and the winner is – acquired. entrepreneurship as a contest yielding radical innovations - thomas...

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And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations Forthcoming in Research Policy Joachim Henkel, TUM Thomas Rønde, CBS Marcus Wagner, University of Würzburg GERMANY IN DANISH BUSINESS RESEARCH CBS, Nov. 4, 2014

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Look through the contribution from Thomas Rønde, Professor at Copenhagen Business School, @ the seminar 'Germany in Danish Business Research'.

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Page 1: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

And the Winner is – Acquired.Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical

Innovations

Forthcoming in Research Policy

Joachim Henkel, TUM Thomas Rønde, CBS

Marcus Wagner, University of Würzburg

GERMANY IN DANISH BUSINESS RESEARCH

CBS, Nov. 4, 2014

Page 2: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

22

Sources of Innovation: Start-ups or Incumbents?

• Schumpeter: – I: entrepreneurs

– II: large incumbents

• Numerous studies, empirical and theoretical:– start-ups ~ radical innovations

– incumbents ~ incremental innovations

• But: – older studies usually assumed

product market competition

– reality: successful start-ups often acquired by incumbents

• Does it matter for innovation if entrants aim for being acquired by an incumbents?

Schumpeter, 1932

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Page 3: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

33

Example for Innovation by Acquisition: Cisco

Switching

Storage

ContentRouting WirelessSecurity Voice Optical

Home Networking

Source: Cisco, presentation at TUM, 6/2005

Page 4: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

4

• Motivation

• Empirical study: EDA

• Sketch of model and analysis

• Conclusions

4

Agenda

Page 5: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

55

EDA Industry

• EDA overall (2006, ca.): $ 5 bn sales, 23,000 employees

• Three large incumbents– Cadence ($ 1.48 bn, 5,200)

– Synopsys ($ 1.10 bn, 5,130)

– Mentor ($ 0.79 bn, 4,230)

• Numerous start-ups (1999: approx. 80)

• Many acquisitions

Quellen: 10-k‘s, A. Sangiovanni-Vincentelli (2003), Report Q3 2006 des EDA Consortiums

Page 6: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

66

EDA Industry

• EDA: “Electronic Design Automation”

• Automation of design of computer chips using software

LOGIC CHIP DESIGNEDA

Page 7: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

77

EDA Industry

Source of figure: http://www.synopsys.com/products/solutions/dfm.html

EDA software is a system product. Example Synopsys:

Design for Manufacturing Product Family

TCAD from acquisition of Integrated Systems Engineering

1993 founded as ETH spin-off2004 acquired for $ 115 mio.

Page 8: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

88

Frequent Acquisitions

The three established EDA firms acquire start-ups at a high and increasing level(1989-2005 = 105)

Sources: Websites, 10k-Berichte

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005

= 32

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

1989 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005

Synopsys

Cadence

Mentor(11) = 31

= 42

Page 9: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

99

Start-ups in EDA: Evidence from Interviews

Start-ups …

A) have to do innovate– “[Innovative technology] is the only thing they sell, so it‘s either make it

or break it.”(2)

B) have to aim for radical innovation:– “... there [in small firms] … has to be a radical core, I would say,

otherwise it is not possible”

• “So they are relying on start-ups, which then are starting from scratch … so they can apply very new methodology with very new techniques without being restrained by all customers or all the methodology”

C) can hardly remain independent in the long run:– “The goal is always to be acquired. […] The more successful we are,

the more urgent it becomes to be acquired.”(3)

Numbers (2, 5, 3) denote the interview patner.

Page 10: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

• Motivation

• Empirical study: EDA

• Sketch of model and analysis

• Conclusions

1010

Agenda

Page 11: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

1111

Set-up

• One established firm (I) and N entrants

• All conduct R&D to develop a new product

• Firms choose from a given set of possible R&D projects, characterized by their success probability p

• Profit for I from a project, if successful: (p); otherwise: 0

• The function p·(p) assumes its maximum in ]0,1[ at p = p*

• Only the incumbent can market the innovation start-ups aim at being acquired by I

• All firms maximize expected profits:– Entrants: Expected acquisition price

– Incumbent: Expected product market profit minus acquisition price

Page 12: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

The Assumptions – Illustration for (p) = 1- p

12

pp*

0

p(p)(p)

1

Page 13: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

1313

Timing

time

• Stage 1: firms pick their R&D projects (pI , p1, p2)

• (Nature: R&D outcomes are realized)

• Stage 2: Competition among the start-ups to be acquired by the incumbent

• (Product is sold, profits are realized)

Alternative interpretation: patented inventions are traded in a market for technology

Page 14: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

Analysis: Game Theory

• A “Game” is a situation where:

– The “players” have to make decisions

– The payoff is affected by other players’ actions

– The case in setup considered here

• We look for a stable situation (or, “Nash equilibrium”):

– Everybody is expected to behave in a certain way

– All players are doing the best that they can for themselves given what

the other players are expected to do

– Nobody has an incentive to deviate from the expected behavior

Page 15: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

The Equilibrium – Illustration for N = 2

15

pp1* pI

*= p*p2*

0

p(p)(p)

1

Page 16: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

Intuition

• Entrants choose risky strategies as they need to have the best available technology to be acquired

• Incumbent chooses a safer strategy to have a fall-back option and a good bargaining position in negotiations with a successful entrant

• The more entrants there are, the stronger is the push to pursue radical projects with low success probability/high value:– Success probability of the most radical project undertaken in

equilibrium is decreasing in the number of entrants

• Result is robust to a number of changes:– More entrants, more incumbents, different timing of the game, etc.

16

Page 17: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

17

• Motivation

• Empirical study: EDA

• Sketch of model and analysis

• Conclusions

17

Agenda

Page 18: And the Winner is – Acquired. Entrepreneurship as a Contest Yielding Radical Innovations - Thomas Rønde

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Conclusions

• Explains focus of start-ups on riskier and, if successful, more radical innovations, based only on their need of being acquired

• Incumbent chooses a safer strategy to have a fall-back option and a good bargaining position in negotiations with a successful entrant

• Parsimonious model with very rich structure

• Model fits well what we observe in EDA– in real life, mixed with other mechanisms (HR, organizational rigidities, focus on

existing customers)

• Industries where model fits are characterized by systems products:– Software, electronics, telecom

• Contribution to understanding sources of innovation and markets for ideas

Thank you