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Ambiguity and the process of knowledge transfer in strategic alliances

✍ Scribed by Bernard L. Simonin


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
180 KB
Volume
20
Category
Article
ISSN
0143-2095

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✦ Synopsis


This research examines the role played by the 'causally ambiguous' nature of knowledge in the process of knowledge transfer between strategic alliance partners. Based on a crosssectional sample of 147 multinationals and a structural equation methodology, this study empirically investigates the simultaneous effects of knowledge ambiguity and its antecedentstacitness, asset specificity, prior experience, complexity, partner protectiveness, cultural distance, and organizational distance-on technological knowledge transfer. In contrast to past research that generally assumed a direct relation between these explanatory variables and transfer outcomes, this study's findings highlight the critical role played by knowledge ambiguity as a full mediator of tacitness, prior experience, complexity, cultural distance, and organizational distance on knowledge transfer. These significant effects are further found to be moderated by the firm's level of collaborative know-how, its learning capacity, and the duration of the alliance.


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