Innovators not driven by money, thrive on intellectual challenge and independence
Rushika Bhatia
Management
Published:

Innovators not driven by money, thrive on intellectual challenge and independence

Scientists and engineers who produce innovative work aren’t in it just for the money, according to researchers from Duke University and the Georgia Institute of Technology. The research results come from an analysis of survey data, from more than 1,700 Ph.D. scientists and engineers who work in research and development at private firms.

Innovators’ drive to create new ideas and inventions stems primarily from a desire for intellectual challenge and independence, say study co-authors Wesley M. Cohen, professor of business administration at Duke’s Fuqua School of Business, and Henry Sauermann, an assistant professor of strategic management at Georgia Institute of Technology.

The researchers measured innovative performance using the number of patent applications produced by employees. They linked this performance measure to employees’ motives, including how much employees care about such factors as intellectual challenge, independence, salary, job security, opportunity for advancement, responsibility and contributing to society. Scientists and engineers who highly ranked intellectual challenge, independence and income had the most patent applications.

In contrast, people who said job security was important had fewer patent applications than their peers. The need for job security may lead people to pursue safer projects, or it could cause risk aversion that may squelch creativity, the researchers suggest.

Sauermann and Cohen found a strong relationship between hours worked and innovative output, with the peak of productivity reached at about 60 hours per week. However, longer hours did not explain why people interested in challenge or independence were more productive.

“Although people might think the impact of motives on innovation is measured simply by the quantity of effort that is expended, that is not the case,” Cohen said. “The effect has more to do with the character — rather than the quantity — of effort.”

A report on the study appears in Management Science: .