Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7384593 | Research Policy | 2018 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
We examine the determinants of firms' innovation success, using the firm-level data from the Japanese National Innovation Survey. We focus on the relationship between organizational and human resource management practices for research and development (R&D) and product/process innovation. We find that interdivisional cooperation/teams and the creation/relocation/integration of R&D centers are positively associated with both product and process innovation. Having board members with an R&D background is positively associated with product innovation, implying that top-down R&D decision-making may be important for firms to introduce new products. Among the factors examined, personnel assessment reflecting R&D outcomes appears to have an especially strong relationship with product innovation. Moreover, the positive relationship between the creation/relocation/integration of R&D centers and innovation success suggests that drastic organizational changes can work as a clear signal of firms' determination to pursue an innovation-oriented strategy and help to accelerate innovation success.
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Authors
Shoko Haneda, Keiko Ito,