When Does Start-Up Innovation Spur the Gale of Creative Destruction?

This paper is motivated by the substantial differences in start-up commercialization strategies observed across different high-technology sectors. Specifically, we evaluate the conditions under which start-up innovators earn their returns on innovation through product market competition with more established firms (such as in many areas of the electronics industry) as opposed to cooperation with these incumbents (either through licensing, strategic alliances or outright acquisition as observed in the pharmaceutical industry). While the former strategy challenges incumbent market power, the latter strategy tends to reinforce current market structure. Though the benefits of cooperation include forestalling the costs of competition in the product market and avoiding duplicative investment in sunk assets, imperfections in the market for ideas' may lead to competitive behavior in the product market. Specifically, if the transaction costs of bargaining are high or incumbents are likely to expropriate ideas from start-up innovators, then product market competition is more likely. We test these ideas using a novel dataset of the commercialization strategies of over 100 start-up innovators. Our principal robust findings are that the probability of cooperation is increasing in the innovator's control over intellectual property rights, association with venture capitalists (which reduce their transactional bargaining costs), and in the relative cost of control of specialized complementary assets. Our conclusion is that the propensity for pro-competitive benefits from start-up innovators reflects an earlier market failure, in the market for ideas.'

[1]  Wesley M. Cohen,et al.  Empirical studies of innovation and market structure , 1989 .

[2]  E. Mansfield,et al.  Imitation Costs and Patents: An Empirical Study , 1981 .

[3]  M. Kamien,et al.  Market structure and innovation , 1982 .

[4]  Scott J. Wallsten,et al.  Rethinking the Small Business Innovation Research Program , 1999 .

[5]  Toby E. Stuart,et al.  Interorganizational Endorsements and the Performance of Entrepreneurial Ventures , 1999 .

[6]  Jerry R. Green,et al.  On the Division of Profit in Sequential Innovation , 1995 .

[7]  Nancy Gallini,et al.  Licensing in the Theory of Innovation , 1985 .

[8]  Samuel Kortum,et al.  Assessing the Contribution of Venture Capital to Innovation , 2000 .

[9]  Jennifer F. Reinganum Uncertain Innovation and the Persistence of Monopoly , 1982 .

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

[11]  Richard R. Nelson,et al.  Appropriating the Returns from Industrial R&D , 1988 .

[12]  Frederic M. Scherer,et al.  Schumpeter and Plausible Capitalism , 1992 .

[13]  K. Arrow Economic Welfare and the Allocation of Resources for Invention , 1962 .

[14]  James J. Anton,et al.  Start-ups, Spin-offs, and Internal Projects , 1995 .

[15]  Henry Chesbrough,et al.  When is Virtual Virtuous? Organizing for Innovation , 1999 .

[16]  A. Arora Licensing Tacit Knowledge: Intellectual Property Rights And The Market For Know-How , 1995 .

[17]  J. Gans,et al.  Incumbency and R&D Incentives: Licensing the Gale of Creative Destruction , 1999 .

[18]  A. Arora,et al.  Markets for Technology (Why Do We See Them, Why Don't We See More of Them, and Why Should We Care) , 1999 .

[19]  William D. Bygrave,et al.  Venture capital at the crossroads , 1992 .

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

[21]  I. Cockburn,et al.  Racing To Invest? The Dynamics of Competition in Ethical Drug Discovery , 1994 .

[22]  Manju Puri,et al.  The Interaction between Product Market and Financing Strategy: The Role of Venture Capital , 1999 .

[23]  Paul A. Gompers,et al.  The venture capital cycle , 1999 .

[24]  S. Salant Preemptive Patenting and the Persistence of Monopoly: Comment , 1984 .

[25]  R. V. Wyk Innovation: The attacker's advantage : Richard N. Foster 316 pages, £14.95 (London, Macmillan, 1986) , 1987 .

[26]  James J. Anton,et al.  Expropriation and Inventions: Appropriable Rents in the Absence of Property Rights , 1994 .

[27]  S. Winter,et al.  Appropriating the Returns from Industrial Research and Development , 1987 .

[28]  Edward B. Roberts,et al.  Entrepreneurs in high technology : lessons from MIT and beyond , 1991 .

[29]  J. Tirole,et al.  The Management of Innovation , 1994 .

[30]  Robert P. Merges,et al.  Uncertainty and the Standard of Patentability , 1992 .

[31]  G. Pisano The R&D Boundaries of the Firm: An Empirical Analysis , 1990 .

[32]  Luigi Orsenigo,et al.  The Emergence of Biotechnology: Institutions and Markets in Industrial Innovation , 1989 .

[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]  C. Shapiro,et al.  R&D Rivalry with Licensing or Imitation , 1987 .

[35]  Josh Lerner,et al.  The Government as Venture Capitalist: The Long-Run Impact of the Sbir Program , 1998 .

[36]  S. Wallsten The Effects of Government-Industry R&D Programs on Private R&D: The Case of the Small Business Innovation Research Program , 2000 .

[37]  Kim B. Clark,et al.  Architectural Innovation: The Reconfiguration of Existing Product Technologies and the Failure of , 1990 .

[38]  David B. Audretsch,et al.  Innovation in large and small firms , 1987 .

[39]  J. Schumpeter Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy , 1943 .

[40]  Clayton M. Christensen The Innovator's Dilemma: When New Technologies Cause Great Firms to Fail , 2013 .