Performance and Survival Implications of Sourcing Choice Sequence Across an Architectural Innovation Life Cycle

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

1-28-2021

Publication Title

Journal of Operations Management

First page number:

1

Last page number:

24

Abstract

© 2021 Association for Supply Chain Management, Inc. This study investigates follower firms' make–buy sourcing choices and sequences in response to an architectural innovation by an innovator. We argue that the dynamic trade-offs among knowledge acquisition, knowledge transformation, and transaction cost reduction underlie the performance impacts of make–buy sourcing choices and sequences across the architectural innovation life cycle. Using the data gathered from the gear-shifting market of the U.S. bicycle industry, we empirically demonstrate that “buy” is a superior sourcing choice before key market-winner features (i.e., dominant design) have emerged. After that, “make” becomes a superior choice. We then demonstrate that the “buy-to-make” sourcing sequence is associated with superior technological and financial performances in the postdominant design phase of the architectural innovation period, as well as with greater firm survival during the market shakeout in the later period of modular standardization. The theoretical and managerial implications of our findings are also discussed.

Keywords

Architectural innovation; Sourcing choice sequence; U.S. Bicycle gear-shifting market

Disciplines

Operations and Supply Chain Management

Language

English

UNLV article access

Search your library

Share

COinS