External Technology Sourcing Through Alliances or Acquisitions: An Analysis of the Application-Specific Integrated Circuits Industry

In today's turbulent business environment innovation is the result of the interplay between two distinct but related factors: endogenous R&D efforts and (quasi) external acquisition of technology and know-how. Given the increasing importance of innovation, it is vital to understand more about the alternative mechanisms--such as alliances and acquisitions--that can be used to enhance the innovative performance of companies. Most of the literature has dealt with these alternatives as isolated issues. Companies, however, are constantly challenged to choose between acquisitions and strategic alliances, given the limited resources that can be spent on research and development. This paper contributes to the literature because it focuses on the choice between innovation-related alliances and acquisitions. We focus on the question of how the trade-off between strategic alliances and acquisitions is influenced by previous direct and indirect ties between firms in an industry network of interfirm alliances. We formulate hypotheses pertaining to the number of direct ties between two companies, their proximity in the overall alliance network, and their centrality in that network. In so doing, we distinguish between ties that connect firms from the same and from different industry segments, and those that connect firms from the same or from different world regions. These hypotheses are tested on a sample of strategic alliances and acquisitions in the application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC) industry. The findings show that a series of strategic alliances between two partners increases the probability that one will ultimately acquire the other. Whereas previous direct contacts tend to lead to an acquisition, this is not true of previous indirect contacts, which increase the probability that a link between the companies, once it is forged, takes the form of a strategic alliance. In the case of acquisitions, firms that are more centrally located in the network of interfirm alliances tend to be acquirers, and firms with a less central position tend to become acquired. These findings underscore the importance of taking previously formed interfirm linkages into account when explaining the choice between strategic alliances and acquisitions, as these existing links influence the transaction costs associated with both alternatives.

[1]  J. Hagedoorn,et al.  Inter-firm partnerships and co-operative strategies in core technologies , 1990 .

[2]  Andrew C. Inkpen,et al.  Believing Is Seeing: Joint Ventures and Organization Learning* , 1995 .

[3]  E. Bohlin,et al.  External Technology Acquisition in Large Multi-Technology Corporations , 1992 .

[4]  Michael E. Porter,et al.  Patterns of International Coalition Activity , 1986 .

[5]  K. R. Harrigan Strategies for joint ventures , 1985 .

[6]  N. Nohria,et al.  Global strategic linkages and industry structure , 1991 .

[7]  Terry L. Amburgey,et al.  Strategic momentum: The effects of repetitive, positional, and contextual momentum on merger activity , 1992 .

[8]  Niels G. Noorderhaven,et al.  Competition between Alliance Blocks: The Case of the RISC Microprocessor Technology , 2001 .

[9]  J. Heckman,et al.  Does Unemployment Cause Future Unemployment? Definitions, Questions and Answers from a Continuous Time Model of Heterogeneity and State Dependence. , 1980 .

[10]  L. Bengtsson,et al.  The Interorganizational Learning Dilemma: Collective Knowledge Development in Strategic Alliances , 1998 .

[11]  J. Hennart,et al.  The transaction costs theory of joint ventures: an empirical study of Japanese subsidiaries in the united states , 1991 .

[12]  D. Teece Competition, Cooperation, and Innovation Organizational Arrangements for Regimes of Rapid Technological Progress , 1992 .

[13]  M. Porter Competition in Global Industries , 1986 .

[14]  Benjamin Gomes-Casseres,et al.  Ownership structures of foreign subsidiaries : Theory and evidence , 1989 .

[15]  Eric W. K. Tsang A preliminary typology of learning in international strategic alliances , 1999 .

[16]  Todd R. Zenger,et al.  Testing Alternative Theories of the Firm: Transaction Cost, Knowledge-Based, and Measurement Explanations for Make-or- Buy Decisions in Information Services , 1997 .

[17]  E. H. Bowman,et al.  Strategy through the Option Lens: An Integrated View of Resource Investments and the Incremental-Choice Process , 1993 .

