuring the variables • Same approach to operationalization of • Interrelatedness of the technological system to which product innovation belongs • Radicalness of the technology in the product innovation
Length of the development phase Length of the adaptation phase Pre-existing standards and regulations IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion Results (1) Dependent and independent variable Table 2: Correlation between pre-existing standards and regulations and the length of phases
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion Results (2) Moderating variable: Interrelatednesstechnological system
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion Results (3) Relationship dependent & independent variable taking moderating variable ‘Interrelatednessof the technological system’ into account Table 5: Correlation between ‘pre-existing standards and regulations’ and ‘the length of the adaptation phase’ for two sets of cases
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion Results (4) Relationship dependent & independent variable taking moderating variable ‘Radicalness of technology’ into account Table 6: Correlation between ‘pre-existing standards and regulations’ and ‘the length of the adaptation phase’ for two sets of cases
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions CasesDiscussion Conclusion Pre-existing standards and regulations can shorten the adaptation phase, not the development phase; this is especially the case where innovative products are part of more inter-related technological systems and where more radically new technology is involved. Pre-existing standards & regulations No effect on development phase Shortening effect on adaptation phase Direct & moderated effects are only found for adaptation phase!
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion Cases to explain our findings (1) Why do pre-existing standards and regulations shorten early diffusion (adaptation phase) while they do not have such an effect on early innovation (development phase) Two cases: cellular mobile telephony and plasma screen Plasma screens Cellular mobile telephony
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion • Cases to explain our findings (2) • Why do pre-existing standards and regulations shorten early diffusion (adaptation phase) while they do not have such an effect on early innovation (development phase) • Two cases: cellular mobile telephony and plasma screen • Cellular mobile telephony • Why long development phase? • Long development phase can not be attributed to infrastructure. • AT&T perceived interests (King & West, 2002) • FCC blocked rapid introduction probably about 10 yrs (Gershon, 2003, p. 178) • Scarcity spectrum (public use: military, police, television; industrial use; private use) • Fear of AT&T monopoly position • Plasma screens • Very complex technology yet remarkably short development phase (patent delayed phase)(Weber, 2006) • Why a long adaptation phase? • Fragile technology not ready for commercialization (Weber, 2006) • Lack of standards (Uchiike, 2002; Mently, 2002) • Competition with LCD (Uchiike, 2002; Mently, 2002)
IntroTheory Method Results Conclusions Cases Discussion • Discussion • What do the results mean? • Standards and regulations can have a huge shortening effect on the adaptation phase; costly and risky phase (burnout of the pioneers) • Explanation lack of effect on development phase: effort to comply and vested interests seem to outweigh the effect of distributing the latest information and focussing the development efforts. (tentative based on 2 cases only) • Additional checks on results • Strong moderating effect of variable ‘Interrelatedness of technological system’ • Products from Telecom and electronics industry are relatively interrelated • ’Additional analysis shows no direct effect of infrastructure and compatibility on length adaptation phase. • Moderating effect of variable ‘Radicalness of technology • Further research • Development phase (test tentative findings from two cases) • Distinct effect of standards and regulations • Differentiation of standards • Timing of standardization & differentiation of innovation (Egyedi & Sherif, 2010)
Thank you! Questions?
Adaptation phase Stabilization phase Development phase Cumulative percentage of adoption ↑ Market Introduction T=0 (invention) → Time (in years) Pre-diffusion phases: development and adapation (Ortt, 2010)