The Context-Specific Nature of Competence and Corporate Development
Andrew H. Van de Ven ()
Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 2004, vol. 21, issue 1_2, 123-147
Abstract:
Based on an analysis of knowledge-intensive innovations, this paper argues that much of the knowledge that provides distinctive competence for sustained competitive advantage is context specific. The development of this competence is a path-dependent process of numerous learning events in particular situations and practices. Because competence is embedded in the specific context in which it was created, it is very difficult to imitate and can become the basis for sustained competitive advantage. This represents an important opportunity for firms who have grown up in a developing country and learned how to compete successfully there. Firms from developing countries who run in packs to build and expand on their context-specific competencies can be more successful in expanding into other developing countries with similar national political institutional contexts than firms from developed countries who have not acquired this tacit knowledge of local practices.
Date: 2004
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