How Many and What Kind? The Role of Strategic Orientation in New Product Ideation

Existing studies on the role that strategic orientation plays in companies' innovation efforts primarily focus on identifying the relationship between strategic orientation and innovation performance for launched new products. In contrast, this article investigates how the different types of strategic orientation (i.e., customer, competitor, and technology orientations) influence the front end of innovation. Specifically, this research examines how strategic orientation relates to new product ideation outcomes such as ideation volume (i.e., how many new product ideas are generated) and ideation novelty (i.e., how innovative ideas are). The model developed in this study includes both direct effects of strategic orientation on new product ideation and indirect effects on ideation, mediated by an organization's market search behavior targeted at uncovering new product ideas. A survey of 182 marketing and technical managers, whose responses are analyzed with Partial Least Squares (PLS), reveals that firms characterized by a competitor orientation search their markets significantly more for new product ideas than firms marked by a technology or customer orientation. An emphasis on market search behavior, in turn, leads to significantly greater quantities of new product ideas generated by the firm. Neither a competitor nor a customer orientation significantly enhances the novelty of new product ideas, which is augmented only by technology orientation. The data also reveal that product ideation novelty is significantly enhanced by a technology orientation regardless of the level of market turbulence faced by the innovating firm. Together, these findings suggest that market orientation may have a greater influence on the implementation and commercialization stages of new product development than on new product ideation.

[1]  E. Patrick McGuire Generating new-product ideas , 1972 .

[2]  C. Fornell,et al.  Evaluating structural equation models with unobservable variables and measurement error. , 1981 .

[3]  Teresa M. Pavia,et al.  The Early Stages of New Product Development in Entrepreneurial High-Tech Firms , 1991 .

[4]  F. Bookstein,et al.  Two Structural Equation Models: LISREL and PLS Applied to Consumer Exit-Voice Theory: , 1982 .

[5]  Jacob Goldenberg,et al.  Special Issue on Design and Development: The Idea Itself and the Circumstances of Its Emergence as Predictors of New Product Success , 2001, Manag. Sci..

[6]  Bernard J. Jaworski,et al.  Market orientation: The construct, research propositions, and managerial implications. , 1990 .

[7]  A. Griffin The Effect of Project and Process Characteristics on Product Development Cycle Time , 1997 .

[8]  I. Alam Commercial Innovations from Consulting Engineering Firms: An Empirical Exploration of a Novel Source of New Product Ideas , 2003 .

[9]  Eric M. Olson,et al.  The Contingent Value of Responsive and Proactive Market Orientations for New Product Program Performance , 2005 .

[10]  Bernard J. Jaworski,et al.  Market orientation: Antecedents and consequences , 1993 .

[11]  Wynne W. Chin The partial least squares approach for structural equation modeling. , 1998 .

[12]  Dominique M. Hanssens,et al.  New Products, Sales Promotions, and Firm Value: The Case of the Automobile Industry , 2004 .

[13]  J. Farley,et al.  Executive Insights: Corporate Culture and Market Orientation: Comparing Indian and Japanese Firms , 1999 .

[14]  Rajiv K. Sinha,et al.  Market Orientation and Alternative Strategic Orientations: A Longitudinal Assessment of Performance Implications , 2002 .

[15]  A. Gustafsson,et al.  Harnessing the Creative Potential among Users , 2004 .

[16]  John Hulland,et al.  Use of partial least squares (PLS) in strategic management research: a review of four recent studies , 1999 .

[17]  John C. Narver,et al.  The Effect of a Market Orientation on Business Profitability , 1990 .

[18]  J. Workman,et al.  Market Orientation, Creativity, and New Product Performance in High-Technology Firms , 2004 .

[19]  Gary R. Schirr,et al.  Growth and Development of a Body of Knowledge: 16 Years of New Product Development Research, 1989-2004 , 2008 .

[20]  John C. Narver,et al.  Strategic Management Journal Research Notes and Communications Customer-led and Market-oriented: Let's Not Confuse the Two , 2022 .

[21]  Charles H. Fine,et al.  Time Versus Market Orientation in Product Concept Development: Empirically-Based Theory Generation , 1997 .

[22]  Cheryl Burke Jarvis,et al.  A Critical Review of Construct Indicators and Measurement Model Misspecification in Marketing and Consumer Research , 2003 .

[23]  Angela Paladino,et al.  Investigating the Drivers of Innovation and New Product Success: A Comparison of Strategic Orientations* , 2007 .

[24]  George S. Day,et al.  Managing the market learning process , 2002 .

[25]  Peter A. Dacin,et al.  Market Situation Interpretation and Response: The Role of Cognitive Style, Organizational Culture, and Information Use , 2003 .

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

[27]  A. Griffin PDMA Research on New Product Development Practices: Updating Trends and Benchmarking Best Practices , 1997 .

[28]  Henk W. Volberda,et al.  The Multifaceted Nature of Exploration and Exploitation: Value of Supply, Demand, and Spatial Search for Innovation , 2007, Organ. Sci..

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

[30]  Lisa C . Troy,et al.  Innovativeness and new product success: insights from the cumulative evidence , 2007 .

[31]  Tony M. O'Driscoll,et al.  From experience: applying performance support technology in the fuzzy front end , 2000 .

[32]  Alina Sorescu,et al.  Innovation's Effect on Firm Value and Risk: Insights from Consumer Packaged Goods , 2008 .

[33]  John C. Narver,et al.  Creating a Market Orientation , 1998 .

[34]  Jin K. Han,et al.  Market Orientation and Organizational Performance: Is Innovation a Missing Link? , 1998 .

[35]  John Preston,et al.  Winning at New Products , 1988 .

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

[37]  Ahmet H. Kirca,et al.  Market Orientation: A Meta-Analytic Review and Assessment of its Antecedents and Impact on Performance , 2005 .

[38]  A. Grinstein The effect of market orientation and its components on innovation consequences: a meta-analysis , 2008 .

[39]  George A. Marcoulides,et al.  Modern methods for business research , 1998 .

[40]  G. Hult,et al.  Does market orientation matter?: a test of the relationship between positional advantage and performance , 2001 .

[41]  D. Iacobucci,et al.  A Meditation on Mediation: Evidence that Structural Equations Models Perform Better than Regressions , 2007 .

[42]  James M. Sinkula,et al.  Does Market Orientation Facilitate Balanced Innovation Programs? An Organizational Learning Perspective , 2007 .

[43]  J. Scott Armstrong,et al.  Estimating nonresponse bias in mail surveys. , 1977 .

[44]  P. Lachenbruch Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences (2nd ed.) , 1989 .

[45]  John F. Sherry,et al.  Creating a Market Orientation: A Longitudinal, Multifirm, Grounded Analysis of Cultural Transformation , 2006 .

[46]  G. Day,et al.  Managerial Representations of Competitive Advantage , 1994 .

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

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

[49]  Anthony W. Ulwick,et al.  The customer-centered innovation map. , 2008, Harvard business review.

[50]  K. Zhou,et al.  The Effects of Strategic Orientations on Technology- and Market-Based Breakthrough Innovations , 2005 .

[51]  O. Ferrell,et al.  The effect of market orientation on product innovation , 2000 .

[52]  T. Cook,et al.  Quasi-experimentation: Design & analysis issues for field settings , 1979 .

[53]  W VolberdaHenk,et al.  The Multifaceted Nature of Exploration and Exploitation , 2007 .

[54]  Peter R. Dickson,et al.  Toward a General Theory of Competitive Rationality , 1992 .

[55]  Lisa C . Troy,et al.  Generating new product ideas: An initial investigation of the role of market information and organizational characteristics , 2001 .