Title: Technological Diffusion and the Flow of Technology
1Technological Diffusion and the Flow of
Technology
- Charles Weber
- PSU-EMGT 510/610
- Innovation Management
2Resistance to Change
- To get the bad customs of a country changed and
new ones, though better, introduced, it is
necessary first to remove the prejudices of the
people, enlighten their ignorance, and convince
them that their interests will be promoted by the
proposed changes and this is not the work of a
day. - Benjamin Franklin (1781)
3Resistance to Innovation
- There is nothing more difficult to plan, more
doubtful of success, nor more dangerous to manage
than the creation of a new order of things.
Whenever his enemies have occasion to attack the
innovator, they do so with the passion of
partisans, while the others defend him sluggishly
so that the innovator and his party alike are
vulnerable. - Niccolo Machiavelli The Prince (1513)
4Gunfire at Sea A Case Study of
Innovation(Elting Morrison, 1966)
- Key Questions
- How did the initial idea for continuous-aim
firing (change) occur? - Who developed the hardware that enabled
continuous-aim firing? - How did Scott develop continuous-aim firing? Why
he? - Why was Sims initially unable to introduce
continuous-aim firing into the US Navy? - Who resisted Simss efforts and why?
- Discuss the three stages of resistance.
- How did Sims eventually prevail?
5Micro-motives
- The incentives of individuals and groups do not
align with the incentives of the organization. - Careers may be invested in change or the status
quo. - Some people are natural rebels looking for a
cause. - Others identify themselves with the status quo.
6The Not-Invented-Here Syndrome (NIH)
- Definition of NIH the tendency of a project
group of stable composition to believe it
possesses a monopoly of knowledge of its field,
which leads it to reject new ideas from outsiders
to the likely detriment of its performance.
(Katz Allen, 1982)
7NIH (Katz Allen, 1982)
- Katz Allen (1982) studied 345 RD professionals
in 50 Project Groups. - For the first few years of group tenure,
performance increases due to teambuilding. - Then stable project teams become increasingly
cohesive over time. - They separate themselves from external sources of
technical communication. - They communicate less with colleagues outside
their teams. - Project performance deteriorates.
8The Influence of Job and Group Longevity(Katz,
1982)
Three stages Socialization, Innovation and
Stabilization
9Situational versus Individual Control (Katz,
1982)
- With increasing job longevity.
- Situational control (dependence on others)
decreases. - Individual control increases.
10Technological Diffusion
- Sociological Definition (Rogers, 1983) Diffusion
is the process by which an innovation is
communicated through certain channels over time
among the members of a social system. - Economic Metaphor (Mansfield, 1968) The higher
the cost, the slower diffusion will occur. The
higher the perceived profit from an innovation,
the faster adoption will occur. - Organizational Learning Perspective (Attewell,
1992) Diffusion increases as barriers to
knowledge transfer break down.
11The Diffusion S-Curve
Economic Perspective Sociological
Perspective Organizational Learning Perspective
12Factors that Affect the Diffusion Rate (Rogers,
1983, pp. 15-16)
- Relative advantage is the degree to which and
innovation is perceived better than the idea that
it supercedes. - Compatibility is the degree to which an
innovation is perceived as being consistent with
the existing values, past experiences and needs
of adopters. - Complexity is the degree to which an innovation
is perceived as difficult to understand and use. - Trialability is the degree to which an innovation
may be experimented with on a limited basis. - Observability is the degree to with the results
of an innovation are visible to others.
13The Hybrid Corn Puzzle (Griliches, 1957)
- Key Question Why should hybrid corn be adopted
earlier, faster and to a greater extent in some
states than in others?
14Facts about Hybrid Seed Grains(Jugenheimer, 1939)
- Hybrid seed grains are generally not produced by
the farmer they are developed by specialists. - The cost of developing a hybrid strain is fixed.
- New lines of seed grain are developed by
inbreeding or self-pollination. - Hybrid corn is the product of a controlled,
systematic crossing of specially selected
parental strains called inbred lines. - Accompanying inbreeding is a rigid selection
against seeds of poor heredity. - The inbred lines are inferior in vigor and yield
to open-pollinated varieties. - However, vigor is restored through hybridization,
the cross-pollination of two inbred lines.
15The Flow of Technology (Allen, Marquis,
Frischmuth)
- Key Research Questions
- How to we get from science to the application of
technology? - How does the professional literature affect the
flow of technology? - How do organizations bring in new ideas and
capabilities? - How does physical proximity affect communication?
- Does workplace architecture influence
communication?
Prof. Tom Allen MIT Sloan School
16Critique of Allens Work
- Generally viewed as highly normative
- Engineering logic applied to organization
science (Allen is an engineer by training.) - High external validity
- Tom (Allen)s results can be repeated in most
organizations and in many different industries.
17Information Processing in Science and Technology
(Allen, 1977 Marquis Allen 1966)
- Question What about tacit knowledge?
18Normal Progression from Science to Utilization of
Technology(Allen, 1977 Marquis Allen, 1966)
19From Basic Science to Products in a Monopoly
Culture The Case of Bell Laboratories 1945-1985.
20Inability to Control Spillovers The Case of
Copper Interconnect at IBM (Lim, 2001)
- IBM does not get return on investment.
- In the end, IBM lets suppliers manufacture copper
interconnect equipment. - IBMs process becomes de facto standard for
semiconductor industry. - IBMs semiconductor division has some learning
curve advantage.
21Science, Technology and Product Utilization
(Allen, 1977 Marquis Allen, 1966)
- Communication paths between the three streams of
technological development are bi-directional and
not necessarily sequential.
