TY - JOUR
T1 - Customer Firms' Resistance and Innovation of Entrepreneurial Supplier Firms in the Blockchain Industry
T2 - The Mediating Role of Knowledge Assimilation
AU - Zheng, Leven J.
AU - Lin, Boqiang
AU - Zhang, Justin Z.
AU - Jasimuddin, Sajjad M.
AU - Messina, Lisa
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1988-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - The extant scholarship has concentrated on the macro-level interorganizational interactions within business-to-business (B2B) relationships. However, granular-level phenomena, particularly the resistive behaviors of individual B2B relationship managers, have not been adequately scrutinized. Grounded in resource dependence theory, the study examines the ramifications of B2B relationship manager resistance within customer firms on acquiring customer knowledge by entrepreneurial suppliers, with subsequent implications for product innovation. An empirical analysis of data from 135 entrepreneurial entities within the nascent blockchain industry indicates that the resistance from customer firms' B2B relationship managers exerts a substantive detrimental effect on the supplier's innovation outcomes, a process that is mediated by the diminished assimilation of customer knowledge. This article further discerns two salient organizational competencies - customer involvement capability and relational capability - as moderating variables that can attenuate the negative repercussions of B2B relationship manager resistance. By shedding light on the mediating function of customer knowledge assimilation and addressing the impact of individual-level resistance in the specific milieu of an emergent technological field, this study augments the corpus of B2B literature, offering novel insights into the intricate dynamics at the microinteractional level.
AB - The extant scholarship has concentrated on the macro-level interorganizational interactions within business-to-business (B2B) relationships. However, granular-level phenomena, particularly the resistive behaviors of individual B2B relationship managers, have not been adequately scrutinized. Grounded in resource dependence theory, the study examines the ramifications of B2B relationship manager resistance within customer firms on acquiring customer knowledge by entrepreneurial suppliers, with subsequent implications for product innovation. An empirical analysis of data from 135 entrepreneurial entities within the nascent blockchain industry indicates that the resistance from customer firms' B2B relationship managers exerts a substantive detrimental effect on the supplier's innovation outcomes, a process that is mediated by the diminished assimilation of customer knowledge. This article further discerns two salient organizational competencies - customer involvement capability and relational capability - as moderating variables that can attenuate the negative repercussions of B2B relationship manager resistance. By shedding light on the mediating function of customer knowledge assimilation and addressing the impact of individual-level resistance in the specific milieu of an emergent technological field, this study augments the corpus of B2B literature, offering novel insights into the intricate dynamics at the microinteractional level.
KW - Blockchain industry
KW - business-to-business relationship (B2B)
KW - entrepreneurial firms
KW - innovation
KW - new product development
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85188960163&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TEM.2024.3371330
DO - 10.1109/TEM.2024.3371330
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85188960163
SN - 0018-9391
VL - 71
SP - 5939
EP - 5952
JO - IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
JF - IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management
ER -