A network-based model of exploration and exploitation

Publication date

2021-05

Authors

den Hamer, PieterISNI 000000039361277X
Frenken, KoenORCID 0000-0003-4731-0201ISNI 0000000114504056

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

We propose a new model of exploration and exploitation, in which firms rely on local search for exploitation and on imitation for exploration. We assume that firms imitate the knowledge base of successful competitors, with imitation errors taking place depending on the social distance between the imitating firm and imitated firm in the network. The key model outcome, consistent with earlier empirical findings, holds that successful imitation generally occurs at an intermediate level of cognitive proximity because imitation at high cognitive distance is too error-prone, while for imitation at low cognitive distance there are typically no firms to imitate. A second outcome holds that social and cognitive proximity are substitutes. The model further shows that exploration by imitation is more beneficial in highly complex industries than in less complex industries, and that small-world networks yield the highest benefits for collective learning.

Keywords

Complexity, NK-model, Proximity, Small-world, Taverne, Marketing

Citation

den Hamer, P & Frenken, K 2021, 'A network-based model of exploration and exploitation', Journal of Business Research, vol. 129, pp. 589-599. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2019.12.040