TY - JOUR
T1 - Intellectual Property Protection and Firm Risk
T2 - How Service Transition and Knowledge Intensity Mitigate the Loss of Strategic Resources
AU - Hudson, Kerry
AU - Morgan, Robert E.
N1 - Published online: 01 December 2024.
PY - 2025/2
Y1 - 2025/2
N2 - The inherent rarity and inimitability of intellectual property (IP) has long been recognized as the foundation of its strategic value. These characteristics are compromised in markets with weak IP protection, where IP cannot be leveraged to create sustainable competitive advantage. This presents significant challenges for internationalization, and extant literature provides little guidance on how firms can mitigate this risk. From first principles of resource-based theory, we posit that service transition alleviates this loss of a strategic resource, representing a basis for reliable revenue generation that retains its rarity and inimitability across markets with varying levels of regulatory protection. Combining novel datasets on firms’ foreign market activity and countries’ IP rights, we find that IP risk increases the volatility of revenues and consequently firm idiosyncratic risk, but that this can be offset by (a) deriving a larger share of revenues from service-based business segments and (b) increasing the knowledge intensity of service offerings. Results from a 12-year panel of 2,716 firms across 223 industries offer new insights into how the regulatory environment can erode the strategic value of resources and practical recommendations to mitigate the detrimental effects on firm-specific risk and market performance.
AB - The inherent rarity and inimitability of intellectual property (IP) has long been recognized as the foundation of its strategic value. These characteristics are compromised in markets with weak IP protection, where IP cannot be leveraged to create sustainable competitive advantage. This presents significant challenges for internationalization, and extant literature provides little guidance on how firms can mitigate this risk. From first principles of resource-based theory, we posit that service transition alleviates this loss of a strategic resource, representing a basis for reliable revenue generation that retains its rarity and inimitability across markets with varying levels of regulatory protection. Combining novel datasets on firms’ foreign market activity and countries’ IP rights, we find that IP risk increases the volatility of revenues and consequently firm idiosyncratic risk, but that this can be offset by (a) deriving a larger share of revenues from service-based business segments and (b) increasing the knowledge intensity of service offerings. Results from a 12-year panel of 2,716 firms across 223 industries offer new insights into how the regulatory environment can erode the strategic value of resources and practical recommendations to mitigate the detrimental effects on firm-specific risk and market performance.
KW - Firm risk
KW - Intellectual property
KW - Resource-based theory
KW - Service transition
KW - Strategic resources
KW - Firm risk
KW - Intellectual property
KW - Resource-based theory
KW - Service transition
KW - Strategic resources
U2 - 10.1016/j.jbusres.2024.115118
DO - 10.1016/j.jbusres.2024.115118
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0148-2963
VL - 188
JO - Journal of Business Research
JF - Journal of Business Research
M1 - 115118
ER -