Global buyer–supplier networks and innovation: The role of technological distance and technological breadth
Abstract One of the critical challenges of technology management for a firm is managing technological knowledge. This study focuses on available technological knowledge in a firm's global supplier network and examines factors that accrue innovation benefits from such knowledge for a buyer firm. Using absorptive capacity as a theoretical lens, we specifically examine technological distance, technological breadth, and extent of global sourcing, and how these factors interrelate in influencing a firm's innovation performance. The panel data is drawn from various sources (Bloomberg SPLC, PATSTAT Global, and Compustat). Our sample spans four years from 2011 through 2014 and comprises an unbalanced panel of 878 firm‐year observations derived from buyer–supplier relationship data of 246 unique buyer firms. Embedded in this data are 846 unique supplier firms and 9291 dyads (buyer–supplier pairs). The findings confirm the negative association between technological distance and innovation performance, and the positive association between technological breadth and innovation performance. Contrary to expectations, technological distance plays a negative moderating role in the relationship between technological breadth and innovation performance. The results also show that while the extent of a firm's global sourcing has a positive relationship with its innovation performance, the relationship changes with technological distance.
Supply base innovation and firm financial performance
Yan Dong, Keith Skowronski, Sining Song, Sriram Venkataraman, Fan Zou · Journal of Operations Management
Administrative environmental innovations, supply network structure, and environmental disclosure
Marcus A. Bellamy, Suvrat Dhanorkar, Ravi Subramanian · Journal of Operations Management
Exploring supplier–supplier innovations within the Toyota supply network: A supply network perspective
Antony Potter, Miriam Wilhelm · Journal of Operations Management
Strengthening supply chain resilience during <scp>COVID</scp>‐19: A case study of <scp>JD</scp>.com
Zuo‐Jun Max Shen, Yiqi Sun · Journal of Operations Management
The effect of customer and supplier concentrations on firm resilience during the <scp>COVID</scp>‐19 pandemic: Resource dependence and power balancing
Shenyang Jiang, Andy C.L. Yeung, Zhaojun Han, Baofeng Huo · Journal of Operations Management
The association between supply chain structure and transparency: A large‐scale empirical study
Jury Gualandris, Annachiara Longoni, Davide Luzzini, Mark Pagell · Journal of Operations Management
Breaking out of the pandemic: How can firms match internal competence with external resources to shape operational resilience?
Yuan Li, Xincheng Wang, Tianyu Gong, Haifeng Wang · Journal of Operations Management
The impact of governmental <scp>COVID</scp>‐19 measures on manufacturers' stock market valuations: The role of labor intensity and operational slack
Lujie Chen, Taiyu Li, Fu Jia, Tobias Schoenherr · Journal of Operations Management