1. 1 Summary This thesis intends to answer three questions: First, what
is a lead market; second, what constitutes a lead market, and third, how
companies can harness lead markets to generate global innovations.
Considering the international, cross-border diffu- sion of innovations
one can observe that a particular technological design such as the
facsimile machine, the personal computer or the mobile cellular
telephone is often adopted by one country or region much earlier than by
other countries which subsequently follow this country, which I will
call the lead market. A lead market is defined as a country that adopts
an innovation that is subsequently adopted worldwide. When different
designs of an innovation compete internationally, the design preferred
in the lead market becomes the global dominant design. The study
suggests a theoretical explanation for the phenomena of lead markets and
collects empirical evidence from a detailed case study of the cellular
mobile tele- of an innovation design adopted first phone industry. The
international diffusion by the lead market, i. e. subsequent adoption of
an innovation design preferred in the lead market by other countries,
can be put down to the special market context in the lead market. The
market context includes demand preferences, the environ- mental
condition and the degree of competition. Multinational firms are often
confronted not only with varying market acceptance of new products and
processes from country to country, but with national prefer- ences for
particular specifications of an innovation, i. e.