Abstract

This study aims to explain what drives innovation diffusion in management accounting during its various phases. Based on Abrahamson [Abrahamson, E. (1991). Managerial fads and fashions: the diffusion and rejection of innovations. Academy of Management Review, 16, 586–612] , four perspectives with potential to explain the diffusion of accounting innovations are identified: the efficient-choice, forced selection, fad and fashion perspectives. The diffusion of activity-based costing (ABC) in Finland provides an empirical context to study how these four perspectives apply to management accounting innovation. Data comes from a set of four surveys (total n=490, response rate 39.5%, 114 ABC cases), from interviews of consultants, academics and software industry employees, and from archival sources. The study proposes that the driving forces behind innovation diffusion in management accounting change over the course of diffusion. Efficient choice may explain the earliest adoptions, whereas fashion-setting organizations exert considerable influence in the take-off stage. Later on, the influence of fashion setting organizations diminishes. Further diffusion is explained both by mimetic behaviour and efficient-choice.

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