Search Strategies in Innovation Networks: The Case of the Hungarian Food Industry
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Considerations and Empirical Evidences
3. Data and Empirical Strategy
4. Descriptive Statistics
5. Results
5.1. Strategy Orientation
- For product innovators, the chance for an individual innovation source being used in the innovation development process is equally positive and significant for all sources. It is very much in line with the open attribute of innovation which derives basically from the SMS nature of the Hungarian food manufacturing companies.
- For companies concentrating on process innovation, mainly business sources (extended with some professional information) have the possibility of becoming information source. These firms do not rely on science.
- Organizational innovators orient mainly towards professional sources and some business inputs.
- For market innovating firms, the probability of becoming an appropriate innovation information source is given almost exclusively for the information coming from the downstream partners. This is very articulate, because they necessarily need to trust in their buyers’ opinion and recommendations.
- Companies with more openness to European and world markets align themselves with information for innovation originating from the scientific world. This is because they need to compete with global challenges. Therefore, they have to follow the latest trends, achievements and results of the science in order to sound on the European, or even on the global market.
- Those enterprises, which have been carrying out innovations for a long time, expect new ideas and hints from everywhere to successful completion of the ongoing innovation projects. Therefore, any kind of sources—except the research institutes—may become a springboard for innovation.
5.2. Quantity of Sources/Information
- In case of product innovation, each of the sourcing groups are relevant, significant and positive: the more product innovation the firms proceed with, the more sources they use from each of the sourcing partner groups.
- The picture is different with process innovation: the application of business and science sources’ quantity is positively related to the process innovation. However, the professional sources’ connection is not significant.
- The organizational innovation shows the same picture as product innovation: positively and significantly relates to each information source group; consequently, the more organizational innovation a company can accomplish, the more sources it acquires from any source group.
- The market innovation confirms our previous ascertainment that companies are looking at marketing innovation as a very confidential one, therefore, they are not willing even to consult with their partners, except the business ones.
- The openness proves also in this case, that if the firms are more exposed to global market contests, they use more scientific information sources in their innovation process.
- The more continuous innovation activity is running within the frame of the company, the more information sources will be applied, independently from the type of information source groups.
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Supplier | Private Buyer | Public Buyer | Competitor | Consultant | |||||||
Coef. | Sig. | Coef. | Sig. | Coef. | Sig. | Coef. | Sig. | Coef. | Sig. | ||
Product innovation | 1.556 | *** | 1.963 | *** | 1.404 | *** | 1.847 | *** | 1.426 | *** | |
Process innovation | 0.826 | *** | 0.424 | ** | 0.135 | 0.411 | ** | 0.810 | *** | ||
Organizational innovation | 0.535 | *** | 0.218 | 0.251 | * | 0.252 | * | 0.299 | ** | ||
Market innovation | 0.094 | 0.164 | * | 0.184 | ** | 0.132 | 0.052 | ||||
Openness—information source | 0.143 | 0.100 | 0.112 | 0.176 | 0.044 | ||||||
Ongoing—information source | 0.769 | *** | 1.355 | *** | 0.537 | ** | 0.860 | *** | 0.873 | *** | |
CONSTANT | −2.164 | *** | −2.089 | *** | −2.517 | *** | −2.137 | *** | −2.168 | *** | |
Pseudo R² | 0.577 | 0.616 | 0.454 | 0.579 | 0.536 | ||||||
University | Research Institutes | Conference | Journal | Profession | |||||||
Coef. | Sig. | Coef. | Sig. | Coef. | Sig. | Coef. | Sig. | Coef. | Sig. | ||
Product innovation | 1.219 | *** | 1.345 | *** | 1.872 | *** | 1.874 | *** | 1.526 | *** | |
Process innovation | 0.202 | −0.202 | 0.114 | 0.456 | ** | 0.274 | |||||
Organizational innovation | 0.227 | 0.373 | *** | 0.291 | ** | 0.236 | * | 0.358 | *** | ||
Market innovation | 0.106 | 0.143 | 0.087 | 0.166 | * | 0.098 | |||||
Openness—information source | 0.577 | *** | 0.318 | * | 0.314 | ** | 0.060 | 0.111 | |||
Ongoing—information source | 1.229 | *** | 0.393 | 0.932 | *** | 1.188 | *** | 1.173 | *** | ||
CONSTANT | −2.873 | *** | −2.824 | *** | −2.304 | *** | −2.155 | *** | −2.168 | *** | |
Pseudo R² | 0.522 | 0.415 | 0.556 | 0.596 | 0.526 |
