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Article
Resource Recombinations in the Firm: Knowledge Structures and the Potential for Schumpeterian Innovation
Strategic Management Journal (1998)
  • Simon Rodan, San Jose State University
  • D. C. Galunic
Abstract
Building on the resource-based view of the firm, this paper explores the notion of ‘resource recombinations’ within the firm. We suggest such recombinations can occur when competencies within the firm (which are interpreted as organized clusters of firm resources) either combine to synthesize novel competencies (synthesis-based recombinations) or experience a reconfiguration or relinking with other competencies (reconfiguration-based recombinations). Central to this paper is an examination of the antecedents necessary for such innovation to occur, and in particular the nature of knowledge in the firm. We argue that several characteristics of knowledge (tacitness, context specificity, dispersion) and its social organization (the way competencies come to be formed and institutionalized) will have important consequences on the likelihoods of resource recombinations. Our paper develops a model of resource recombination likelihoods and propositions
Publication Date
1998
Citation Information
Simon Rodan and D. C. Galunic. "Resource Recombinations in the Firm: Knowledge Structures and the Potential for Schumpeterian Innovation" Strategic Management Journal Vol. 19 Iss. 12 (1998)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/simon_rodan/8/