J 2018

Pulling the Plug? Investigating Firm-Level Drivers of Innovation Project Termination

VACULÍK, Marek, Annika LORENZ, Nadine ROIJAKKERS and Wim VANHAVERBEKE

Basic information

Original name

Pulling the Plug? Investigating Firm-Level Drivers of Innovation Project Termination

Authors

VACULÍK, Marek, Annika LORENZ, Nadine ROIJAKKERS and Wim VANHAVERBEKE

Edition

IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management, 2018, 0018-9391

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Článek v odborném periodiku

Field of Study

50202 Applied Economics, Econometrics

Confidentiality degree

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Organization unit

Moravian Business College Olomouc

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TEM.2018.2798922

UT WoS

000465230100005

Keywords in English

Dynamic capabilities; innovation process; innovation project termination; organizational agility
Změněno: 10/5/2021 08:11, Ing. Michaela Nováková

Abstract

V originále

Firms need to innovate and develop dynamic capabilities to create a sustainable competitive advantage. Due to this pressure, firms in high-tech industries invest a high percentage of their revenues in innovation. Despite the vast number of innovation success stories, only one in five innovation projects reaches the market. It is important to understand the drivers of project termination as many firms make sizable investments in innovation and these drivers may have a significant impact on their innovation performance. Therefore, the earlier recognition of unfeasible projects would avoid continued investment and release resources that could be invested in more profitable projects. This paper investigates firm-level factors influencing the termination of innovation projects based on a sample of 4385 firms in the Czech Republic and Germany. We find that firm size, research and development activities, organizational agility, and the level of internationalization are positively associated with innovation project termination. Surprisingly, marketing innovation is also positively associated with project termination. Our results contribute to an improved understanding of why some firms are better at identifying unsuccessful projects (earlier) than others. Identifying generalizable factors provides complementary insights into project-level factors of project termination that can have a remarkable impact on the profitability and survival of firms.
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