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David J. Teece

Researcher at University of California, Berkeley

Publications -  326
Citations -  103328

David J. Teece is an academic researcher from University of California, Berkeley. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dynamic capabilities & Multinational corporation. The author has an hindex of 89, co-authored 312 publications receiving 93195 citations. Previous affiliations of David J. Teece include Yale University & University of Michigan.

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Capturing Value from Knowledge Assets: The New Economy, Markets for Know-How, and Intangible Assets

TL;DR: The increasing liberalization of markets coupled with the creation of new markets for intermediate products is stripping firm-level competitive advantage back to its fundamental core: difficult to create and difficult to imitate intangible assets as discussed by the authors.
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Dynamic Capabilities and Strategic Management

TL;DR: The dynamic capabilities framework as discussed by the authors analyzes the sources and methods of wealth creation and capture by private enterprise firms operating in environments of rapid technological change, and suggests that private wealth creation in regimes of rapid technology change depends in large measure on honing internal technological, organizational, and managerial processes inside the firm.
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Economies of scope and the scope of the enterprise

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined elements of an efficiency-based theory of the multiproduct firm and extended the theoretical framework developed by Williamson to explain vertical integration to explain diversification.
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Towards an economic theory of the multiproduct firm

TL;DR: In this paper, a theory of the multiproduct firm is presented, in which profit seeking firms are seen to diversify in order to avoid the high transactions costs associated with using various markets to trade the services of various specialized assets.
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Understanding corporate coherence: Theory and evidence

TL;DR: This paper showed that as U.S. manufacturing firms grow more diverse, they maintain a constant level of coherence between neighboring activities, which runs counter to the idea that firms with many activities are generally more "incoherent".