This study deals with the convergence and divergence issue in terms of the possible differencein the knowledge-sourcing behaviour of latecomer and incumbent firms. Consequently,empirical analysis using the patent citation data shows that no significan...
This study deals with the convergence and divergence issue in terms of the possible differencein the knowledge-sourcing behaviour of latecomer and incumbent firms. Consequently,empirical analysis using the patent citation data shows that no significant difference exists inthe knowledge-sourcing behaviour of the incumbents and latecomers in long-cycle timebasedsectors, particularly in terms of whether each type of firm relies more or less on‘recent’ and ‘scientific’ knowledge. By contrast, a significant difference is observed in theshort-cycle technology-based sectors, such that the latecomer firms tend to rely more on‘recent’ and ‘scientific’ knowledge than the incumbents. Thus, the findings suggest that theanswer to the question of whether convergence or divergence exists in knowledge sourcingis that it depends on the knowledge regime of the sectors, specifically on the cycle time ofthe technologies of sectors. This finding is consistent with the reasoning that the latecomerfirms can afford to rely only on recent technologies in short-cycle sectors in whichtechnologies tend to change quickly or become obsolete; latecomer firms are also keen ontheir knowledge sourcing to broadly search not only into technological knowledge (patents)but also into scientific knowledge (articles) in short-cycle sectors with rapid change oftechnologies.