"To achieve the above-mentioned objectives of the KITFEM project, the activities and tasks are broken down into work packages (WP1-4), with a fifth work package running during the last 5 months (image 1). All work packages have undertaken an extensive literature review that served as a base for the following empirical enquiries.
A key contribution from the work package ""International Technology Transfer, Knowledge Networks and Innovation Capabilities Upgrading"" has been the development of a meta-translation framework of indicators to evaluate the feasibility and facilitate the undertaking comparative analyses. This has lead to a prototype of a tool to for visualising statistical analyses useful for research communication and dissemination purposes.
For the work package ""Collaborative innovation among stakeholders"", the findings lead to the identification of key marketing factors which contribute to successful partnerships (trust, commitment, organizational integration…). Additionally, potential barriers to effective collaborative innovation-oriented partnerships were determined.
The work package ""Employees and firm innovation"" has carried out empirical studies to examine the effect of involvement and participation (EIP) mechanisms on management innovation in emerging market SMEs as well as on various types of innovation in European SMEs. An important contribution derives from building up a genuine database, collecting data from CEO, middle managers and employees in Moroccan SMEs. The findings have practical implications for SME managers as they highlight the potential positive effect of EIP for innovation in emerging as well as European SMEs. However, the potential positive effect is conditioned by contextual factors, such as middle-managers value orientation, role identity, organisational climates as well as structural variables such as industry affiliation and firm size.
Also research indicates a link between innovation and firm performance, while highlighting that only specific types of innovation contribute directly to firm performance.
With respect to ""Expatriates as agents of knowledge transfer"" their research identified the types of knowledge acquired by expatriates abroad, determined the factors that facilitate reverse knowledge transfer from subsidiaries in emerging markets to headquarters, Expartriate managemnt practices can lead to strong relationships between expatriates’ integration and attachment to the organization, and reverse knowledge transfer."