Capturing value from innovation-diverging views of R&D and marketing managers

Timo Fischer, Joachim Henkel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

21 Scopus citations

Abstract

Profiting from technological innovation requires both the development of new products and the capture or appropriation of profits from them. For new product development, the interplay of marketing and R&D has been intensively researched. In contrast, for capturing value, this interplay has been largely neglected in the literature. To fill this gap, we study choices by marketing and R&D managers regarding activities aimed at appropriating profits from new products. We study, in detail, how managers perceive the effectiveness of product-related patents, overall patent portfolio size, marketing, sales and services quality, lead time, and contributions to open standards. We conducted discrete choice experiments with 143 managers working in R&D or marketing functions in upper and middle management in a leading communications equipment firm, and analyzed the resulting data by comparing marginal effects of rank-ordered mixed logit models between the two groups. We find that choices of R&D and marketing functions on how to capture the most value differ strongest on the mechanism that is perceived as most important by R&D managers, lead time advantages. Top management needs to consider and deal with these diverging perceptions when formulating business strategies on value capture.

Original languageEnglish
Article number6185653
Pages (from-to)572-584
Number of pages13
JournalIEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
Volume59
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012

Keywords

  • Appropriability mechanisms
  • communications equipment
  • discrete choice experiments
  • innovation
  • marketing-R&D interface

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