Distinctive Marketing and Information Technology Capabilities and Strategic Types: A Cross-National Investigation
1Charles N. Kimball, MRI/Missouri Endowed Chair in Management of Technology and Innovation and Professor of Marketing, Institute for Entrepreneurship and Innovation, Henry Bloch School of Business and Public Administration, University of Missouri–Kansas City.
songmi@umkc.eduRobert W. Nason2,
2Professor of Marketing, Department of Marketing and Supply Chain Management, Michigan State University.
nason@msu.eduC. Anthony Di Benedetto3
3Professor of Marketing, Fox School of Business and Management, Temple University.
anthony.dibenedetto@temple.eduAbstract
The authors examine the relationship between strategic type and development of distinctive marketing, market-linking, technology, and information technology (IT) capabilities to implement innovation strategy. They hypothesize that prospectors must build technical and IT capabilities, whereas defenders develop market-linking and marketing capabilities. The authors collect data from 709 firms across the United States, Japan, and China. They find support for their capability hypotheses, as well as for some of their cross-national hypotheses that are based on cultural and business environment differences among the three countries. In particular, they find support for the hypotheses that Japanese firms have greater technology and IT capabilities than U.S. firms of the same strategic type. They conclude with implications for management.
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