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Combination of Complementary Technological Knowledge to Generate “Hard to Imitate” Technologies

Feng Zhang () and Guohua Jiang ()
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Feng Zhang: The Pennsylvania State University Abington, 1600 Woodland Rd, Abington, 19001 PA, USA
Guohua Jiang: College of Business Administration & Public Management, West Chester University, 700 S. High St., West Chester, PA 19383, USA

Journal of Information & Knowledge Management (JIKM), 2019, vol. 18, issue 02, 1-24

Abstract: Valuable technological knowledge attracts more imitations. In light of knowledge-level perspective, this study investigates how firms could generate rare and valuable knowledge that is also hard to imitate. By applying specialised complementary assets concept to the technological portfolio of a firm, we show that core and background technological knowledge from internal and external sources, respectively, are complementarily combined to create new technologies that delay inter-firm knowledge externalities and that generate significant intra-firm knowledge flows simultaneously. The results suggest that the combination of knowledge in certain technological categories would have significant appropriability benefits, allowing firms to generate valuable and hard to imitate technological knowledge. This finding contributes to knowledge management, patent economics, and appropriability literature. Managerial implications for knowledge management are also discussed.

Keywords: Specialised complementary assets; technological portfolios; appropriability; knowledge management; patent economics (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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DOI: 10.1142/S0219649219500230

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