ABSTRACT
In innovation literature, some view firms’ failures as negative to their innovative behaviour, while others argue that failures have a net function – learning from failure. However, we question whether classic linear regression methods constrain understandings of patterns by presenting only one side of the cause-and-effect relationship. This paper complements conventional approaches to literature by characterising the forms of innovation behaviour as mutually exclusive alternatives. Through an empirical approach evaluating mutually exclusive alternatives, we detected that firms’ failures simultaneously affect both the probability of choice to increase innovation investment and that to decrease innovation investment. Our results suggest that there is a certain threshold for the degree of failure to trigger innovative behaviour. When this is kept at a low level, innovative behaviour, rather than conservative behaviour, is more likely to be triggered. However, at a high level, companies could choose to increase their innovation investment; but they could also do the exact opposite at any time. Overall, attempts to model the innovation decision-making process as one on choosing the best out of mutually exclusive alternatives allows us to simultaneously compare the probability of innovation behaviour, elucidating the multidimensional aspects of innovation.
Acknowledgements
This paper was submitted as part of the first author’s doctoral dissertation under the supervision of the second author. The authors are grateful to Jinho Bae, three anonymous referees, and the editor for many helpful comments and suggestions.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 From the BTF view, organisational slack is the difference between total available resources and total necessary payments.
2 The organisational slack plays a constructive role that enables the firm to maintain itself under crisis and absorb shocks (Cyert and March Citation1963).