Coherent diversification in corporate technological portfolios
Emanuele Pugliese, Lorenzo Napolitano, Andrea Zaccaria, and Luciano, Pietronero

TL;DR
This paper introduces a measure of coherent diversification in firms' technological portfolios and demonstrates its positive relationship with labor productivity, highlighting the importance of related technological fields for economic performance.
Contribution
It develops a novel network-based measure of technological portfolio coherence and shows its significant correlation with firm productivity, surpassing traditional diversification metrics.
Findings
Coherent diversification correlates positively with labor productivity.
Traditional diversification measures are less predictive of performance.
The measure captures meaningful synergies within firms' technological structures.
Abstract
We study the relationship between firms' performance and their technological portfolios using tools borrowed from the complexity science. In particular, we ask whether the accumulation of knowledge and capabilities related to a coherent set of technologies leads firms to experience advantages in terms of productive efficiency. To this end, we analyzed both the balance sheets and the patenting activity of about 70 thousand firms that have filed at least one patent over the period 2004-2013. From this database it is possible to define a measure of the firms' coherent diversification, based on the network of technological fields, and relate it to the firms' perfomance in terms of labor productivity. Such a measure favors companies with a diversification structure comprising blocks of closely related fields over firms with the same breadth of scope, but a more scattered diversification…
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