1 / 13

Rotman School of Management PhD, UC Berkeley MA, UC Berkeley SM, MIT AB, Harvard

T echnological Resources and the Direction of Corporate Diversification: Toward an I ntegration of the Resource-based View and Transaction Cost Economics. Rotman School of Management PhD, UC Berkeley MA, UC Berkeley SM, MIT AB, Harvard.

james-eaton
Download Presentation

Rotman School of Management PhD, UC Berkeley MA, UC Berkeley SM, MIT AB, Harvard

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Technological Resources and the Direction of Corporate Diversification: Toward an Integration of the Resource-based View and Transaction Cost Economics Rotman School of Management PhD, UC Berkeley MA, UC Berkeley SM, MIT AB, Harvard Silverman, B. S. 1999. Management Science, 45(8): 1109-1124. Presented by Jae Kyun Yoo

  2. Overview • A study of how a firm’s resource base affects the choice of industries into which the firm diversifies. • Empirically, operationalizes technological resources at a more fine-grained level than has been done in prior resource-based research. • Theoretically, examines and tests the assumption that rent-generating resources are necessarily too asset specific to allow contracting (link between RBV and TCE).

  3. RBV and Diversification • RBV describes the firm as a “collection of sticky and imperfectly imitable resources or capabilities that enable it to successfully compete against other firms” (see Penrose, 1959). • These same characteristics prevent firms from “transplanting” resources into new contexts. • It is assumed that more “related” diversification supports more extensive exploitation of resources. • Studies use SIC system to measure degree of industry relatedness. • R&D intensity, advertising intensity, and other such investments serve as proxies for underlying resources and that firms will diversify into industries with relative intensities.

  4. RBV and Diversification • However, current studies depend on strong assumptions regarding the ordering and applicability of the SIC system as well as the fungibility of R&D and advertising intensity. • Popular studies on diversification using RBV characterize resources at the industry level, and leave open the effects of firms’ repositories of expertise or technology. • Identification of individual firms’ resources allows for greater insights into the role of resources in diversification.

  5. Hypotheses • Hypothesis 1:Ceteris paribus, a firm is more likely to diversify into a business the more applicable its existing technological resources are to that business (in absolute terms). • Hypothesis 2: Ceteris paribus, a firm is more likely to diversify into a business the more applicable its existing technological resources are to that business, relative to other opportunities facing the firm. • Hypothesis 3. Ceteris paribus, a firm is more likely to diversify in to a business the more likely that contracting out its technological resources in that business is subject to high contractual hazards. • A: A firm is more likely to diversify into a business as the feasibility of licensing its technological resources in that business decreases. • B: A firm is more likely to diversify into a business as the need for secrecy to appropriate returns to its technological resources in that business increases. • C: A firm is more likely to diversify into a business as the degree of tacit knowledge associated with its technological resources in that business increase.

  6. Methodology • The empirical test of the hypotheses entailed estimating the entry of existing firms into new SICs during the three-year window 1982-1985 as a function of firm, industry, and resource characteristics in 1981. • Each firm’s resource base was determined through the use of patent data. • Issues arise where firm knowledge is not patented due to ineligibility or firm choice. • It should also be noted that differences in the comprehensiveness of patenting may exist across firms, industries, and time .

  7. Variables • Dependent Variable • Divij = 1 where firm (i) enters industry (j) during allotted time • Independent variables • AbsTechij = absolute level of firm (i) patent portfolio applicable to industry (j) • RelTechij = applicability of firm (i) patent portfolio to industry (j) relative to other industries • Royaltyj = the feasibility of licensing innovations in industry (j) • Secrecyj = the importance of secrecy to appropriating returns to innovation in industry (j) • Learningj = the importance of learning curve advantages to appropriating returns to innovation in industry (j)

  8. Variables

  9. MODEL SPECIFICATION

  10. Correlation Table

  11. Results Hypothesis 1 supported. Hypothesis 2 supported. Hypothesis 3a, 3c supported.

  12. Contributions • This paper has many firsts: • Measures effects of firm heterogeneous technological resources via patent data on diversification. • Examines empirically the hypothesis that firms prioritize their diversification options according to the relative applicability of their resources. • Examines empirically the role of transaction costs on diversification in an RBV context.

  13. Contributions • The results of this study suggest that a firm’s technological resource base significantly influences its diversification decisions (as seen through a patent portfolio lens). • Firms elect to enter markets where it can exploit its existing technological resources and in which its existing technological resource base is strongest. • Firms’ diversification decisions are influenced by the severity of hazards surrounding contractual alternatives • The source of innovation in an industry indicates the direction of likely diversifying entry into that industry. (Pavitt et al., 1989) • This study integrates TCE with RBV and suggests that “while conflicts between the two theories exist, the strong complementarities between them should not be ignored”.

More Related