Publication | Closed Access
Complementarity in product, process, and organizational innovation decisions: evidence from European firms
61
Citations
48
References
2017
Year
Innovation EvaluationInnovation AdoptionOrganizational EconomicsInnovation ManagementIndustrial OrganizationCorporate InnovationNational Innovation PoliciesInnovative ApproachesInnovation LeadershipManagementNew Product DevelopmentTechnological InnovationInnovation EconomicsStrategic ManagementInnovationMarketingEuropean FirmsInnovation StudyMultivariate Probit SpecificationOrganizational Innovation DecisionsBusinessEu CountriesInnovation ActivitiesInnovation PolicyComplementarity Theory
This work uses a sample of firm‐level data from seven EU countries to explore the possible roles of simultaneity and heterogeneity in determining firms' decisions to engage in three types of innovation. Process, product, and organizational innovations are considered jointly, by applying a multivariate probit specification. The results support the hypothesis that the three innovation decisions are interdependent. This has straightforward implications for the practice of R&D managers. In order to gain advantages from an innovation, innovation managers need to jointly exploit these different types of innovation activities and their potential synergies. Given that the innovative firms in the sample, desire additional credit which actually they do not obtain, R&D managers should also be concerned with the financing sources firms have access to. Finally, from the analysis it also emerges that public support boost all the three forms of innovation.
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