• DocumentCode
    27954
  • Title

    Openness and Appropriation: Empirical Evidence From Australian Businesses

  • Author

    Fang Huang ; Rice, J. ; Galvin, Paul ; Martin, Nicolas

  • Author_Institution
    Murdoch Univ., Perth, WA, Australia
  • Volume
    61
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    Aug. 2014
  • Firstpage
    488
  • Lastpage
    498
  • Abstract
    The adoption of open innovation creates a dilemma for firms. On one hand, a commitment to openness facilitates the flow of knowledge between firms, with this flow (generally) unconstrained by royalties and other appropriation mechanisms. However, openness has also led to unintended knowledge spillovers, limiting firms´ abilities to protect their core knowledge. This dilemma has created a need to consider the relationship between openness and firms´ appropriability regimes. In order to explore this “paradox of openness,” an investigation of the appropriability regimes adopted by Australian firms through an empirical analysis of innovation-related data from 4 322 businesses was undertaken. It was found that the relationship between two indicators of openness (the breadth of external knowledge sources and the scope of interorganizational collaborations) and the scope of appropriability regimes employed by a firm exhibits a nonlinear inverse-U (∩) form. The results also indicated that open innovators actually increase controls on their intellectual property through informal appropriability regimes rather than loosening appropriability mechanisms to promote knowledge spillovers as open innovation theories suggest.
  • Keywords
    industrial property; innovation management; knowledge management; organisational aspects; Australian businesses; core knowledge protection; empirical analysis; external knowledge source breadth; firm appropriability regimes; informal appropriability regimes; innovation-related data; intellectual property; interorganizational collaboration scope; knowledge spillovers; nonlinear inverse-U form; open innovation adoption; openness indicators; unconstrained knowledge flow; Business; Collaboration; Educational institutions; IP networks; Industries; Patents; Technological innovation; Appropriation; Australian businesses; open innovation; paradox of openness;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9391
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TEM.2014.2320995
  • Filename
    6823676