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Authors | Year | Title | Aim | Methodology | Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cassiman, B. Veugelers, R. | 2006 | In search of complementarity in innovation strategy: Internal R&D and external knowledge acquisition. | To analyze complementarity between internal research and external knowledge acquisition, | Empirical methodology. | Development of internal research and acquisition of external knowledge are complementary innovation activities. |
Emden, Z., Calantone, R. J. Droge, C. | 2006 | Collaborating for new product development: Selecting the partner with maximum potential to create value. | To develop a process theory of partner selection for collaborative NPD alliances using a theory development approach. | Narrative analysis. | Development of a new theory of the partner selection process, which envisages relational and strategic alignments as well as technological alignment of the partners. |
Laursen, K. Salter, A. | 2006 | Open for innovation: The role of openness in explaining innovation performance among UK manufacturing firms. | To link search strategy to innovative performance. | Open search strategies that involve the use of a wide range of external actors and sources. | Link between research strategy and innovative performances (wide and deep research is curvilinear and correlated to performance). |
Perkmann, M. Walsh, K. | 2007 | University-industry relationships and open innovation: Towards a research agenda. | To explore the diffusion and characteristics of collaborative relationships between universities and industry. | Literature review. | The organizational dynamics of university-business relations are still poorly explored. |
Knudsen, M.P. | 2007 | The Relative Importance of Interfirm Relationships and Knowledge Transfer for new product development success. | To investigate the nature and relative importance of different types of interfirm relationships for new product development success. | Empirical methodology. | Suppliers and universities are important external sources of knowledge for innovative performance. The combination of suppliers and competitors has had a positive effect on innovative performance. |
Gumusluoğlu, L. Ilsev, A. | 2009 | Transformational Leadership and Organizational Innovation: The Roles of Internal and External Support for Innovation. | To determine whether internal and external support for innovation as contextual conditions influence transformational leadership on organizational innovation. | Hierarchical regression analysis. | Existence of the positive influence of transformational leadership on organizational innovation. |
Dahlander, L. Gann, D. M. | 2010 | How open is innovation? | To clarify the definition of ‘openness’ as currently used in the literature on open innovation, and to re-conceptualize the idea for future research on the topic. | Combination of bibliographic analysis with a systematic content analysis of the field. | Subdivision between inbound and outbound innovation in pecuniary and non-pecuniary interactions, with relative advantages and disadvantages. |
Capitanio, F. Coppola, A. Pascucci, S. | 2010 | Product and process innovation in the Italian food industry. | To develop an econometric analysis using information from one of the most important national datasets for innovation analysis. | Exploratory analysis. | A determinant to successfully develop and introduce product innovation is the capacity to built relationships on the product markets. |
Zheng Zhou, K. Wu, F. | 2010 | Technological capability, strategic flexibility, and product innovation. | To examine the role of technological capability in product innovation. | Use of a technological capability has curvilinear and differential effects on exploitative and explorative innovations. | Though technological capability fosters exploitation at an accelerating rate, it has an inverted U-shaped relationship with exploration. |
Xiaobao, P. Wei, S. Yuzhen, D. | 2013 | Framework of open innovation in SMEs in an emerging economy: firm characteristics, network openness, and network information. | To propose a network framework by bridging the resource-based view and the social network perspective with their respective emphases on the importance of EM SME innovation capacity. | Structural equation modelling (SEM). | Importance of innovation capacity and innovation barriers for understanding open innovation in EM SMEs. |
Garcia M., M. Lazzarotti, V. Manzini, R. Sánchez G., M. | 2014 | Open innovation strategies in the food and drink industry: determinants and impact on innovation performance. | To examine the determinants of openness and the impact of open behaviors by companies on innovation performance. | Cluster analysis. | Food companies can be grouped into three open innovation modes in terms of an external knowledge search strategy ranging from limited collaboration with traditional partners to a broad and profound openness approach. |
