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Wiley InterScience

R&D Management

R&D Management

Volume 33 Issue 4, Pages 425 - 437

Published Online: 14 Aug 2003

Journal compilation © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd



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Benefits of co-operation on innovative performance: evidence from integrated circuits and biotechnology firms in the UK and Taiwan
Yuan-Chieh Chang 1
  1 Innovation and Technology Management Program, Department of Business Administration, Yuan-Ze University, Chung-Li, Taoyuan, Taiwan, R.O.C. y.c._chang@saturn.yzu.edu.tw
Copyright © Blackwell Publishing Ltd. 2003

ABSTRACT

The increase of strategic alliance and national or pan-national government collaborative programmes has highlighted the shifting management and policy focus from inducing in-house R&D to promoting a joint partnership between firms and knowledge-generating organisations in the increasingly complex and costly innovation process. Both the 'dynamic capability' school and the 'innovation network' theorists demonstrate that inter-organisational co-operation has become a crucial mechanism for 'collective innovation'. However, little attempt has been undertaken to examine the relationship between inter-organisational co-operation and innovative performance at the firm level. The innovative activities and inter-organisational co-operation of integrated circuits and biotechnology sectors across Taiwan and the UK are investigated via a postal questionnaire survey. Multiple logistic regression models are deployed. The result reveals that the types of inter-organisational co-operation enhancing a firm's innovative performance vary across sectors and countries. Despite the variation, this paper argues that a firm's networking ability to co-operate with buyer firms, supplier firms and external organisations is becoming imperative for enhancing innovation in the increasingly distributed innovation process.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/1467-9310.00308 About DOI

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