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Towards enhancing innovation capability of teams: a conceptual perspective

Gaurav Dilip Tikas (Department of Management Studies, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India)
Akhilesh K.B. (Department of Management Studies, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India)

Team Performance Management

ISSN: 1352-7592

Article publication date: 3 October 2017

Issue publication date: 9 October 2017

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Abstract

Purpose

This conceptual paper aims to explain the unidirectional cross-level impact of five “organizational-level” factors on “team-level” innovation capability through two “team-level” mediating factors. This multivariate model consists of five organizational-level factors (higher-level) factors – leadership, culture, structure, networks and knowledge – and team-level (lower-level) factors – “innovation capability”, “team-level focus” and “team-level intensity” towards innovation. Understanding the top-down influence of higher-level factors on lower-level ones gives this study a cross-level and unidirectional nature.

Design/methodology/approach

A keyword-based approach was used to select “relevant” articles from major journals to collect evidences and develop a conceptual model. All factors in the conceptual model were chosen from the organizational- and the team-level literature. Theoretical background for each of the chosen “factors” has been presented under relevant headings.

Findings

First is the conceptualization of team-level mediators – intensity and focus – towards innovation. Second is the conceptualization of innovation capability as a team-level factor, characterized by two sub-dimensions: customer orientation and manifestation.

Research limitations/implications

This conceptual paper does not contain any empirical data analysis. The authors have not considered individual-level factors like individual excellence, personalities, etc., which may impact team-level innovation. They are specifically looking at the top-down “unidirectional” cross-level impact of “higher-level” (organizational-level) factors on “lower-level” (team-level) factor, not the other way around.

Practical implications

Innovation-driven organizations can use this model to build long-term “innovation capabilities” by developing the right kind of “intensity” and “focus” of their R&D teams towards innovation. R&D teams can be encouraged to work closely with their “target” customers and manifest their innovation capabilities (to them) to ensure market success.

Social implications

Top management can design organizational-level policies to improve their leadership, culture, structure, networks and knowledge to encourage better innovation. Future researchers who wish to study the “cross-level” influence of organizational-level factors on team-level innovation capability may find this paper useful.

Originality/value

This study’s original contributions include: first, the conceptualization of a multivariate “cross-level” model to understand team-level innovation capability. Second is proposing the mediating role of “team-level” factors like focus and intensity while building innovation capability. Third is conceptualizing innovation capability as a team-level construct, with sub-dimensions: customer orientation and manifestation.

Keywords

Citation

Tikas, G.D. and K.B., A. (2017), "Towards enhancing innovation capability of teams: a conceptual perspective", Team Performance Management, Vol. 23 No. 7/8, pp. 352-363. https://doi.org/10.1108/TPM-04-2016-0011

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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