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Knowledge-Sharing Processes for Reverse Innovation

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Knowledge-Sharing Processes for Reverse Innovation. / Roth, Linus; Corsi, Simone; Hughes, Mathew.
In: Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings, Vol. 2023, No. 1, 01.08.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineConference articlepeer-review

Harvard

Roth, L, Corsi, S & Hughes, M 2023, 'Knowledge-Sharing Processes for Reverse Innovation', Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings, vol. 2023, no. 1. https://doi.org/10.5465/AMPROC.2023.220bp

APA

Roth, L., Corsi, S., & Hughes, M. (2023). Knowledge-Sharing Processes for Reverse Innovation. Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings, 2023(1). https://doi.org/10.5465/AMPROC.2023.220bp

Vancouver

Roth L, Corsi S, Hughes M. Knowledge-Sharing Processes for Reverse Innovation. Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings. 2023 Aug 1;2023(1). Epub 2023 Jul 24. doi: 10.5465/AMPROC.2023.220bp

Author

Roth, Linus ; Corsi, Simone ; Hughes, Mathew. / Knowledge-Sharing Processes for Reverse Innovation. In: Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings. 2023 ; Vol. 2023, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{ac35b89a9df84cd0a5b3297133cac62d,
title = "Knowledge-Sharing Processes for Reverse Innovation",
abstract = "R&D is increasingly globalised and recent research attributes a growing global innovative power to R&D activities in developing economies. Innovations from developing markets that find application in advanced markets are defined as Reverse Innovations (RIs) as they flow against the direction assumed in traditional innovation theory. In the meantime, researchers have awarded important benefits to the pursuit of RI. Namely, from the commercialisation of RIs in advanced markets and the innovative contributions that developing economy-based R&D activities can hold for MNEs. Despite the increasing theoretical and practical relevance of RI, academic literature has failed to provide systematic approaches that MNEs can adopt to effectively manage the inversion of the flow of innovative knowledge. This paper fills that gap by adopting a knowledge-based view of the firm. Specifically, we investigate how MNEs manage their knowledge-sharing across developing and advanced economies to strategically enable explorative and exploitative RI. We do so through an abductive research approach based on interview data collected from thirty R&D executives of MNEs that operate in both developing and advanced economies. In correspondence to each phase of the RI process (von Zedtwitz et al., 2015), our study contributes to the RI literature by identifying the processes that are crucial for the systematic execution of RI. It also extends our understanding of the KBV to the context of cross-border knowledge flows from emerging to advanced economies.",
author = "Linus Roth and Simone Corsi and Mathew Hughes",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023, Academy of Management. All rights reserved.; 83rd Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, AOM 2023 ; Conference date: 04-08-2023 Through 08-08-2023",
year = "2023",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.5465/AMPROC.2023.220bp",
language = "English",
volume = "2023",
journal = "Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings",
issn = "0065-0668",
publisher = "Academy of Management",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Knowledge-Sharing Processes for Reverse Innovation

AU - Roth, Linus

AU - Corsi, Simone

AU - Hughes, Mathew

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023, Academy of Management. All rights reserved.

PY - 2023/8/1

Y1 - 2023/8/1

N2 - R&D is increasingly globalised and recent research attributes a growing global innovative power to R&D activities in developing economies. Innovations from developing markets that find application in advanced markets are defined as Reverse Innovations (RIs) as they flow against the direction assumed in traditional innovation theory. In the meantime, researchers have awarded important benefits to the pursuit of RI. Namely, from the commercialisation of RIs in advanced markets and the innovative contributions that developing economy-based R&D activities can hold for MNEs. Despite the increasing theoretical and practical relevance of RI, academic literature has failed to provide systematic approaches that MNEs can adopt to effectively manage the inversion of the flow of innovative knowledge. This paper fills that gap by adopting a knowledge-based view of the firm. Specifically, we investigate how MNEs manage their knowledge-sharing across developing and advanced economies to strategically enable explorative and exploitative RI. We do so through an abductive research approach based on interview data collected from thirty R&D executives of MNEs that operate in both developing and advanced economies. In correspondence to each phase of the RI process (von Zedtwitz et al., 2015), our study contributes to the RI literature by identifying the processes that are crucial for the systematic execution of RI. It also extends our understanding of the KBV to the context of cross-border knowledge flows from emerging to advanced economies.

AB - R&D is increasingly globalised and recent research attributes a growing global innovative power to R&D activities in developing economies. Innovations from developing markets that find application in advanced markets are defined as Reverse Innovations (RIs) as they flow against the direction assumed in traditional innovation theory. In the meantime, researchers have awarded important benefits to the pursuit of RI. Namely, from the commercialisation of RIs in advanced markets and the innovative contributions that developing economy-based R&D activities can hold for MNEs. Despite the increasing theoretical and practical relevance of RI, academic literature has failed to provide systematic approaches that MNEs can adopt to effectively manage the inversion of the flow of innovative knowledge. This paper fills that gap by adopting a knowledge-based view of the firm. Specifically, we investigate how MNEs manage their knowledge-sharing across developing and advanced economies to strategically enable explorative and exploitative RI. We do so through an abductive research approach based on interview data collected from thirty R&D executives of MNEs that operate in both developing and advanced economies. In correspondence to each phase of the RI process (von Zedtwitz et al., 2015), our study contributes to the RI literature by identifying the processes that are crucial for the systematic execution of RI. It also extends our understanding of the KBV to the context of cross-border knowledge flows from emerging to advanced economies.

U2 - 10.5465/AMPROC.2023.220bp

DO - 10.5465/AMPROC.2023.220bp

M3 - Conference article

AN - SCOPUS:85190420374

VL - 2023

JO - Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings

JF - Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings

SN - 0065-0668

IS - 1

T2 - 83rd Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, AOM 2023

Y2 - 4 August 2023 through 8 August 2023

ER -