Abstract:
The thesis explores the strategic choices made by automotive manufacturers in
developing and deploying technology that is discontinuous and potentially disruptive. It
studies the deployment of seat belts, airbags, hybrid vehicles and fuel cell electric
vehicles, drawing on product deployment histories, patents and the opinions of industry
experts. The thesis identifies two fundamental strategies called depth and breadth and
shows how the different manufacturers’ approach to these four technologies is arrayed
along a continuum between these two choices.
The thesis contributes to the theory of the technology-based firm which focuses on the
management of scale, scope, time and space by making operational the idea of scope
with depth and breadth. It also explicitly links the theory to the literature on coevolution
and dynamic capabilities and adds to the understanding of the co-evolutionary
dynamics at play in the automotive industry by applying the idea of technological
pathways to the technologies under study. This discussion yields some potentially
interesting insight for practitioners.
The thesis also reviews the literature concerning the potential changes to automotive
power train technology and adds to it by using the theory of the technology-based firm
as well as environmental literature and the non market strategy lens in order to develop
a nonbiased view of the state of development of fuel cell and hybrid technology.
Finally, the thesis provides a rigorous review of the use of patents in management
science over the last 50 years and makes one of the first attempts in the academic
literature to study patents using a patent mapping tool to help make sense of the large
amounts of data available in line with the new ideas concerning the importance of
developing visualisation techniques in data intensive scientific enquiry.