Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10489777 | Journal of Engineering and Technology Management | 2005 | 24 Pages |
Abstract
R&D alliances and outsourcing elements of the new product development process are now commonplace practices among many firms. However, little previous work has examined how these organizational choices influence project knowledge and learning. Based on a comparison of three new product development projects in the software industry, this paper examines how task partitioning in the project influences learning and knowledge development within the firm. The paper suggests that internal development projects encourage synthetic learning and development of architectural and tacit knowledge; in contrast, outsourcing and joint ventures encourage analytic learning and development of component and explicit knowledge.
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Accounting
Authors
Stephen Chen,