Complements or substitutes? Domestic and international network search and SME ambidexterity

Joanne Wright, Antje Fiedler, Benjamin Fath
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Abstract

Purpose

Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) use networks to overcome knowledge deficiencies in pursuing innovation. However, balancing the cost and risk of growing networks, especially internationally, with potential gains in knowledge remains a critical challenge. Searching for innovation knowledge in international and domestic networks can be complementary when learning is compressed or as competing when the SMEs capacity to use the new knowledge is exceeded. This paper aims to investigate whether knowledge searches in domestic and international networks are complementary or conflicting in pursuit of innovation.

Design/methodology/approach

This study is based on firm-level data set comprising 426 SMEs located in New Zealand, an advanced small and open economy. Using multi-level modelling, this study tests competing hypotheses, asking whether domestic and international network searches are complements or substitutes when seeking ambidexterity.

Findings

The research finds that, in contrast to earlier research, which shows increasing network breadth drives innovation activity, SMEs benefit less from knowledge search across combined domestic and international networks for exploration innovation and ambidexterity. In contrast, exploitation shows no effect, suggesting that combined networks could support exploitation.

Originality/value

This paper highlights how SMEs mitigate the influence resource constraints have on the partnerships they form and how this translates to ambidexterity. Specifically, recognising that an opportunistic approach to network development may impose future constraints on SME ambidexterity. From a management perspective, the paper recognises that balancing knowledge search across domestic and international networks can facilitate ambidexterity; however, to prevent spreading resources too thinly, this likely requires exit from early domestic innovation network partnerships.

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互补还是替代?国内和国际网络搜索与中小企业的灵活性
目的中小型企业(SMEs)利用网络来克服创新过程中的知识缺陷。然而,如何在发展网络(尤其是国际网络)的成本和风险与潜在的知识收益之间取得平衡,仍然是一个严峻的挑战。在国际和国内网络中搜索创新知识,可以在压缩学习时间的情况下起到互补作用,也可以在中小企业超出使用新知识的能力时起到竞争作用。本文旨在研究在追求创新的过程中,国内和国际网络中的知识搜索是互补的还是相互冲突的。设计/方法/途径本研究基于企业层面的数据集,其中包括新西兰(一个先进的小型开放经济体)的 426 家中小企业。本研究使用多层次建模,对相互竞争的假设进行了检验,询问在寻求灵活性时,国内和国际网络搜索是互补还是替代。研究结果本研究发现,与早期研究显示网络广度的增加会推动创新活动不同,中小企业在探索创新和灵活性时,从国内和国际网络的知识搜索中获益较少。与此相反,开拓创新却没有受到任何影响,这表明联合网络可以支持开拓创新。 原创性/价值 本文强调了中小型企业如何缓解资源限制对其建立的合作伙伴关系的影响,以及这种影响如何转化为灵活性。具体而言,本文认识到机会主义的网络发展方式可能会对中小企业未来的灵活性造成制约。从管理的角度来看,本文认为平衡国内和国际网络之间的知识搜索可以促进灵活性;然而,为了防止资源过于分散,这可能需要退出早期的国内创新网络伙伴关系。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
15.00%
发文量
17
期刊介绍: In recent years, the business practices and management philosophies of global enterprises have been subject to increasingly close scrutiny by commentators in the fields of journalism and academia. Such scrutiny has been motivated by a growing desire to examine the nature of globalisation, its impact on specific communities and its benefits for society as a whole. Coverage includes, but is not restricted to, issues of: ■Globalization ■Production and consumption ■Economic change ■Societal change ■Politics and power of organizations and governments ■Environmental impact
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