Do firms really learn from failure? The dynamics of abandoned innovation
Date
2020
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Abstract
Abandoned and failed innovations can be regarded as a part of the natural process of
experimentation by firms, which can lead to important lessons being learned. Although the
literature suggests some benefit from failure or abandoned innovation activities, prior studies
using relatively large firm-level datasets to test the nature of this link are often unable to deal
explicitly with the time dimension of learning. We contribute to the literature by showing the
dynamic and causal nature of the linkage between abandoned innovation and subsequent
innovation outcomes at firms. We demonstrate based on balanced panel data of Spanish
manufacturing firms from 2008-2016 that innovation failure not only leads to more successful
innovation, but that there is an explicit time dimension to this. We demonstrate that firms
which have experienced ‘failure’ (as evidenced by abandoned innovation activities) in the past
will have stronger positive effects of recent abandoned innovation activities on innovation
output. This is a strong test of the ‘learning-from-failure’ hypothesis. In addition, we find
evidence that in addition to enabling cumulative learning processes, abandoning innovation
may also act as a dynamic corrective mechanism preventing firms carrying weaker innovation
portfolios through from one period to the next.
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Keywords
innovation failure, abandoning innovation activities, learning effects, innovation performance