2002
DOI: 10.1509/jmkg.66.3.47.18508
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Technological Opportunism and Radical Technology Adoption: An Application to E-Business

Abstract: Using the resource-based view of the firm, the authors hypothesize that differences in adoption of radical technologies among firms can be attributed to a sense-and-respond capability of firms with respect to new technologies, which is termed technological opportunism. Using survey data from senior managers in business-to-business firms, the authors study the adoption of e-business, a radical technology with the potential to alter business models. The authors first establish the distinctiveness of technologica… Show more

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Cited by 470 publications
(424 citation statements)
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“…Future research could also include variables such as owner attitude, level of IT knowledge among the employees or the business strategy to the Internet adoption model as current research suggests that managerial characteristics and business strategy also influence technology adoption (Levy & Powell, 2003;Srinivasan, Lilien, & Rangaswamy, 2002). For example, a popular strategy typology from Miles and Snow (1978) -Prospectors, Analysers, Defenders and Reactors -suggests linkages between technology and strategy.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Future research could also include variables such as owner attitude, level of IT knowledge among the employees or the business strategy to the Internet adoption model as current research suggests that managerial characteristics and business strategy also influence technology adoption (Levy & Powell, 2003;Srinivasan, Lilien, & Rangaswamy, 2002). For example, a popular strategy typology from Miles and Snow (1978) -Prospectors, Analysers, Defenders and Reactors -suggests linkages between technology and strategy.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To improve their customer satisfaction, firms are making greater use of IT tools in their internal and customer facing business processes (El Sawy and Bowles 1997;Srinivasan, Lilien and Rangaswamy 2002). Managers consistently rank "improvement in customer satisfaction" as one of the prime motivations for making IT investments.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It merges some markets, creates new ones, and destroys old ones. It can propel small outsiders into a position of industry leadership and can bring down large incumbents that fail to innovate (Chandy and Tellis 2000;Srinivasan, Lilien, and Rangaswamy 2002;Utterback 1994). Firms at the leading edge of radical innovation tend to dominate world markets and to promote the international competitiveness of their home economies (Atuahene-Gima 2005; Tellis and Golder 2001).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%