Abstract:
Strategic behaviour reflects the corporate and generic strategies of a firm,
which facilitate the understanding and fulfilment of customers' needs in a dynamic
and competitive environment. Although literature on many researches carried out in
relation to individual strategic behaviours or orientations is available, current
understanding of their combined adoption within organizations remains highly
limited. In addition, the strategic typology produces grater mediating effect on
innovations; it is unclear whether these assumptions are applicable in the indigenous
context and no study that directly examine the mediating effect of the strategic
typology between strategic behaviour and innovation of the firms has yet been
carried out.
This research comprises of a descriptive quantitative pedagogy and 300
questioners were distributed among owners of the Ayurveda firms. Researcher has
applied several statistical analytical techniques such as Multiple Regression Models,
ANOVA, and SOBEL Test for testing hypotheses. The results add to the knowledge
in relation to the interplay and synergetic effects of the subject orientations and
suggest that strategic behaviours should be considered as a configuration of multiple
dimensions. The research suggests that behavioural dimensions have a significant
joint effect on product development. Especially, entrepreneurial and technological
dimensions have a significant positive effect on product development. In relation to
the effect of strategic behaviour on differentiation, technology is the only factor that
has a highly significant positive effect on differentiation. Entrepreneurial and
administrative behaviours are individually insignificant. In relation to the effect of
strategic behaviour on typology, probabilities of entrepreneurial, technological and
administrative behaviours are highly significant. Entrepreneurial behaviour has
influenced negatively on typology and administrative behaviour influences positively
on typology. Further, technology is individually insignificant and strategic typology
has a significant effect on innovation, on both new product development and
differentiation. Importantly, typology does not mediate the relationship between
strategic behaviour and product development but typology does mediate the
relationship between strategic behaviour and differentiation. Defender, Analyzer and
Prospector create significant mediating effect on the relationship between strategic
behaviour and differentiation.
Overall, the results highlights the importance of the simultaneous utilization
of appropriate strategic behaviour, and instigate strategists to adopt an appropriate
typology towards their work on innovation, these findings are very important even
for organizations of indigenous nature.