Going Underground: Bootlegging and Individual Innovative Performance

To develop innovations in large, mature organizations, individuals often have to resort to underground, “bootleg” research and development (R&D) activities that have no formal organizational support. In doing so, these individuals attempt to achieve greater autonomy over the direction of their R...

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Veröffentlicht in:Organization science (Providence, R.I.) R.I.), 2014-09, Vol.25 (5), p.1287-1305
Hauptverfasser: Criscuolo, Paola, Salter, Ammon, Wal, Anne L. J. Ter
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container_title Organization science (Providence, R.I.)
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creator Criscuolo, Paola
Salter, Ammon
Wal, Anne L. J. Ter
description To develop innovations in large, mature organizations, individuals often have to resort to underground, “bootleg” research and development (R&D) activities that have no formal organizational support. In doing so, these individuals attempt to achieve greater autonomy over the direction of their R&D efforts and to escape the constraints of organizational accountability. Drawing on theories of proactive creativity and innovation, we argue that these underground R&D efforts help individuals to develop innovations based on the exploration of uncharted territory and delayed assessment of embryonic ideas. After carefully assessing the direction of causality, we find that individuals’ bootleg efforts are associated with achievement of high levels of innovative performance. Furthermore, we show that the costs and benefits of bootlegging for innovation are contingent on the emphasis on the enforcement of organizational norms in the individual’s work environment; we argue and demonstrate empirically that the benefits of an individual’s bootlegging efforts are enhanced in work units with high levels of innovative performance and which include members who are also engaged in bootlegging. However, during periods of organizational change involving formalization of the R&D process, individuals who increase their bootlegging activities are less likely to innovate. We explore the implications of these findings for our understanding of proactive and deviant creativity.
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subjects Accountability
Analysis
Bootlegging
Business
Business innovation
Corporate objectives
Cost benefit analysis
Creative ability
creative deviance
Creativity
Deviance
Deviant behavior
Educational innovation
Enforcement
Experimental economics
Formalization
Innovation
Innovation management
Innovations
innovative performance
Organization development
Organizational behaviour
Organizational change
Product innovation
R&D
Research & development
Research and development
Social innovation
Studies
Technological innovation
Work environment
Work environments
title Going Underground: Bootlegging and Individual Innovative Performance
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