Organizing for Radical Product Innovation: The Overlooked Role of Willingness to Cannibalize

Why are some firms more successful at introducing radical product innovations than others? Following Schumpeter (1942), many researchers have suggested that firm size is the key organizational predictor of radical product innovation. The authors provide an alternate view and argue that one key variable that differentiates firms with strong radical product innovation records from others is the firms’ willingness to cannibalize their own investments. The authors identify three organizational factors that drive a firm's willingness to cannibalize. Results from a survey of three high-tech industries tend to support the alternate view that willingness to cannibalize is a more powerful driver of radical product innovation than firm size is. These results suggest a need to reconsider conventional wisdom on firm size, cannibalization, and organizational synergy.

[1]  Rafesh Koshy Chandy Organizing for Radical Product Innovation , 1998 .

[2]  G. Tellis,et al.  Will It Ever Fly? Modeling the Takeoff of Really New Consumer Durables , 1997 .

[3]  Richard Staelin,et al.  Pulling the Plug to Stop the New Product Drain , 1997 .

[4]  Vijay Mahajan,et al.  Issues and Opportunities in New Product Development: An Introduction to the Special Issue , 1997 .

[5]  H. Gatignon,et al.  Strategic Orientation of the Firm and New Product Performance , 1997 .

[6]  Anne S. Miner,et al.  The Impact of Organizational Memory on New Product Performance and Creativity , 1997 .

[7]  Gerard J. Tellis,et al.  First to Market, First to Fail? Real Causes of Enduring Market Leadership , 2006 .

[8]  James M. Utterback,et al.  Mastering the Dynamics of Innovation , 1996 .

[9]  Sundar G. Bharadwaj,et al.  The quality and effectiveness of marketing strategy: Effects of functional and dysfunctional conflict in intraorganizational relationships , 1996 .

[10]  G. Day Using the past as a Guide to the Future: Reflections on the History of the Journal of Marketing , 1996 .

[11]  C. Moorman Organizational Market Information Processes: Cultural Antecedents and New Product Outcomes , 1995 .

[12]  P. Nulty After years of neglect, a golden age dawns for small business. , 1995, Fortune.

[13]  Barrie R. Nault,et al.  Eating Your Own Lunch: Protection through Preemption , 1995 .

[14]  R. H. Waterman,et al.  In Search of Excellence: Lessons from America's Best-run Companies , 1995 .

[15]  Eric M. Olson,et al.  Organizing for effective new product development: The moderating role of product innovativeness. , 1995 .

[16]  Charlotte H. Mason,et al.  An approach for identifying cannibalization within product line extensions and multi-brand strategies , 1994 .

[17]  Stepehn Drew BPR in financial services: Factors for success , 1994 .

[18]  Andrej Vizjak,et al.  Exploiting your synergy potential: Promoting collaboration between business units , 1994 .

[19]  Abdul Ali,et al.  Pioneering Versus Incremental Innovation: Review and Research Propositions , 1994 .

[20]  Bernard J. Jaworski,et al.  Markor: A Measure of Market Orientation , 1993 .

[21]  W. Mitchell,et al.  Death of the Lethargic: Effects of Expansion into New Technical Subfields on Performance in a Firm's Base Business , 1993 .

[22]  G. Tellis,et al.  Pioneer Advantage: Marketing Logic or Marketing Legend? , 1993 .

[23]  J. V. Reenen,et al.  The Profitability of Innovating Firms , 1993 .

[24]  V. Mahajan,et al.  New product models: Practice, shortcomings and desired improvements , 1992 .

[25]  D. Leonard-Barton,et al.  Core capabilities and core rigidities: A paradox in managing new product development: Strategic Management Journal, 13, 111–125 (Summer 1992) , 1992 .

[26]  Barton A. Weitz,et al.  The Use of Pledges to Build and Sustain Commitment in Distribution Channels , 1992 .

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

[28]  R. Cooper,et al.  The Impact of Product Innovativeness on Performance , 1991 .

[29]  F. Damanpour Organizational Innovation: A Meta-Analysis Of Effects Of Determinants and Moderators , 1991 .

[30]  P. Ghemawat Market Incumbency and Technological Inertia , 1991 .

[31]  David B. Audretsch,et al.  Innovation and Technological Change: An International Comparison , 1991 .

[32]  M. Tushman,et al.  Technological Discontinuities and Dominant Designs: A Cyclical Model of Technological Change , 1990 .

[33]  Jane M. Howell,et al.  Champions of Technological Innovation. , 1990 .

[34]  K. Pavitt What We Know about the Strategic Management of Technology , 1990 .

[35]  Bernard J. Jaworski,et al.  Market Orientation: The Construct, Research Propositions, and Managerial Implications , 1990 .

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

[37]  R. Deshpandé,et al.  Organizational Culture and Marketing: Defining the Research Agenda , 1989 .

[38]  V. Folkes,et al.  The Availability Heuristic and Perceived Risk , 1988 .

[39]  James C. Anderson,et al.  STRUCTURAL EQUATION MODELING IN PRACTICE: A REVIEW AND RECOMMENDED TWO-STEP APPROACH , 1988 .

[40]  Anil K. Gupta SBU Strategies, Corporate-SBU Relations, and SBU Effectiveness in Strategy Implementation , 1987 .

[41]  John E. Ettlie,et al.  Firm size and product innovation , 1987 .

[42]  S. Winter,et al.  An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change.by Richard R. Nelson; Sidney G. Winter , 1987 .

[43]  M. Tushman,et al.  Technological Discontinuities and Organizational Environments , 1986 .

[44]  Edwin R. Otto Innovation: The Attacker's Advantage , 1986 .

[45]  D. A. Kenny,et al.  The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[46]  J. Ettlie,et al.  Organization Strategy and Structural Differences for Radical Versus Incremental Innovation , 1984 .

[47]  B. M. Staw The Escalation of Commitment To a Course of Action , 1981 .

[48]  Barry M. Staw,et al.  Escalation of Commitment. , 1981 .

[49]  M. Lessnoff Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy , 1979 .

[50]  James T. Rothe,et al.  Cannibalism and new product development , 1978 .

[51]  Robert A. Peterson,et al.  Strategic Marketing Problems: Cases and Comments , 1978 .

[52]  M. Hannan,et al.  The Population Ecology of Organizations , 1977, American Journal of Sociology.

[53]  William Copulsky,et al.  Cannibalism in the Marketplace , 1976 .

[54]  David A. Specht,et al.  On the evaluation of causal models , 1975 .

[55]  Edward M. Tauber,et al.  How market research discourages major innovation , 1974 .

[56]  Daniel Kahneman,et al.  Availability: A heuristic for judging frequency and probability , 1973 .

[57]  J. L. Price Handbook of Organizational Measurement , 1975 .

[58]  M. Aiken,et al.  Organizational interdependence and intra-organizational structure. , 1968 .