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Running in Packs to Develop
Knowledge-Intensive Technologies
Andrew H. Van de Ven
Volume 29, Issue 2
Abstract
Advances
in information technologies and the growth of a knowledge-based service
economy are transforming the basis of technological innovation and
corporate competition. This transformation requires taking a
broader, institutional and political view of information technology and
knowledge management. To succeed, firms are advised to focus on
building their distinctive competencies, outsource the rest, and become
nodes in value chain networks. This shifts the level of
competition from between individual firms to between networks of
firms. In these networks, individual firms or entrepreneurs
seldom have the resources, power, or legitimacy to produce change
alone. As a result, “running in packs” is often more successful
than “going it alone” to develop and commercialize knowledge-intensive
technologies. Many different actors in public and private sectors
make important contributions. These actors do not play impartial
roles; instead, they are active participants who become embroiled in
diverse, partisan, and em bedded issues of innovation
development. In this setting, success requires not only technical
and rational competence, but also political savvy to understand and
mobilize the interests of other players with stakes in an emerging
industry.
Keywords: Knowledge
management, competence, infrastructure
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