Journal Article10.1287/ORSC.3.3.383
Knowledge of the Firm, Combinative Capabilities, and the Replication of Technology
Bruce Kogut,Udo Zander +1 more
13.8K
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that what firms do better than markets is the sharing and transfer of the knowledge of individuals and groups within an organization, and that knowledge is held by individuals but is also expressed in regularities by which members cooperate in a social community (i.e., group, organization, or network).
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Abstract: How should we understand why firms exist? A prevailing view has been that they serve to keep in check the transaction costs arising from the self-interested motivations of individuals. We develop in this article the argument that what firms do better than markets is the sharing and transfer of the knowledge of individuals and groups within an organization. This knowledge consists of information (e.g., who knows what) and of know-how (e.g., how to organize a research team). What is central to our argument is that knowledge is held by individuals, but is also expressed in regularities by which members cooperate in a social community (i.e., group, organization, or network). If knowledge is only held at the individual level, then firms could change simply by employee turnover. Because we know that hiring new workers is not equivalent to changing the skills of a firm, an analysis of what firms can do must understand knowledge as embedded in the organizing principles by which people cooperate within organizatio...
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Political Skill: An Antidote in the Role Overload–Strain Relationship.
Pamela L. Perrewé,Kelly L. Zellars,Ana Maria Rossi,Gerald R. Ferris,Charles J. Kacmar,Yongmei Liu,Robert Zinko,Wayne A. Hochwarter +7 more
TL;DR: Results support the hypothesized moderating effects of political skill such that greater political skill reduces the negative effects of role overload on all types of strain.
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TL;DR: It is suggested that administrative structures that reduce technology leakage are a key feature of the equity joint venture, a result that is inconsistent with a “pure” knowledge-based perspective on alliances.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the impact of adopting basic Internet access on cross-location knowledge flows within the same firm and find that when both locations in the pair adopt basic Internet there is an increase in the likelihood of a citation between the citing and (potential) cited location.
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