Abstract
PurposeThis article aims to identify the capabilities supporting the development of collaborative innovation within knowledge‐intensive environments.Design/methodology/approachRe‐considering the history of the ARPANET project as a vivid example of collaborative innovation, the article presents qualitative research from a historical case.FindingsWithin this framework, the article shows that benefiting from collaboration in innovation entails that the innovative organisation is capable of achieving (at least) the following tasks: to leverage complementarities between internal and external sources of innovation (design capability); to codify, capitalise and disseminate knowledge outcomes (knowledge management capability); and to align product and organisations in a dynamic way (adaptive governance capability).Research limitations/implicationsThis contribution is limited by looking at a single case. On the premise that model generalization depends on extensive empirical data, the current article should be considered as preliminary/exploratory research that aims at identifying the capabilities supporting collaborative innovation within knowledge‐intensive environments.Originality/valueThe originality of this article is to look at a historical case to elaborate on a typology of collaborative innovation capabilities.
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