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Turning creative ideas into successful innovations: Differential effects of network structure for radical and incremental innovation

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Turning creative ideas into successful innovations: Differential effects of network structure for radical and incremental innovation. / Zhang, Jia; Wang, Jian; Winnink, Jos et al.
In: The Journal of Technology Transfer, 04.12.2024, p. 1-21.

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Zhang J, Wang J, Winnink J, Jong S. Turning creative ideas into successful innovations: Differential effects of network structure for radical and incremental innovation. The Journal of Technology Transfer. 2024 Dec 4;1-21. Epub 2024 Dec 4. doi: 10.1007/s10961-024-10173-8

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Bibtex

@article{82b26d589fed49689185398f4b41a025,
title = "Turning creative ideas into successful innovations: Differential effects of network structure for radical and incremental innovation",
abstract = "This paper examines how the collaboration network structure of an innovation site influences the adoption and future use of its innovations. We explore the effects of tie strength and network cohesion, with a particular focus on the moderating role of innovation radicalness. While prior research emphasizes the benefits of strong ties and network cohesion for idea transfer—due to increased trust, information exchange, and reciprocity—we argue that these effects are contingent on the innovation{\textquoteright}s radicalness. Specifically, we suggest that these effects hold for incremental innovations but may become negative for radical innovations, as the impact of radical innovations may not align with reciprocity norms and could be sanctioned by the network. Additionally, the lack of information diversity may hinder the identification of new applications for radical innovations. Our empirical analysis is based on a dataset of 93 of the most innovative U.S. pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, with 16,011 unique sites observed from 2001 to 2013. This results in a panel dataset with 19,343 site-time observations, using 3-year rolling windows. Our findings support our hypotheses, contributing to the literature on social networks, creativity, and innovation. We show that different types of innovations require different network conditions for diffusion, and that reciprocity norms can be burdensome, particularly for radical innovations. We also demonstrate that non-redundant information is crucial not only for generating novel ideas but also for identifying new applications for radical innovations. The findings have implications for innovation management, particularly at geographically dispersed sites.",
author = "Jia Zhang and Jian Wang and Jos Winnink and Simcha Jong",
year = "2024",
month = dec,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1007/s10961-024-10173-8",
language = "English",
pages = "1--21",
journal = "The Journal of Technology Transfer",
issn = "0892-9912",
publisher = "Kluwer Academic Publishers",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Turning creative ideas into successful innovations

T2 - Differential effects of network structure for radical and incremental innovation

AU - Zhang, Jia

AU - Wang, Jian

AU - Winnink, Jos

AU - Jong, Simcha

PY - 2024/12/4

Y1 - 2024/12/4

N2 - This paper examines how the collaboration network structure of an innovation site influences the adoption and future use of its innovations. We explore the effects of tie strength and network cohesion, with a particular focus on the moderating role of innovation radicalness. While prior research emphasizes the benefits of strong ties and network cohesion for idea transfer—due to increased trust, information exchange, and reciprocity—we argue that these effects are contingent on the innovation’s radicalness. Specifically, we suggest that these effects hold for incremental innovations but may become negative for radical innovations, as the impact of radical innovations may not align with reciprocity norms and could be sanctioned by the network. Additionally, the lack of information diversity may hinder the identification of new applications for radical innovations. Our empirical analysis is based on a dataset of 93 of the most innovative U.S. pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, with 16,011 unique sites observed from 2001 to 2013. This results in a panel dataset with 19,343 site-time observations, using 3-year rolling windows. Our findings support our hypotheses, contributing to the literature on social networks, creativity, and innovation. We show that different types of innovations require different network conditions for diffusion, and that reciprocity norms can be burdensome, particularly for radical innovations. We also demonstrate that non-redundant information is crucial not only for generating novel ideas but also for identifying new applications for radical innovations. The findings have implications for innovation management, particularly at geographically dispersed sites.

AB - This paper examines how the collaboration network structure of an innovation site influences the adoption and future use of its innovations. We explore the effects of tie strength and network cohesion, with a particular focus on the moderating role of innovation radicalness. While prior research emphasizes the benefits of strong ties and network cohesion for idea transfer—due to increased trust, information exchange, and reciprocity—we argue that these effects are contingent on the innovation’s radicalness. Specifically, we suggest that these effects hold for incremental innovations but may become negative for radical innovations, as the impact of radical innovations may not align with reciprocity norms and could be sanctioned by the network. Additionally, the lack of information diversity may hinder the identification of new applications for radical innovations. Our empirical analysis is based on a dataset of 93 of the most innovative U.S. pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, with 16,011 unique sites observed from 2001 to 2013. This results in a panel dataset with 19,343 site-time observations, using 3-year rolling windows. Our findings support our hypotheses, contributing to the literature on social networks, creativity, and innovation. We show that different types of innovations require different network conditions for diffusion, and that reciprocity norms can be burdensome, particularly for radical innovations. We also demonstrate that non-redundant information is crucial not only for generating novel ideas but also for identifying new applications for radical innovations. The findings have implications for innovation management, particularly at geographically dispersed sites.

U2 - 10.1007/s10961-024-10173-8

DO - 10.1007/s10961-024-10173-8

M3 - Journal article

SP - 1

EP - 21

JO - The Journal of Technology Transfer

JF - The Journal of Technology Transfer

SN - 0892-9912

ER -