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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FROM: Nancy
Gardner (206) 543-2580
nancylou@u.washington.edu
DATE:
August 16, 2007
“I read somewhere that everybody on this planet is
separated by only six other people. Six degrees of separation
between us and everyone else on this planet,” quips
the character, Tess, in John Guare's 1990 play “Six
Degrees of Separation.”
Researchers at the University of Washington and New York
University who examined networks of companies in relation
to their creative strengths have discovered that it is, indeed,
a small world.
Corey Phelps, an assistant professor of management and organization
at the UW Business School and co-author of the study, says
that when companies are indirectly linked in a network of
strategic alliance relationships with only a few degrees
of separation, they are more innovative.
Phelps and Melissa Schilling, an associate professor at NYU,
analyzed the innovative performance of 1,106 companies in
11 different industries over a six-year period. They examined
the pattern or structure of strategic alliance relationships
among companies in each industry. They found that how firms
are connected to one another influences the number of patented
inventions they obtained. Those that secured more patents
were classified by Phelps and Schilling as being more creative.
“Most social networks, whether we're talking about
friendships among individuals or alliances between companies,
are typically
clustered,” Phelps says. “Generally speaking,
we only know a very small number of people and these individuals
mostly know each other. As we know from high school, the
world is cliquish. This is the essence of clustering.
“Because of this clustering, we might expect that it
would take many connections to link two people or two firms
from
different parts of the world. However, if only a small number
of individuals have ties that bridge clusters, then the average
degree of separation between any two individuals in the network
decreases dramatically. This is the essence of a small world.
We know a small subset of people well, who also know each
other, but thanks to a few boundary spanners, it only takes
a few links to connect anyone in the world.”
According to the researchers, companies reap greater benefits when they are part
of a network that exhibits a high degree of clustering and only a few degrees
of separation, both of which are characteristic of a small world network.
They found that clustering enables information to travel quickly and accurately
because it creates redundant paths between companies and increases the level
of cooperation among them. Clusters within networks are important structures
for making information exchange meaningful and useful, they add. Clustering can
make firms more willing and able to exchange information.
A network in which
companies are directly or indirectly connected to many others by only a fewdegrees
of separation has high reach. Reach increases the amount and diversity of information
available by increasing the number of companies that provide information
and by decreasing the length of the path the information has to travel. Based
upon their analysis, the authors conclude that companies involved in large-scale
alliance networks that exhibit high levels of clustering and reach are more innovative.
"When a small-world network structure emerges within an industry, all companies
in the network benefit in terms of increased innovation, Phelps says. “Our
results are particularly important because in today's knowledge economy, innovation
is king. Without the ability to continually create and commercialize new products
and services, companies often wither and die. This study helps us understand
how large-scale alliance networks influence innovation. It improves our understanding
of why some industries and regions are more innovative than others.”
The study, which was partially supported by the National Science Foundation,
appears in the July issue of Management Science.
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