22Managing the Flow of Technology in a
Strategically Complex Environment The Case of
SEMATECH
23RD Funding in the 1990s
- Funding for advanced research is becoming
extremely tight. - Government is reducing RD funds for universities
and national laboratories. - Corporations are focusing RD dollars on
product-oriented research. - Access to technologies of the future is in
jeopardy. - One Solution pool resources in consortia.
- Consortia operate in a strategically complex
environment. - Consortium members compete against each other,
their suppliers and their customers (Porter,
1976) - Key question how do consortium members gain
competitive advantage in this complex environment?
24About
- SEMATECH is a consortium of semiconductor
manufacturers. - It was founded in the 1980s to enhance the
competitiveness of the U.S. semiconductor
industry. - It focused on the relationship between chipmakers
and tool suppliers relations. - It worked in partnership with SEMI/SEMATECH, an
association of U.S. tool and materials suppliers. - In the 1990s tool suppliers became increasingly
involved in process RD. - In 1998, SEMATECH became an international
organization that coordinates the relationship
between chipmakers and tool suppliers.
25RD Spending in the Semiconductor Industry( From
Paul Peercy, President, SEMI/SEMATECH)
26The Effect of Industry Coordination
- Joint tool definition at SEMATECH prevents market
segmentation. - Lower entry barriers for tool and materials
suppliers. Risk reduction. - Increased price elasticity of demand for tools
and materials. - Enhanced bargaining power for SEMATECH member
companies (MCs).
27Net Flow of Goods, Services and Informationfor
SEMATECH-Sponsored Activities
Research Groups
Tool Suppliers
Chip Makers
SEMATECH Member Companies
SEMI/ SEMATECH Member(s)
Natl Lab(s) Universities US Corp. RD
Participating Entities
28Strategic Interests of Participants
- Chipmakers (including MCs) and tool suppliers
compete by the learning curve. - SEMATECH Member Companies (MCs)....
- want early access to useful and affordable tools.
- Participating Tool Suppliers....
- want early access to research
- want help with tool definition
- want additional funds for accelerated tool
development - will not withhold sales to MCs rival chip
makers. - Participating Research Groups....
- need industry contacts
- want to benefit from their intellectual property
- desire funds for new research.
29SEMATECHs Strategic Dilemma
- Chronologically, the aforementioned
SEMATECH-sponsored activities benefit.... - participating research groups first
- participating tool suppliers second
- SEMATECH member companies third.
- SEMATECH-sponsored activities inherently enhance
the bargaining power of participating tool
suppliers. - Suppliers will sell to all chip makers when they
are ready, essentially at the same time. - Some goods, services and information will flow to
the rivals of participating tool suppliers and
MCs. - How do MCs gain competitive advantage?
30Effective Technology Integrationin the
Semiconductor Industry(Iansiti West,1997)
- Chip makers....
- sponsor internal and external research, which
creates technology - evaluate a plethora of technologies
- choose and incorporate the best technolgies.
- Rate of Technology Integration Competitive
Advantage
31The Directed Information Flow Model
- SEMATECH provides upstream feedback on use
environment and downstream feedforward on
technological characteristics. - From basic science to product prototype in 2
years.
32The Sources of Solutions to Technical Problems
(Allen, 1977)
- Literature and company research provide a
minority of solutions. - People outside of your professional peer group
tend not to read technical literature your field. - Customers (users) are an important source of
solutions. (von Hippel) - An informal organization and external networks
are the most common source of solutions.
33Informal Organizations (Allen, 1977, Ch. 6-7)
- Information flow density clusters.
- An informal network-based organization develops.
- Star employees are immersed in information flow.
34Technological Gatekeepers (Allen, 1977, Ch. 6
Katz, Tushman)
- Employees who bring technology into an
organization from the outside. - They have a reputation for technical competence
in a particular field. - They read the journals in the field
- They have many external connections
- They are frequently promoted to first level
supervisory positions.
35Becoming a Technical Gatekeeper(Katz, Allen,
Tushman)
36Gatekeeper Networks (Allen, 1977, Ch. 6)
- Gatekeepers of a particular technology from
different firms hang out together at conferences,
- and they join the same professional societies.
- Gatekeepers of different technologies within the
same organization also hang out together, - increasing their effectiveness in coupling their
organization to the outside world.
37Long Distance Communication (Allen, 1977, Ch. 8)
- The probability of communication among employees
of the same firm drops dramaticallyas a
function of separation distance.
- Telephones were available at time of study.
- E-mail and the Internet were not.
38Communicating over Short Distances(Allen, 1977,
Ch. 8)
- If the separation distance between people exceeds
10 meters, then the expected frequency of
communication is low.
39Workplace Architecture Matters! (Allen, 1977,
Ch.9)
- Open cubicles present fewer communication
barriers than individual, closed offices do. - Being on a different floor affects communication
adversely. - Being in a different building is a strong
impediment.
40Normative Implications of Allens Work (Allen,
1977, Ch. 9)
- One can design informal organizations.
- Co-locate offices of people that you want to
communicate frequently. - Warning!!!!!
- Aligning the formal and the informal organization
by co-locating employees of the same department
is a counterproductive practice that introduces
communication barriers. - Rebellious employees may practice passive
aggression against your plan. - Your organizational design criteria may be
suboptimal. - Do you really understand the internal dynamics of
your organization?
41Summary
- Adoption of technology is not instantaneous
technology diffuses over time. - There is resistance to innovation.
- The flow from basic science to technology to
product utilization is not necessarily
unidirectional and sequential. - Informal organizations based upon communication
patterns may develop. - This informal organization may constitute a
primary source of innovation. - Networks of technical gatekeepers bring external
knowledge into this organization. - The frequency of communication between
individuals strongly depends upon physical
proximity and workplace architecture. - According to Allen (1977), informal organizations
can be designed.