[18]  Sabine Reddy,et al.  Digestibility and asymmetric information in the choice between acquisitions and joint ventures: where’s the beef? , 2000 .

[19]  A. Lewin,et al.  The Co-Evolution of Strategic Alliances , 1998 .

[20]  D. Foray The secrets of industry are in the air: Industrial cooperation and the organizational dynamics of the innovative firm , 1991 .

[21]  Robert E. Spekman,et al.  Alliances, External Technology Acquisition, and Discontinuous Technological Change , 1997 .

[22]  R. Gulati Network location and learning: the influence of network resources and firm capabilities on alliance formation , 1999 .

[23]  H. Barkema,et al.  Learning Through Acquisitions , 2001 .

[24]  R. Gulati Social Structure and Alliance Formation Patterns: A Longitudinal Analysis , 1995 .

[25]  D. Mowery,et al.  Strategic alliances and interfirm knowledge transfer , 1996 .

[26]  R. Gulati Does Familiarity Breed Trust? The Implications of Repeated Ties for Contractual Choice in Alliances , 1995 .

[27]  Harbir Singh,et al.  The Effect of National Culture on the Choice of Entry Mode , 1988 .

[28]  K. R. Harrigan Joint ventures and competitive strategy , 1988 .

[29]  Daniel A. Levinthal,et al.  Innovation and Learning: The Two Faces of R&D , 1989 .

[30]  A. Lewin,et al.  The Coevolution of Network Alliances: a Longitudinal Analysis of An International Professional Service Network , 1999 .

[31]  L. Freeman Centrality in social networks conceptual clarification , 1978 .

[32]  Frederic M. Scherer,et al.  Mergers, sell-offs, and economic efficiency , 1987 .

[33]  Michael Useem,et al.  The Alliance Revolution: The New Shape of Business Rivalry@@@Investor Capitalism: How Money Managers are Changing the Face of Corporate America , 1996 .

[34]  W. Dugger The Economic Institutions of Capitalism , 1987 .

[35]  D. Mowery International collaborative ventures in U.S. manufacturing , 1988 .

[36]  B. Kogut The Stability of Joint Ventures: Reciprocity and Competitive Rivalry , 1989 .

[37]  J. Hagedoorn Understanding the rationale of strategic technology partnering: Nterorganizational modes of cooperation and sectoral differences , 1993 .

[38]  Pierre Dussauge,et al.  Alliances versus acquisitions: choosing the right option , 2000 .

[39]  Robert A. Moffitt,et al.  A COMPUTATIONALLY EFFICIENT QUADRATURE PROCEDURE FOR THE ONE-FACTOR MULTINOMIAL PROBIT MODEL , 1982 .

[40]  Arnold C. Harberger,et al.  World Economic Growth: Case Studies of Developed and Developing Nations , 1985 .

[41]  Lawrence G. Franko,et al.  Global corporate competition: Who's winning, who's losing, and the R&D factor as one reason why , 1989 .

[42]  S. Sengupta,et al.  Impact of Strategic Alliances on Firm Valuation , 1998 .

[43]  Rajneesh Narula,et al.  Choosing Organizational Modes of Strategic Technology Partnering: International and Sectoral Differences , 1996 .

[44]  Daniel A. Levinthal,et al.  ABSORPTIVE CAPACITY: A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON LEARNING AND INNOVATION , 1990 .

[45]  Julian Birkinshaw,et al.  Knowledge transfer in international acquisitions , 1999 .

[46]  Donald E. Hatfield,et al.  THE EFFECTS OF CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING ON AGGREGATE INDUSTRY SPECIALIZATION , 1996 .

[47]  R. Gulati Alliances and networks , 1998 .

[48]  Geert Duysters,et al.  Organizational modes of strategic technology partnering. , 2000 .

[49]  Geert Duysters,et al.  Embedded Patterns of International Alliance Formation , 1959 .

[50]  Alok K. Chakrabarti,et al.  Does it pay to acquire technological firms , 1994 .

[51]  C. Freeman,et al.  New Explorations in the Economics of Technological Change , 1990 .

