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The nature of underground innovation: Missionary, user, and exploratory orientation

  • Jeroen P.J. de Jong*
  • , Max Mulhuijzen
  • , Brita Schemmann
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Bootlegging and creative deviance studies have described “underground” innovations, which employees develop without managerial consent but with company benefits in mind. This phenomenon is explained by structural strain theory: when organizations have innovative goals but limited resources, some employees may pursue these goals without permission. Anecdotal observations, however, reveal underground employee behaviors that do not fit this pattern; underground innovations may serve different purposes and remain permanently invisible. We therefore conducted an explorative study of why and how employees develop underground innovations. Based on interviews and survey data at a multinational automotive company, underground innovations have three orientations: missionary (aimed to change company practices), user (to solve work problems), and exploratory (to cater to developers' passion for exploration). The three orientations differ in their involvement of others, deployed resources, and dissemination efforts. Without missionary orientation, underground innovations are not proactively diffused, inhibiting organizations from reaping their full benefits. We infer a refined theory based on constraints that prevent employees from being openly proactive. Specifically, underground innovation may be triggered by 1. lacking resources to pursue organizational innovation goals, 2. lacking resources and thresholds to improve work processes, and 3. the organization's inability to match work tasks with innovation workers' preferences. The last two constraints are easily overlooked, and organizations will capture more value from their human capital by stimulating the diffusion of user and exploratory-oriented projects.
Original languageEnglish
Article number102498
Pages (from-to)1-19
Number of pages19
JournalLong Range Planning
Volume58
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Feb 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors

Funding

We surveyed employees at three locations: the two departments where we interviewed and another product development department in the United Kingdom. The sample included R&D workers (researchers, product developers) and support staff concerned with car warranty policies, human resources, administration, IT, and operational support (e.g., operators at test tracks, communication officers, and secretarial workers).This work was funded through a Ford Motor Company University Research Program. We thank Chafica Bounia, Markus Kees, Rocio Luna, and K. Venkatesh Prasad for their help and support.

Funders
Ford Motor Company University
Chafica Bounia

    Keywords

    • Bootlegging
    • Creative deviance
    • Innovation diffusion
    • Open-source
    • Underground innovation
    • User innovation

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