An examination of organizational factors influencing new product success in internal and alliance-based processes

被引:668
|
作者
Sivadas, E [1 ]
Dwyer, FR
机构
[1] Rutgers State Univ, Fac Management, Dept Mkt, Piscataway, NJ 08855 USA
[2] Univ Cincinnati, Dept Mkt, Cincinnati, OH 45221 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1509/jmkg.64.1.31.17985
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
New products provide increased sales, profits, and competitive strength for most organizations. However, nearly 50% of the new products that are introduced each year fail. Organizations thus find themselves in a double bind. On the one hand they must innovate consistently to remain competitive, but on the other hand innovation is risky and expensive. Many organizations are forming business alliances to quicken the pace of and reduce risks associated with innovation. Yet by some estimates, 70% of these alliances fail. Many of the prescriptions for successful alliance management clash with recommendations for effective innovation management. The authors develop testable hypotheses by integrating the new products and alliance literature. A construct-cooperative competency-derived from related concepts of mutual adjustment, absorptive capacity, and relational capability is posited as the key factor affecting new product development success, regardless of whether it is an intra- or interfirm endeavor. The authors test the model with data from a sample survey in the semiconductor manufacturing context and replicate it in the health care sector. The antecedents of cooperative competency-formalized and clannish administration, mutual dependence, and institutional support-are revealed empirically and substantiated. The authors identify the importance and means of developing interfirm cooperation.
引用
收藏
页码:31 / 49
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Alliance-Based New Product Development Success: The Role of Formalization in Exploration and Exploitation Contexts
    Lambe, C. Jay
    Morgan, Robert E.
    Sheng, Shibin
    Kutwaroo, Gopal
    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS-TO-BUSINESS MARKETING, 2009, 16 (03) : 242 - 275
  • [2] MANAGERIAL FACTORS INFLUENCING SUCCESS OF NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
    Sedighadeli, Sima
    Kachouie, Reza
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INNOVATION MANAGEMENT, 2013, 17 (05)
  • [3] FACTORS INFLUENCING SUCCESS ON CPA EXAMINATION
    REILLY, FK
    STETTLER, HF
    JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 1973, 10 (02) : 308 - 321
  • [4] Externally Directed and Internally Directed Market Launch Management: The Role of Organizational Factors in Influencing New Product Success
    Kuester, Sabine
    Homburg, Christian
    Hess, Silke C.
    JOURNAL OF PRODUCT INNOVATION MANAGEMENT, 2012, 29 : 38 - 52
  • [5] Factors influencing the success of wood product innovations in Australia and New Zealand
    Bull, Lyndall
    Ferguson, Ian
    FOREST POLICY AND ECONOMICS, 2006, 8 (07) : 742 - 750
  • [6] A FRAMEWORK FOR UNDERSTANDING NEW PRODUCT ALLIANCE SUCCESS
    Carlson, Brad D.
    Frankwick, Gary L.
    Cumiskey, Kevin J.
    JOURNAL OF MARKETING THEORY AND PRACTICE, 2011, 19 (01) : 7 - 25
  • [7] An empirical examination of factors influencing JIT success
    Yasin, MM
    Wafa, MA
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OPERATIONS & PRODUCTION MANAGEMENT, 1996, 16 (01) : 19 - &
  • [8] MEASURING ORGANIZATIONAL SUCCESS WITH RESPECT TO SITUATIONAL INFLUENCING FACTORS
    BUHNER, R
    MANAGEMENT INTERNATIONAL REVIEW, 1977, 17 (03) : 51 - 60
  • [9] The success of frozen examination and factors influencing success in borderline ovarian tumors
    Ege, Hasan Volkan
    Tuncer, Haticegul
    Cakmak, Makbule Buse
    Cengiz, Murat
    Akgor, Utku
    Ozgul, Nejat
    Tuncer, Zafer Selcuk
    Basaran, Derman
    Gultekin, Murat
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GYNECOLOGICAL CANCER, 2024, 34 (SUPPL_1) : A406 - A407
  • [10] Organizational memory influences new product success
    Chang, Dae Ryun
    Cho, Hang
    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS RESEARCH, 2008, 61 (01) : 13 - 23