journal article Apr 02, 2013

Developing Sustainable New Products in the Textile and Upholstered Furniture Industries: Role of External Integrative Capabilities

View at Publisher Save 10.1111/jpim.12013
Abstract
Environmental sustainability has become one of the key issues for strategy, marketing, and innovation. In particular, significant attention is being paid by companies, customers, media, and regulators to development and consumption of green products. It is argued that through the efficient use of resources, low carbon impacts, and risks to the environment, green products can be essential to help society toward the environmental sustainability targets. The number of green product introductions is rapidly increasing, as demonstrated by the growing number of companies obtaining eco‐labels or third party certifications for their environmentally friendly products. Hundreds of companies representing most of the industries, such as Intel, SC Johnson, Clorox, Wal‐Mart, and Hewlett–Packard, have recently introduced new green products, underlining the need to develop products that create both economic and environmental values for the firm and customers. A review of the literature shows that academic research on green product development has grown in interest. However, to date, only a few empirical studies have addressed the challenge of integrating environmental issues into new product development (NPD). Previous empirical works have mainly focused on a set of activities for the green product development process at the project level. After years of paying no or marginal attention to environmental sustainability issues, most of the companies now generally realize that it would require knowledge and competencies to develop green products on a regular basis. These knowledge and competencies can be varied, such as R&D, environmental know‐how, clean technology/manufacturing process, building knowledge on measuring environmental performance of products, etc., that may be developed internally or can be integrated through external networks. Adopting a resource‐based view of the firm, this article aims at (1) investigating the role of capabilities useful for companies to integrate knowledge and competencies from outside of the firm on green product development in terms of both manufacturing process and product design and (2) understanding whether green product development opens new product, market, and technology opportunities, as well as leads to better financial performance of NPD programs. To this end, a survey was conducted in two Italian manufacturing industries in which environmental issues are becoming increasingly important, namely textiles and upholstered furniture. A questionnaire was sent to 700 firms, and 102 useable questionnaires were returned. Results show that (1) companies engage in developing external integrative capabilities through the creation of collaborative networks with actors along the supply chain, the acquisition of technical know‐how, and the creation of external knowledge links with actors outside the supply chain; (2) external knowledge links play a key role in the integration of environmental sustainability issues into the manufacturing process, whereas capabilities such as the acquisition of technical know‐how and the creation of collaborative networks prove to be more important for integrating environmental issues into product design; and (3) the integration of environmental sustainability issues into NPD programs in terms of product design leads to the creation of new opportunities for firms, such as opening new markets, technologies, and product arenas, though not necessarily leading to improved financial performance of the NPD programs.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
69
[2]
Allwood J. M. (2006)
[3]
Does It Pay to Be Green? A Systematic Overview

Ambec Stefan, Lanoie Paul

Academy of Management Perspectives 10.5465/amp.2008.35590353
[5]
Estimating Nonresponse Bias in Mail Surveys

J. Scott Armstrong, Terry S. Overton

Journal of Marketing Research 10.1177/002224377701400320
[8]
The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations.

Reuben M. Baron, David A. Kenny

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 10.1037/0022-3514.51.6.1173
[13]
The Influence of Green Innovation Performance on Corporate Advantage in Taiwan

Yu-Shan Chen, Shyh-Bao Lai, Chao-Tung Wen

Journal of Business Ethics 10.1007/s10551-006-9025-5
[14]
Chung Y. "The effect of green design activities on new product strategies and performance: An empirical study among high‐tech companies" International Journal of Management (2007)
[15]
A Paradigm for Developing Better Measures of Marketing Constructs

Gilbert A. Churchill

Journal of Marketing Research 10.1177/002224377901600110
[16]
Cohen W. M. "Absorptive capacity: A new perspective on learning and innovation" Administrative Science Quarterly (1990)
[17]
Mainstreaming Green Product Innovation: Why and How Companies Integrate Environmental Sustainability

Rosa Maria Dangelico, Devashish Pujari

Journal of Business Ethics 10.1007/s10551-010-0434-0
[18]
The dynamics of product innovation and firm competences

Erwin Danneels

Strategic Management Journal 10.1002/smj.275
[20]
Dechert LLP.2008.2008 Dechert LLP Annual Report on Trends in Trademarks. Available at:http://www.dechert.com/library/Trends_in_Trademarks_2008.pdf(last accessed June 2011).
[21]
Dewberry E. "Spaceship ecodesign" Co‐design (1996)
[23]
Evans G. "“Green” designs get spotlight at market, in Special Report Stationary Upholstery" Furniture Today (2007)
[25]
Toward a knowledge‐based theory of the firm

Robert M. Grant

Strategic Management Journal 10.1002/smj.4250171110
[27]
Groenewegen P. "Technology policy and the creation of new technologies" International Journal of Technology Management (1991)
[28]
Hair J. F. (2006)
[30]
A Natural-Resource-Based View of the Firm

Stuart L. Hart

The Academy of Management Review 10.2307/258963
[33]
Hopkins M. "How sustainability fuels design innovation. Interview with Steven Eppinger" MIT Sloan Management Review (2010)
[34]
ISTAT.2007.Rapporto annuale. La situazione del Paese 2006.
[38]
[44]
Nidumolu R. "Why sustainability is now the key driver of innovation" Harvard Business Review (2009)
[49]
Why do ‘great minds’ think alike?: antecedents of team member schema agreement

Joan R. Rentsch, Richard J. Klimoski

Journal of Organizational Behavior 10.1002/job.81

Showing 50 of 69 references

Cited By
231
Understanding sustainable innovation: A systematic literature review

Valentina Cillo, Antonio Messeni Petruzzelli · 2019

Corporate Social Responsibility and...
Metrics
231
Citations
69
References
Details
Published
Apr 02, 2013
Vol/Issue
30(4)
Pages
642-658
License
View
Cite This Article
Rosa Maria Dangelico, Pierpaolo Pontrandolfo, Devashish Pujari (2013). Developing Sustainable New Products in the Textile and Upholstered Furniture Industries: Role of External Integrative Capabilities. Journal of Product Innovation Management, 30(4), 642-658. https://doi.org/10.1111/jpim.12013
Related

You May Also Like

Industry Platforms and Ecosystem Innovation

Annabelle Gawer, Michael A. Cusumano · 2013

1,666 citations

Disruptive Innovation: In Need of Better Theory*

Constantinos Markides · 2005

893 citations