Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Resources, supplier investment, product launch advantages, and first product performance

View through CrossRef
AbstractSuccessfully launching its first product is critical to a new venture's continued success, yet the new venture has relatively few financial or human resources to support its marketing or R&D activities. It is thus important for the new venture to attract funding from external investors such as suppliers. Although the operations management (OM) literature addresses product development and supplier involvement in large firms, few studies have examined the relationship between suppliers and new ventures. This study examines how new ventures can complement their resources and experience with supplier investment, to build positional advantages for their first product and increase marketplace performance. We integrate the OM and entrepreneurship literatures to develop a model based on the resource‐based view of the firm, in which the new venture uses external and internal resources to achieve positional advantages of product innovativeness, supplier involvement in production, and product launch quality. We also investigate how market potential moderates the relationship between positional advantages and performance. We empirically test our model using data from 711 new ventures.We find that it is beneficial for a new venture to involve suppliers in production of the first product, and that market potential positively moderates the relationship of product launch quality and performance. However, the results reported here also reveal several surprising results challenging traditional views. Developing a highly innovative first product is much less, not more, important than achieving a high quality first‐product launch. Increasing product innovativeness does not necessarily lead to high product performance for new ventures. For a small market with low growth potential, product innovativeness has a negative, not positive, effect on first product performance. We discuss managerial implications of our findings.
Title: Resources, supplier investment, product launch advantages, and first product performance
Description:
AbstractSuccessfully launching its first product is critical to a new venture's continued success, yet the new venture has relatively few financial or human resources to support its marketing or R&D activities.
It is thus important for the new venture to attract funding from external investors such as suppliers.
Although the operations management (OM) literature addresses product development and supplier involvement in large firms, few studies have examined the relationship between suppliers and new ventures.
This study examines how new ventures can complement their resources and experience with supplier investment, to build positional advantages for their first product and increase marketplace performance.
We integrate the OM and entrepreneurship literatures to develop a model based on the resource‐based view of the firm, in which the new venture uses external and internal resources to achieve positional advantages of product innovativeness, supplier involvement in production, and product launch quality.
We also investigate how market potential moderates the relationship between positional advantages and performance.
We empirically test our model using data from 711 new ventures.
We find that it is beneficial for a new venture to involve suppliers in production of the first product, and that market potential positively moderates the relationship of product launch quality and performance.
However, the results reported here also reveal several surprising results challenging traditional views.
Developing a highly innovative first product is much less, not more, important than achieving a high quality first‐product launch.
Increasing product innovativeness does not necessarily lead to high product performance for new ventures.
For a small market with low growth potential, product innovativeness has a negative, not positive, effect on first product performance.
We discuss managerial implications of our findings.

Related Results

ACTUAL ISSUES OF ASSESSMENT OF THE INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
ACTUAL ISSUES OF ASSESSMENT OF THE INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
One of the most important factors of the sustainable and safe development of the national economy is the availability of investment resources in the economy, the establishment of a...
Rancangan Strategi Pemilihan Supplier Untuk Meningkatkan Kinerja Di Ikm Mebel Jaya Sakti Gampong Teungoh Kota Langsa.
Rancangan Strategi Pemilihan Supplier Untuk Meningkatkan Kinerja Di Ikm Mebel Jaya Sakti Gampong Teungoh Kota Langsa.
IKM Mebel Jaya Sakti beralamat di Gampong Teungoh Kota Langsa, merupakan usaha mebel dalam skala kecil menengah yang bergerak dibidang pengolahan furniture. Masalah yang dialami ad...
Procurement performance and manufacturer-supplier relationships: a multivariate analysis in Kuwaiti manufacturing companies
Procurement performance and manufacturer-supplier relationships: a multivariate analysis in Kuwaiti manufacturing companies
Purpose – The purpose of this study is to report and contrast manufacturer–supplier relationships, supplier selection and procurement performance of two manufacturi...
Drivers of sub-supplier social sustainability compliance: an emerging economy perspective
Drivers of sub-supplier social sustainability compliance: an emerging economy perspective
Purpose Tragic incidents such as the Rana Plaza building collapse call into question the value and effectiveness of supplier codes of conduct (SCC) used in multi-tier supply chains...
Sistem Pendukung Keputusan Pemilihan Supplier Terbaik Menggunakan Multi Factor Evaluation Process (MFEP)
Sistem Pendukung Keputusan Pemilihan Supplier Terbaik Menggunakan Multi Factor Evaluation Process (MFEP)
Supplier selection is the most important thing for a company to find out the best supplier who will supply products to the company, especially at Toserba Fajar Karawang. The suppli...
Empowering indigenous enterprise through supplier diversity – The case for Puna Awarau in Aotearoa (New Zealand)
Empowering indigenous enterprise through supplier diversity – The case for Puna Awarau in Aotearoa (New Zealand)
PurposeThis paper aims to demonstrate the role of supplier diversity in empowering indigenous entrepreneurship and the potential socio-economic benefits derived from Puna Awarau (s...
Pendekatan Metode Analytical Hierachy Process (AHP) untuk Menentukan Supplier Kain di Konveksi YZ Production
Pendekatan Metode Analytical Hierachy Process (AHP) untuk Menentukan Supplier Kain di Konveksi YZ Production
Pemilihan bahan kain di Konveksi YZ Production merupakan bagian paling penting karena berdampak pada hasil produksi dan produktivitas. Ketersediaan bahan kain dari supplier menjadi...
THE IMPACT OF BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT QUALITY IN BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE COUNTRIES ON CHINA'S OUTWARD FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
THE IMPACT OF BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT QUALITY IN BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE COUNTRIES ON CHINA'S OUTWARD FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
This article examines how investment facilitation levels in Belt and Road Initiative countries influence China's outward foreign direct investment. As a major source of global outw...

Back to Top