“…Research in the first stream explores the consequences of antecedents for M&A outcomes (Haleblian et al 2009) Authors take resource complements, knowledge similarity, technological relatedness, cultural, and/or organisational (mis-) fit as indicators of the combination potential of an M&A, with performance implications on accounting and stock-market valuation in general, and patents in particular (Datta, Pinches, and Narayanan 1992;Ahuja and Katila 2001;Prabhu, Chandy, and Ellis 2005;King, Slotegraaf, and Kesner 2008;Stahl and Voigt 2008;Makri, Hitt, and Lane 2010;Malik 2011;Hussinger 2012;Bauer and Matzler 2014). However, such research typically considers PMAI as a black box, disregarding intermediate variables and relevant learnings on integration strategies, and frequently oversimplifies performance (Haleblian et al 2009), let alone innovation performance, to allow for quantitative analysis (Ahuja and Katila 2001;Cloodt, Hagedoorn, and van Kranenburg 2006;Keil et al 2008).…”