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This book focuses on exploring the relationship between spin-outs from incumbents and the patterns of innovation in general purpose technology. Do spin-outs really promote innovation? What happens if star scientists leave the incumbents and establish a startup to target untapped markets? Entrepreneurial spin-outs have been recognized as an engine of innovation. General purpose technology, such as the steam engine in the Industrial Revolution, has been considered an engine of growth. This book provides new perspectives on how entrepreneurial spin-outs shape the patterns of innovation in general purpose technology by integrating theoretical findings in industrial organizations and includes innovation studies and detailed evidence from a longitudinal case study. Concretely, by longitudinally exploring the technological development of laser diodes in the USA and Japan, this study examines how the existence or absence of an entrepreneurial strategic choice for spin-outs influences the patterns of subsequent technological development. The longitudinal analysis in this book shows that spin-outs could hinder the subsequent development of existing technology when that technology is still at a nascent level, because the cumulative effects of technological development could disappear if research and development personnel leave their parent firms in order to target different sub-markets. The findings of this book show that institutional settings designed to promote spin-outs do not necessarily promote innovation. The book offers novel theoretical insights into the relationship between institutions promoting spin-outs and the developments of general purpose technology.
Won the 2020 Schumpeter Prize from The International Schumpeter Society Explains how institutions promoting spin-outs from incumbents develop general purpose technology Scrutinizes longitudinally the technological development of laser diodes in the US and Japan from the 1950s to the 2000s
Auteur
Hiroshi Shimizu is a professor at the Faculty of Commerce, Waseda University. Dr. Shimizu received his Ph.D. from the London School of Economics and Political Science in 2007. After postdoctoral work at Technische Universiteit Eindhoven in 2007-2008, he joined Hitotsubashi University, Institute of Innovation Research (IIR) in 2008. He served as a professor at the IIR between 2011 and 2019. His research interests include, Employee Startups, General Purpose Technology, Innovation Patterns, and Competitive Strategy. He has published in journals including Research Policy, Business History Review, and Journal of Evolutionary Economics.
His Japanese language book Jieneraru Ppasu Tekunoroj* no Inobueshon (Innovations in General Purpose Technology) (Yuhikaku Publishing Co.,Ltd.) won the 59th Nikkei Prize for Excellent Books in Economic Science 2016 by The Japan Center for Economic Research. The English translation of this book *General Purpose Technology, Spin-Out, and Innovation - Technological Development of Laser Diodes in the United States and Japan (Springer, 2019) was awarded the 2020 Schumpeter Prize from The International Schumpeter Society.
Contenu
Part 1 Big Tree with Thick Trunk and its Fruits.- 1 Research Aim and Framework.- 2 Theoretical Background: General Purpose Technology, Pattern of Innovation, and Spin-out.- 3 Data.- 4 Technological Characteristics of Laser and Laser Diode.- Part 2 R&D and Market Competition of Laser Diodes in the U.S. and Japan.- 5 Birth of the Laser Diode: It All Started in the U.S.- 6 Continuous Wave Operation at Room Temperature and Long Operating Life: Catch Up of the Japanese Firms.- 7 Competition over Communications: Long-Wavelength Laser Diode.- 8 Aiming for a New Market: From CD to DVD.- 9 From Red to Blue: Competition for Shorter Wavelengths.- 10 Strategic Behaviors of Japanese Firms on the Technological Trajectory.- 11 Changes in the Industrial Organization: Rise of Spin-Outs.- Part 3 Sub-Market Development and Disappearing Technological Trajectory: Patterns of Innovation in the U.S. and Japan.- 12 Patterns of Spin-Outs and Innovation.- 13 Conclusion.- Appendices.- References.- SubjectIndex.- Name Index.
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