Home Login Search Sitemap FAQ About Us Contact Us MIT Sloan View Cart
MIT Sloan Management Review Homepage
 
 
 

Extracting Value from Corporate Venturing

Rita Gunther McGrath, Thomas Keil and Taina Tukiainen
Reprint 48111; Fall 2006, Vol. 48, No. 1, pp. 50-56

Buy this articleBuy this article Email this page 

The full text of this article is available free to all site visitors, compliments of IBM, as part of our ongoing Business Insight series. Jointly produced by MIT Sloan Management Review and The Wall Street Journal, Business Insight offers fresh thinking on crucial management issues supplemented by the deep knowledge of related, classic SMR articles, of which this is one. Read the Business Insight article to which it relates and other SMR classics on the topic, all free full text.

Launching new ventures outside a corporation’s core business is risky and failure-prone — yet often perceived as vital to innovation and organic growth. Can investing in new ventures add value to a company despite the risks? To explore that question, the authors conducted an in-depth study of corporate venturing at Nokia Corp. between 1998 and 2002; the study included two years of dissertation research by one of the authors.

The research yielded a number of lessons about corporate venturing. For example, Nokia discovered that looking at the success or failure of an individual project as a business was the wrong way to evaluate the effectiveness of the venturing program. Whether or not they succeeded as businesses, Nokia’s corporate ventures often added important capabilities to the core business, such as familiarity with a new customer segment for the company. In fact, seemingly unrelated investments sometimes led to technologies that later benefited the company’s core business. The authors conclude that, to extract value from corporate ventures, companies must use different management practices than in their established businesses, structure new ventures so that they don’t face pressure to deliver immediate results, and emphasize learning. Although 70% of Nokia’s corporate venturing investments during the period studied were either discontinued or completely divested, the capabilities and technologies developed nonetheless played an important role in helping the company’s core businesses respond to change.

Rita Gunther McGrath is an associate professor of management at the Columbia Business School. Thomas Keil is professor of strategic management at Helsinki University of Technology in Espoo, Finland. Taina Tukiainen is head of the department of industrial management at Helsinki Polytechnic Stadia in Helsinki.

  Subscribers: view the full text PDF, free.
$6.50Buy PDFBuy PDF What is this?
$12.00Buy PDFBuy PDF and permission to copy What is this?
$5.50Buy PDFBuy permission to copy from your own original What is this?
$6.50Buy PDFBuy paper reprint What is this?
$12.00Buy PDFBuy paper reprint and permission to copy What is this?

Academic pricing and volume discount information

 

[top] [back]

 
Free Issue
Join our e-mail list.
Click "GO" to register to receive alerts and updates.
POPULAR ARTICLES

MORE

privacy policy