Comments on "Fortune Favors the Prepared Firm"
Prafulla Joglekar,
Alan Harrison Bohl and
Morris Hamburg
Additional contact information
Prafulla Joglekar: Management Department, La Salle University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19141-1199
Alan Harrison Bohl: Management Department, La Salle University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19141-1199
Morris Hamburg: The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6302
Management Science, 1997, vol. 43, issue 10, 1455-1462
Abstract:
A recent paper in Management Science titled "Fortune Favors the Prepared Firm" (Cohen and Levinthal [Cohen, W. M., D. A. Levinthal. 1994. Fortune favors the prepared firm. Management Sci. 40(2) 227--251.]) is a pioneering work insofar as it introduces the concept of a firm's absorptive capacity---the ability to evaluate, assimilate, and exploit extramural technological developments. We appreciate the paper's extensive qualitative discussion of the nature and role of absorptive capacity. We also commend the authors' idea of constructing a mathematical model to analyze a rational firm's incentives for an investment in absorptive capacity. However, we find that the authors' model overlooks one key element of a firm's absorptive capacity, namely, the firm's ability to defend itself against the threat of an external technology. In the absence of that element, the authors' model may be able to explain a firm's incentives for an innovation rather than incentives for the development of an absorptive capacity. We also identify several internal inconsistencies in the authors' mathematical model. For example, the assumed profit maximization function seems inconsistent with the assumed degree of sophistication of the firm's probability assessment behavior. We believe that the inconsistencies and shortcomings noted here raise serious questions about the validity of the authors' findings. However, we hope that this note does not detract from the pioneering nature of the authors' work, but instead increases its value by stimulating further work on the important topic of absorptive capacity.
Keywords: innovation; technological change; expectation formation; absorptive capacity (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1997
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