ABSTRACT

Small producers face a variety of challenges – some related to markets and others related to capabilities. Inability to develop technological capabilities has often restricted small firms from growing large. In this paper, we present learning from three global networks, i.e., Technology Advanced Metropolitan Area (TAMA) in Japan, Wenzhou in China, and Rajkot in India that have adopted a variety of mechanisms of coordination between small producers, and has led to both capability enhancement and demand enhancement. We argue that the capability enhancement effects, play as significant a role as demand enhancement effects, in the growth of small firms. Coordination that allows firms to improve their capabilities enhances both productivity as well as innovative capabilities, to develop new products and processes. The paper, with the help of these three case studies, presents a generic model for small and medium enterprises (SME) development, that is based on acquiring distinctive capabilities and linkages with other small producers or other members of the supply chain. We propose distinctive determinants of a collaborative model for engaging SMEs in technological innovation over a period of time. These are: Focus of the Firm, Interactive Producers, Processing and Product Manufacturing, Innovation Investment, Markets, Market Makers (and market making processes), and Regulatory Support.