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Reversing course: Competing technologies, mistakes, and renewal in flat panel displays
Author(s) -
Eggers J. P.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
strategic management journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 11.035
H-Index - 286
eISSN - 1097-0266
pISSN - 0143-2095
DOI - 10.1002/smj.2412
Subject(s) - ibm , flexibility (engineering) , context (archaeology) , marketing , business model , complementary assets , business , economics , management , paleontology , materials science , biology , nanotechnology
Research summary: The study explores renewal in a novel but understudied context—an era of ferment with competing technological options. It focuses on IBM 's transition from market leadership in a failed path (plasma) to leadership in the emerging dominant technology ( LCD ) in the 1980s. Interviews and internal documents offer two primary factors explaining renewal at IBM . First, IBM R esearch had a hybrid structure that captured the benefits of both centralized and decentralized R&D . Second, middle managers shaped senior management cognitive frames to focus on business‐related issues instead of specific technical issues, thus bypassing biases often resulting from failure. The study offers an integrated framework on what facilitates flexibility at the technology, organization, and decision‐making levels. This flexibility helps firms survive a turbulent era of ferment . Managerial summary: Firms facing technological uncertainty may need to recover from unlucky bets. But responding to failure is politically and organizationally difficult. This study explores how IBM recovered from its failed bet on plasma displays to lead the LCD display market. This study identifies six key factors, highlighting two. First, IBM 's researchers received centralized funding, but could also receive funding directly from division managers. This structure helped preserve options and variety. Second, internal LCD champions focused on the business case for displays and not technology. This fostered technology agnosticism and helped avoid managerial biases from failure. For managers looking to use real options to maintain flexibility in an uncertain environment, this study offers clear suggestions related to design and decision making that can foster flexibility . Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.