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Mechanisms of Technology Re-Emergence and Identity Change in a Mature Field: Swiss Watchmaking
Author(s) -
Ryan Raffaelli
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
academy of management proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2376-7197
pISSN - 0065-0668
DOI - 10.5465/ambpp.2013.13784abstract
Subject(s) - identity (music) , framing (construction) , product (mathematics) , emerging technologies , value (mathematics) , economic geography , sociology , history , marketing , media studies , aesthetics , business , geography , art , archaeology , computer science , geometry , mathematics , artificial intelligence , machine learning
I examine the processes and mechanisms whereby market demand for a “dying” technology re-emerges at a later date. In 1983, fourteen years after the introduction of the first quartz watch, mechanical watches, along with the Swiss Jura community of watchmakers who built them, were thought to be “dead” (Landes, 1983). Unexpectedly, however, by 2008 the Swiss mechanical watchmaking industry had re-emerged as the world’s leading exporter (in monetary value) of watches. Using qualitative and quantitative analysis, which I apply to a wealth of data, I show how changes in product, organizational, and community identities associated with a legacy technology can be reconstituted to reconfigure a field. My findings highlight that three mechanisms – identity claims, leadership, and framing (i.e., temporal, linguistic, value) – are core to explaining field re-emergence. Although new or discontinuous technologies tend to displace older ones, legacy technologies that are seemingly “dead” can re-emerge, thrive, and even ...

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