Tolerance for Failure and Incentives for Collaborative Innovation

Tolerance for Failure and Incentives for Collaborative Innovation

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Article ID: iaor201524773
Volume: 23
Issue: 8
Start Page Number: 1265
End Page Number: 1285
Publication Date: Aug 2014
Journal: Production and Operations Management
Authors: ,
Keywords: management, risk, behaviour
Abstract:

Most organizations employ collaborative teams to manage innovation projects. Although the use of collaborative innovation teams is a good starting point, an organization's ability to innovate can be enhanced by managing risk‐taking behavior through monetary incentive schemes and through an organizational culture that tolerates failure. This article reports the results of two controlled experiments aimed at understanding how tolerance for failure and incentives impact the decisions of individuals engaged in a collaborative innovation initiative. A key element of our experiments is the notion of endogenous project risk, which we define as the explicit link between resources allocated to a project and the likelihood of project success. We observe that when penalties are low, the amount of risk an individual assumes is fairly insensitive to the rewards that are offered. In an analogous result, when individuals make decisions alone (rather than collaboratively), higher tolerance for failure does little to increase the amount of risk an individual is willing to take. Taken together, these results highlight the importance of implicit incentives that are created as a result of project and organizational characteristics.

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