TY - GEN
T1 - Effects of government R&D grants on IT entrepreneurial firm performance
T2 - International Conference on Information Systems, ICIS 2012
AU - Chen, Jin
AU - Jin, Yuwei
AU - Heng, Cheng Suang
AU - Tan, Bernard C.Y.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2013 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Governments keep subsidizing R&D of IT entrepreneurial firms greatly. However, the effect of these grants remains unclear. Acknowledging this gap, this study provides a nuanced perspective to understand the influence of government R&D grants on IT entrepreneurial firm performance. Based on the literature on organizational learning, we categorize government R&D grants into two types: explorative vs. exploitative. Moreover, drawing on resource complementarity theory, we articulate how the two types of government R&D grants interact with firms' private R&D resources. In particular, we hypothesize that in the innovation stage, government explorative R&D grants complement a firm's internal exploration in influencing innovation performance, but substitute a firm's external exploration. We further posit that in the commercialization stage, government exploitative R&D grants complement a firm's innovation performance and internal exploitation in impacting financial performance, but substitute a firm's external exploitation. We advance a theory of public-private R&D interaction for IT entrepreneurial firms.
AB - Governments keep subsidizing R&D of IT entrepreneurial firms greatly. However, the effect of these grants remains unclear. Acknowledging this gap, this study provides a nuanced perspective to understand the influence of government R&D grants on IT entrepreneurial firm performance. Based on the literature on organizational learning, we categorize government R&D grants into two types: explorative vs. exploitative. Moreover, drawing on resource complementarity theory, we articulate how the two types of government R&D grants interact with firms' private R&D resources. In particular, we hypothesize that in the innovation stage, government explorative R&D grants complement a firm's internal exploration in influencing innovation performance, but substitute a firm's external exploration. We further posit that in the commercialization stage, government exploitative R&D grants complement a firm's innovation performance and internal exploitation in impacting financial performance, but substitute a firm's external exploitation. We advance a theory of public-private R&D interaction for IT entrepreneurial firms.
KW - Exploitation
KW - Exploration
KW - Government R and D grants
KW - Innovation
KW - IT Entrepreneurship
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84886558311&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84886558311
SN - 9781627486040
T3 - International Conference on Information Systems, ICIS 2012
SP - 4226
EP - 4236
BT - International Conference on Information Systems, ICIS 2012
Y2 - 16 December 2012 through 19 December 2012
ER -