Español English Contacte con nosotros http://www.uc3m.es/portal/page/portal/biblioteca
DSpace e-Archivo

Archivo Abierto Institucional de la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid > Investigación > Departamentos > Departamento de Economía de la Empresa > DEE - Otros documentos >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10016/6705

Google™ Scholar. Others By: Arora, Ashish - Fosfuri, Andrea - Gambardella, Alfonso
Files in This Item:
markets_fosfuri_2000_wp.pdf-- 2010-02-02 -- Available on Internet -- preprint163,34 kBAdobe PDFformato pdf
Title: Markets for Technology and Their Implications for Corporate Strategy
Author(s): Arora, Ashish
Fosfuri, Andrea [fosfuri]
Gambardella, Alfonso
Publisher: Carnegie Mellon
Issued date: 21-Feb-2000
Revision date: 16-Aug-2009
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10016/6705
DOI: doi:10.2139/ssrn.204848
Abstract: Although market transactions for technologies, ideas, knowledge or information are limited by several well known imperfections, there is increasing evidence that, during the last two decades or so, such market transactions have become more common than in the past. These markets bring about new challenges to the firms. This paper examines some implications of markets for technology for the firms' corporate and technology strategies. Markets for technology change the traditional mindset in which the only available option for a company wishing to introduce an innovation is to develop the technology in-house, or for a company developing the technology to own the downstream assets needed to manufacture and commercialize the goods. This affects the role of companies both as technology users (they can now "buy" technologies) and as technology suppliers (they can now "sell" technologies). The implications for management include more proactive management of intellectual property, greater attention to external monitoring of technologies, and organizational changes to support technology licensing, joint-ventures and acquisition of external technology. For entrepreneurial startups, markets for technology make a focused business model more attractive. At the industry level, markets for technology may lower barriers to entry and increase competition, with obvious implications for the firms' broader strategy as well.
Keywords: Markets for technology
Intellectual property
Technology strategy
Appears in Collections:DEE - Otros documentos
Economists Online

Refworks Export

SFX Query

This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License
Creative Commons

Items in E-Archivo are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

Valid XHTML 1.0! © Universidad Carlos III de Madrid - Software DSpace - Terms of use - Feedback