Some like it free: Innovators' Strategic use of Disclosure to slow down Competition - Archive ouverte HAL Access content directly
Journal Articles Strategic Management Journal Year : 2012

Some like it free: Innovators' Strategic use of Disclosure to slow down Competition

Abstract

Why do some innovators freely reveal their intellectual property? This empirical puzzle has been a focal point of debate in the R&D literature. We show that innovators may share proprietary technology with rivals for free--even if it does not directly benefit them--to slow down competition. By disclosing IP, innovators indirectly induce rivals to wait and imitate instead of concurrently investing in innovation, which alleviates competitive pressure. In contrast with the classical strategy view, our paper also shows that imitators may not always benefit from interfirm knowledge spillovers. Specifically, imitators may want to limit the know-how that they can freely appropriate from innovators. Otherwise, innovators have fewer incentives to quickly develop new technologies, which, ultimately, reduces the pace and profits of imitation.

Dates and versions

hal-00696877 , version 1 (14-05-2012)

Identifiers

Cite

Gonçalo Pacheco-De-Almeida, Peter B. Zemsky. Some like it free: Innovators' Strategic use of Disclosure to slow down Competition. Strategic Management Journal, 2012, 33 (7), pp.773-793. ⟨10.1002/smj.971⟩. ⟨hal-00696877⟩

Collections

HEC CNRS
181 View
0 Download

Altmetric

Share

Gmail Facebook Twitter LinkedIn More