If the Alliance Fits...: Innovation and Network Dynamics

Network formation is often said to be driven by social capital considerations. A typical pattern observed in the empirical data on strategic alliances is that of small world networks: dense subgroups of firms interconnected by (few) clique-spanning ties. The typical argument is that there is social capital value both to being embedded in a dense cluster, and to bridging disconnected clusters. In this paper we develop and analyze a simple model of joint innovation where we are able to reproduce these features, based solely on the assumption that successful partnering demands some intermediate amount of similarity between the partners.

[1]  Daniel Tzabbar,et al.  The structural evolution of multiplex organizational networks: Research and commerce in biotechnology , 2008 .

[2]  J. Coleman,et al.  Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital , 1988, American Journal of Sociology.

[3]  D. Mowery,et al.  Technological overlap and interfirm cooperation: implications for the resource-based view of the firm , 1998 .

[4]  J. H. Dyer,et al.  Creating and managing a high‐performance knowledge‐sharing network: the Toyota case , 2000 .

[5]  P. Grauwe,et al.  Networks-independent partner selection and the evolution of innovation networks , 2008 .

[6]  Massimo Riccaboni,et al.  On Firm Growth in Networks , 2002 .

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

[8]  R. Gulati,et al.  Where Do Interorganizational Networks Come From?1 , 1999, American Journal of Sociology.

[9]  Martin Gargiulo,et al.  Trapped in Your Own Net? Network Cohesion, Structural Holes, and the Adaptation of Social Capital , 2000 .

[10]  R. Katila,et al.  Technological acquisitions and the innovation performance of acquiring firms: a longitudinal study , 2001 .

[11]  W. Powell,et al.  Network Dynamics and Field Evolution: The Growth of Interorganizational Collaboration in the Life Sciences1 , 2005, American Journal of Sociology.

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

[13]  Robin Cowan,et al.  Knowledge Portfolios and The Organization of Innovation Networks , 2009 .

[14]  M. Jackson,et al.  A Strategic Model of Social and Economic Networks , 1996 .

[15]  Dean M. Behrens,et al.  Redundant governance structures: an analysis of structural and relational embeddedness in the steel and semiconductor industries , 2000 .

[16]  Robin Cowan,et al.  Network-Independent Partner Selection and the Evolution of Innovation Networks , 2009, Manag. Sci..

[17]  G. Ahuja Collaboration Networks, Structural Holes, and Innovation: A Longitudinal Study , 1998 .

[18]  Geert Duysters,et al.  Learning in strategic technology alliances , 2006, Technol. Anal. Strateg. Manag..

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

[20]  Ray Reagans,et al.  Contradictory or compatible? reconsidering the “trade-off” between brokerage and closure on knowledge sharing , 2008 .

[21]  Matteo Marsili,et al.  The rise and fall of a networked society: a formal model. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[22]  Duncan J. Watts,et al.  Collective dynamics of ‘small-world’ networks , 1998, Nature.

[23]  B. Kogut,et al.  Social Capital, Structural Holes and the Formation of an Industry Network , 1997 .

[24]  Joel A. C. Baum,et al.  Where Do Small Worlds Come From? , 2003 .