Stock of downstream complementary assets as a catalyst for product innovation during technological change in the U.S. machine tool industry
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-2017
Abstract
Research summary: We investigate the effect of incumbents' stock of downstream complementary assets on their product innovation during a disruptive technological change. We theorize that a firm's stock of downstream complementary assets, by providing critical information about shifting demand conditions, will play a catalytic role in firm adaptation during such a change. Using the advent of disruptive computer numerical control machine tools in the U.S. machine tool industry during the 1970s and 1980s as the context, we find that firms with greater stocks of downstream complementary assets are likely to be product innovation leaders during such a change. Managerial summary: Disruptive changes are challenging firms across industries. We concentrate on the U.S. machine tool industry during the 1970s and 1980s when Japanese manufacturers with disruptive computer numerical control systems challenged the U.S. manufacturers. We find that, under the threat of disruption, the greater the stock of downstream complementary assets a U.S. machine tool manufacturer has, the more likely it is to be the product innovation leader with the disruptive technology. Our findings provide novel insights for managers in companies that face disruptive changes and can help them avoid the consequences of such changes as predicted by prior research. Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
DOI
10.1002/smj.2557
Publication Title
Strategic Management Journal
Volume Number
38
Issue Number
6
First Page
1253
Last Page
1267
ISSN
01432095
Recommended Citation
Roy, Raja and Cohen, Susan K., "Stock of downstream complementary assets as a catalyst for product innovation during technological change in the U.S. machine tool industry" (2017). Management and Marketing Faculty Publications. 17.
https://neiudc.neiu.edu/mm-pub/17