Sourcing technological knowledge through corporate acquisition:Evidence from an international sample of high technology firms

Desyllas, P. and Hughes, A. (2008) Sourcing technological knowledge through corporate acquisition:Evidence from an international sample of high technology firms. Journal of High Technology Management Research, 18 (2). pp. 157-172.

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Abstract

We investigate the prevalence of the motive to source technological knowledge externally through corporate acquisition. Drawing on make-or-buy and organizational learning theories, we infer the implications of this explanation for the acquirers' pre-acquisition innovative characteristics. Using an international sample of 6106 high technology acquisitions during 1984–2000, we assess the contribution of innovative characteristics to the acquisition likelihood. For firms acquiring small private firms and former subsidiaries—but not public targets—the evidence is consistent with three propositions: (1) A firm's commitment to internal R&D is negatively affected by the decision to acquire; (2) Low R&D productivity increases the likelihood of acquisition; (3) A large knowledge stock predisposes firms to acquire because they perceive they are capable of selecting and absorbing targets. We conclude that acquisitions of small private firms and former subsidiaries are a viable R&D strategy to explore a range of potential future innovation trajectories for large public firms.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Journal of High Technology Management Research
Subjects:
?? ACQUISITIONSR&DPATENTS ??
ID Code:
129341
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
05 Dec 2018 11:04
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
18 Sep 2023 01:28