How Provider Selection and Management Contribute to Successful Innovation Outsourcing: An Empirical Study at Siemens

It is becoming increasingly common to involve external technology providers in developing new technologies and new products. Two important phases involved in working with technology vendors are vendor selection and vendor management. Because for both steps theory development of key decision guidelin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Production and operations management 2012-01, Vol.21 (1), p.29-48
Hauptverfasser: Cui, Zhijian, Loch, Christoph, Grossmann, Bernd, He, Ru
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creator Cui, Zhijian
Loch, Christoph
Grossmann, Bernd
He, Ru
description It is becoming increasingly common to involve external technology providers in developing new technologies and new products. Two important phases involved in working with technology vendors are vendor selection and vendor management. Because for both steps theory development of key decision guidelines is still immature, we use detailed case studies of 31 innovation outsourcing projects at Siemens to develop grounded theory on provider selection criteria and on project management success drivers. A selection criterion often associated with successful outsourcing is the provider's “track record” or previous experience. Our cases suggest that there is no standard “track record” for success but that a “match” between the client firm's outsourcing motivation and the provider's strengths appears to be a necessary condition for a successful outsourcing collaboration. As to the second phase—managing the vendor—we identify a number of operational project success drivers. There seems to be no universal checklist, but the most important drivers seem to be contingent on the type of vendor chosen and on the maturity of the technology. We compare five provider types—universities, competitors, customers, start‐up companies, and component suppliers—and find that some success drivers are common to all providers, while others are relevant only for certain types of provider. Moreover, drivers in the case of a mature technology are more focused on successful transfer to manufacturing than on development itself. Our findings offer guidelines for innovation managers on how to select innovation providers and how to manage them during the project.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Business Source Complete; SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Case studies
categorical data
Collaboration
collaborative R&D
Comparative analysis
contingency analysis
Costs
Diversified companies
field research
Grounded theory
innovation outsourcing
Innovations
Manufacturing
Outsourcing
Product development
Project management
R&D
Research & development
Studies
Success
title How Provider Selection and Management Contribute to Successful Innovation Outsourcing: An Empirical Study at Siemens
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