Ferraris, A. Santoro, G. Dezi, L. | 2017 | How MNC’s subsidiaries may improve their innovative performance? The role of external sources and knowledge management capabilities. | To explore the effect of knowledge management (KM) practices on the relationship between external research and development (R&D) and innovative performance. | OLS regression analysis. | The authors found positive evidences in favor of a moderator effect of KM. |
Giacosa E. Ferraris, A. Monge, F. | 2017 | How to strengthen the business model of an Italian family food business. | To focus on how a medium-sized company operating in the food sector should strengthen its business model. | OLS regression analysis. | The company’s competitiveness is the result of a balanced management of innovation. |
Bayona-Saez, C. Cruz-Cázares, C. García-Marco, T. | 2017 | Open innovation in the food and beverage industry. | To extend our knowledge into the relationship between open innovation and firm innovative performance. | Tobit and Logit models by random effects. | Presence of the classic inverted U-shaped relationship between OI and solid innovative performance for FnB and non-FnB companies. |
Török, Á. Tóth, J. Balogh, J. M. | 2019 | Push or Pull? The nature of innovation process in the Hungarian food SMEs. | To explore how external impetuses and internal knowledge resources influence the innovation development in agri-food industry. | OLS and hurdle regressions. | The use of internal tacit knowledge is significant and relevant in the innovation production process. |
Type of Innovation | Acronym | Group |
---|---|---|
New or significantly improved goods | INPDGD | Product innovation |
New or significantly improved services | INPDSV | |
New or significantly improved methods of manufacturing | INPSPD | Process innovation |
New or significantly improved logistics | INPSLG | |
New or significantly improved supporting activities | INPSSU | |
New business practices for organizing procedures | ORGBUP | |
New methods of organizing work responsibilities | ORGWKP | Organization innovation |
New methods of organizing external relations with other firms | ORGEXR | |
Significant changes to the aesthetic design | MKTDGP | |
New media or techniques for product promotion | MKTPDP | |
New methods for product placement or sales channels | MKTPDL | Marketing innovation |
New methods of pricing goods or services | MKTPRI |
Information Sources of Innovation Activities | Acronym | Groups |
---|---|---|
Suppliers of equipment, materials, components, or software | SSUP | Business |
Clients or customers from the private sector | SCLPR | |
Clients or customers from the public sector | SCLPU | |
Competitors or other enterprises in your industry | SCOM | |
Consultants and commercial labs | SINS | Science |
Universities or other higher education institutions | SUNI | |
Government, public or private research institutes | SGMT | |
Conferences, trade fairs, exhibitions | SCON | Profession |
Scientific journals and trade/technical publications | SJOU | |
Professional and industry associations | SPRO |
Variable | Obs | Mean | Std.Dev. | Min | Max |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Turnover (€) | 440 | 68,594.9 | 178,000 | 290.407 | 1,710,000 |
Size (number of employees) | 440 | 135.523 | 157.703 | 10 | 500 |
% of tertiary degree * | 440 | 1.657 | 1.24 | 0 | 6 |
Variable | Obs | Mean | Std.Dev. | Min | Max |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Product innovation | 440 | 0.195 | 0.414 | 0 | 2 |
Process innovation | 440 | 0.166 | 0.475 | 0 | 3 |
Organizational innovation | 440 | 0.266 | 0.629 | 0 | 3 |
Market Innovation | 440 | 0.659 | 1.106 | 0 | 4 |
Openness * | 440 | 0.927 | 0.845 | 0 | 2 |
Ongoing innovation ** | 440 | 0.1 | 0.3 | 0 | 1 |
Variable | Obs | Mean | Std.Dev. | Min | Max |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Business | 440 | 0.695 | 1.363 | 0 | 4 |
Science | 440 | 0.359 | 0.858 | 0 | 3 |
Professional | 440 | 0.527 | 1.08 | 0 | 3 |
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Tóth, J.; Rizzo, G. Search Strategies in Innovation Networks: The Case of the Hungarian Food Industry. Sustainability 2020, 12, 1752. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051752
Tóth J, Rizzo G. Search Strategies in Innovation Networks: The Case of the Hungarian Food Industry. Sustainability. 2020; 12(5):1752. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051752
Chicago/Turabian StyleTóth, József, and Giuseppina Rizzo. 2020. "Search Strategies in Innovation Networks: The Case of the Hungarian Food Industry" Sustainability 12, no. 5: 1752. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051752
APA StyleTóth, J., & Rizzo, G. (2020). Search Strategies in Innovation Networks: The Case of the Hungarian Food Industry. Sustainability, 12(5), 1752. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12051752