Agency in national innovation systems: Institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of Taiwanese IT

This paper examines institutional entrepreneurship as a form of internal agency within national innovation systems. In particular, we consider the entrepreneurship of Taiwanese IT firms over 1980-2007 in creating a new professionalized organizational form markedly different from the traditional Taiw...

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Main Authors: Whittington, R, Hung, S
Format: Journal article
Published: 2011
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author Whittington, R
Hung, S
author_facet Whittington, R
Hung, S
author_sort Whittington, R
collection OXFORD
description This paper examines institutional entrepreneurship as a form of internal agency within national innovation systems. In particular, we consider the entrepreneurship of Taiwanese IT firms over 1980-2007 in creating a new professionalized organizational form markedly different from the traditional Taiwanese model of family business. We compare two successful sectors - personal computers and semiconductors - and one failure - hard disk drives. We emphasize how entrepreneurial firms used strategies of framing, aggregating and networking (F.A.N.) to build legitimacy, mobilize local resources and reach out beyond the limitations of their immediate contexts. We discuss how F.A.N. strategies may evolve from `introversion' to `extraversion' and develop implications for policy-makers and further research.
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spelling oxford-uuid:2e1c8a18-eea0-4e43-acd6-4ad201a9909d2022-03-26T12:47:01ZAgency in national innovation systems: Institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of Taiwanese ITJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:2e1c8a18-eea0-4e43-acd6-4ad201a9909dSaïd Business School - Eureka2011Whittington, RHung, SThis paper examines institutional entrepreneurship as a form of internal agency within national innovation systems. In particular, we consider the entrepreneurship of Taiwanese IT firms over 1980-2007 in creating a new professionalized organizational form markedly different from the traditional Taiwanese model of family business. We compare two successful sectors - personal computers and semiconductors - and one failure - hard disk drives. We emphasize how entrepreneurial firms used strategies of framing, aggregating and networking (F.A.N.) to build legitimacy, mobilize local resources and reach out beyond the limitations of their immediate contexts. We discuss how F.A.N. strategies may evolve from `introversion' to `extraversion' and develop implications for policy-makers and further research.
spellingShingle Whittington, R
Hung, S
Agency in national innovation systems: Institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of Taiwanese IT
title Agency in national innovation systems: Institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of Taiwanese IT
title_full Agency in national innovation systems: Institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of Taiwanese IT
title_fullStr Agency in national innovation systems: Institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of Taiwanese IT
title_full_unstemmed Agency in national innovation systems: Institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of Taiwanese IT
title_short Agency in national innovation systems: Institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of Taiwanese IT
title_sort agency in national innovation systems institutional entrepreneurship and the professionalization of taiwanese it
work_keys_str_mv AT whittingtonr agencyinnationalinnovationsystemsinstitutionalentrepreneurshipandtheprofessionalizationoftaiwaneseit
AT hungs agencyinnationalinnovationsystemsinstitutionalentrepreneurshipandtheprofessionalizationoftaiwaneseit