01723nas a2200169 4500008004100000245004900041210004900090260000900139300001200148490000700160520124500167653003201412100002401444700001601468700001501484856005401499 2012 eng d00aAutonomous Teams and New Product Development0 aAutonomous Teams and New Product Development c2012 a734-7500 v293 aWith its high degree of autonomy, dedication, and co-location, an autonomous team as an emerging tool for new product development (NPD) has more freedom and stronger capabilities to be innovative and entrepreneurial. However, such teams are not a panacea, and implementing them can be costly and disruptive to their parent organization. Hence, in this study we ask under which circumstances an autonomous team is the best choice for NPD. Drawing on both contingency and information-processing theories, we hypothesized that autonomous teams are more effective in developing novelty technology or radical innovation. We tested and confirmed the hypotheses using data from 555 NPD projects by comparing the relative effectiveness of autonomous teams with functional, lightweight, and heavyweight teams in terms of development cost, development speed, and overall product success. The results also suggest that heavyweight teams perform better than other teams in developing incremental innovation. The findings of this study may not only have some important implications for NPD practices but also shed some light on other important topics such as disruptive innovation, new venture, corporate entrepreneurship, and ambidextrous organization.10aStrategy & Entrepreneurship1 aPatanakul, Peerasit1 aChen, Jiyao1 aLynn, Gary uhttp://www.wiley.com/bw/journal.asp?ref=0737-6782