[52]  S. Balakrishnan,et al.  Information asymmetry, adverse selection and joint-ventures* Theory and evidence , 1993 .

[53]  Murray L Weidenbaum,et al.  When Businesses Cross International Borders: Strategic Alliances and Their Alternatives , 1993 .

[54]  O. Williamson Comparative Economic Organization: The Analysis of Discrete Structural Alternatives , 1994 .

[55]  Harbir Singh Managing for Joint Venture Success , 1986 .

[56]  G. Hamel Competition for competence and interpartner learning within international strategic alliances , 1991 .

[57]  B. Kogut Joint ventures: Theoretical and empirical perspectives , 1988 .

[58]  J. Hagedoorn,et al.  Embedded Patterns of International Alliance Formation , 1998 .

[59]  Jeffrey J. Reuer,et al.  Asymmetric information and joint venture performance : Theory and evidence for domestic and international joint ventures , 2000 .

[60]  Candace E Young-Ybarra,et al.  Strategic Flexibility in Information Technology Alliances: the Influence of Transaction Cost Economics and Social Exchange Theory , 1999 .

[61]  Steven B. Andrews,et al.  Structural Holes: The Social Structure of Competition , 1995, The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design.

[62]  J. Hagedoorn,et al.  The institutionalization and evolutionary dynamics of interorganizational alliances and networks. , 1997 .

[63]  J. Hagedoorn,et al.  External Sources of Innovative Capabilities: The Preferences for Strategic Alliances or Mergers and Acquisitions , 2002 .

[64]  T. J. Gerpott Successful integration of R&D functions after acquisitions: An exploratory empirical study , 1995 .

[65]  Bm Bert Sadowski,et al.  The transition from strategic technology alliances to mergers and acquisitions: an exploratory study , 1999 .

[66]  Werner H. Hoffmann,et al.  Acquire or Ally? -- A Strategy Framework for Deciding between Acquisition and Cooperation , 2001 .

[67]  Robert E. Hoskisson,et al.  Resource complementarity in business combinations: Extending the logic to organizational alliances , 2001 .

[68]  Robert E. Hoskisson,et al.  Effects Of Acquisitions on R&D Inputs and Outputs , 1991 .

[69]  M. Porter,et al.  The Competitive Advantage of Nations. , 1990 .

[70]  Robert J. Town,et al.  Merger waves and the structure of merger and acquisition time‐series , 1992 .

[71]  B. Uzzi,et al.  The Sources and Consequences of Embeddedness for the Economic Performance of Organizations: The Network Effect , 1996 .

[72]  W. Powell,et al.  Interorganizational Collaboration and the Locus of Innovation: Networks of Learning in Biotechnology. , 1996 .

[73]  G. Dosi,et al.  Technical Change and Economic Theory , 1989 .

[74]  Alain Verbeke,et al.  Can Market-Based Contracts Substitute for Alliances in High Technology Markets? , 1996 .

[75]  D. Teece Profiting from technological innovation: Implications for integration, collaboration, licensing and public policy , 1993 .

[76]  Sabine Reddy,et al.  The choice between mergers/acquisitions and joint ventures : The case of Japanese investors in the United States , 1997 .

[77]  N. Kay Industrial Collaborative Activity and the Completion of the Internal Market , 1991 .

[78]  Toby E. Stuart Interorganizational alliances and the performance of firms: A study of growth and innovation rates i , 2000 .

[79]  Andrew C. Inkpen Learning and knowledge acquisition through international strategic alliances , 1998 .

[80]  D. Ernst,et al.  Collaborating to compete : using strategic alliances and acquisitions in the global marketplace , 1993 .

[81]  W. Raub,et al.  Reputation and Efficiency in Social Interactions: An Example of Network Effects , 1990, American Journal of Sociology.

[82]  P. Rosenzweig Managing Acquisitions: Creating Value Through Corporate Renewal , 1991 .

[83]  Tailan Chi Trading in strategic resources: Necessary conditions, transaction cost problems, and choice of exchange structure , 1994 .