In addition to their survey, Tellis, Prabhu and Chandy used data from sources such as world competitiveness reports to create variables for each of the 17 countries in areas such as capital, skilled labor and innovation-friendly government policies. Their survey also asked respondents questions about their company’s corporate culture and level of radical innovation.
The researchers found that a number of attitudes and practices associated with corporate culture had a significant positive effect on radical innovation—and radical innovation, in turn, had a positive... To read the complete article, login or sign-up using the form below.
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