TY - JOUR
T1 - The emergence of openness
T2 - How and why firms adopt selective revealing in open innovation
AU - Henkel, Joachim
AU - Schöberl, Simone
AU - Alexy, Oliver
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful for feedback from guest editor Joel West, editor Ashish Arora, Linus Dahlander, Henning Piezunka as well as seminar participants at Harvard Business School, UNC Kenan–Flagler Business School, EPFL Lausanne, TUM School of Management, ESC Rennes, and participants at DRUID and the Open Innovation Conference, Imperial College, June 2012. Alexy acknowledges financial support from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council's IMRC at Imperial College London .
PY - 2014/6
Y1 - 2014/6
N2 - Open innovation is often facilitated by strong intellectual property rights (IPRs), but it may also function, and even be boosted, when firms deliberately waive some of their IPRs. Extant literature has pointed out the potential benefits of such behavior, but falls short of explaining what triggers firms to practice it in the first place and to maintain or extend it. Since the waiving of IPRs runs counter to common views on strategy and competition and to engrained practices, this is a non-trivial question. To address it, we conduct an empirical study in a segment of the computer component industry which traditionally has taken a rather proprietary stance. With the advent of the open source operating system Linux, firms increasingly waived their IPRs on software drivers. We trace and analyze this process using both qualitative and quantitative methods. Our results indicate that component makers went through a learning process, which led some to realize how selectively waiving IPRs may be beneficial for their business. We uncover customer demand pull as the initial trigger and observe how a positive feedback loop sets in subsequently, leading to a further increase in the use of selective revealing. Overall, we find that openness develops into a new dimension of competition. We discuss the implication of our findings for research on open innovation and highlight how they impact managers in practice.
AB - Open innovation is often facilitated by strong intellectual property rights (IPRs), but it may also function, and even be boosted, when firms deliberately waive some of their IPRs. Extant literature has pointed out the potential benefits of such behavior, but falls short of explaining what triggers firms to practice it in the first place and to maintain or extend it. Since the waiving of IPRs runs counter to common views on strategy and competition and to engrained practices, this is a non-trivial question. To address it, we conduct an empirical study in a segment of the computer component industry which traditionally has taken a rather proprietary stance. With the advent of the open source operating system Linux, firms increasingly waived their IPRs on software drivers. We trace and analyze this process using both qualitative and quantitative methods. Our results indicate that component makers went through a learning process, which led some to realize how selectively waiving IPRs may be beneficial for their business. We uncover customer demand pull as the initial trigger and observe how a positive feedback loop sets in subsequently, leading to a further increase in the use of selective revealing. Overall, we find that openness develops into a new dimension of competition. We discuss the implication of our findings for research on open innovation and highlight how they impact managers in practice.
KW - Embedded Linux
KW - Multimethod study
KW - Open innovation
KW - Open source software
KW - Selective revealing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84899657803&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.respol.2013.08.014
DO - 10.1016/j.respol.2013.08.014
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84899657803
SN - 0048-7333
VL - 43
SP - 879
EP - 890
JO - Research Policy
JF - Research Policy
IS - 5
ER -