Abstract
Scholars have long been interested in new industry emergence, highlighting that it could often be impeded by uncertainty across four dimensions: technology, demand, ecosystem, and institutions. Building on the insight that uncertainty stems from partial knowledge, we develop a conceptual framework that utilizes a temporal and a process perspective for knowledge generation and aggregation. Industry emergence through key milestones—commercialization, firm takeoff and sales takeoff—is made possible by micro level processes where diverse actors engage in knowledge generation within and across uncertainty dimensions, and macro level aggregation processes with appending, competitive, and collective mechanisms at play. Our conceptual framework integrates across disciplinary perspectives to shed light on both the development of an industry’s market structure for future growth, and the bottlenecks that may delay or even impede industries from emergence.
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