TY - JOUR
T1 - The structure of knowledge and seller-buyer networks in markets for emergent technologies
AU - Darr, Asaf
AU - Talmud, Ilan
PY - 2003/3
Y1 - 2003/3
N2 - This empirical study compares the impact of knowledge structures on relational patterns in markets for emergent technology and in a mass market within the electronics industry. We hypothesized that in markets for emergent technologies, sellers and buyers do not have a common image of product use, and to reach it they must communicate contextual knowledge rooted in engineering practice. Furthermore, insofar as knowledge is contextual (as opposed to articulated in a mass market), sellers' and buyers' experts must engage in an intense technological dialogue. These hypotheses were tested by a key-parametric qualitative field study and quantitative network analysis. Communication activity was found more intense in the seller-buyer network in the emergent technology market than in the mass market. The seller-buyer network of emergent technology was also more hierarchical, with technical experts located at the center of the technological dialogue regarding product application. Shared practice and co-development proved to be dominant forms of work organization in the market for emergent technologies. By contrast, sequential development epitomized the activities in the seller-buyer network of the standard product. Implications for network theory, economic sociology, and organization studies are discussed.
AB - This empirical study compares the impact of knowledge structures on relational patterns in markets for emergent technology and in a mass market within the electronics industry. We hypothesized that in markets for emergent technologies, sellers and buyers do not have a common image of product use, and to reach it they must communicate contextual knowledge rooted in engineering practice. Furthermore, insofar as knowledge is contextual (as opposed to articulated in a mass market), sellers' and buyers' experts must engage in an intense technological dialogue. These hypotheses were tested by a key-parametric qualitative field study and quantitative network analysis. Communication activity was found more intense in the seller-buyer network in the emergent technology market than in the mass market. The seller-buyer network of emergent technology was also more hierarchical, with technical experts located at the center of the technological dialogue regarding product application. Shared practice and co-development proved to be dominant forms of work organization in the market for emergent technologies. By contrast, sequential development epitomized the activities in the seller-buyer network of the standard product. Implications for network theory, economic sociology, and organization studies are discussed.
KW - Emergent technology
KW - Knowledge structure
KW - Quasi-firm
KW - Social networks
KW - Uncertainty
KW - Vertical integration
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0041670745&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/0170840603024003911
DO - 10.1177/0170840603024003911
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AN - SCOPUS:0041670745
SN - 0170-8406
VL - 24
SP - 443
EP - 461
JO - Organization Studies
JF - Organization Studies
IS - 3
ER -