Abstract
Effective prioritization of environmental investments is critical for firms seeking to achieve sustainable competitive advantage and maximize economic returns. Many environmental initiatives fail due to the absence of a structured “choice” framework, which leads firms to adopt a scattered approach of doing “a bit of everything”—a strategy that squanders limited resources and undermines future innovation efforts. To address this lack of structured guidance, we develop a game-theoretic model that formalizes the strategic prioritization problem firms face when allocating resources between two archetypal environmental innovation strategies, distilled from recurring patterns in corporate practice, industry reports, and academic literature: eco-differentiation (a demand-enhancing, product-oriented investment with high failure risk, delayed payoff, and substantial capital outlay) and eco-efficiency (a cost-reducing, process-oriented investment with minimal risk, short lead time, and lower capital outlay). Our model incorporates strategic rivalry, firm-specific innovation capabilities, innovation failure risks, product development lead times, and consumer heterogeneity in both brand and environmental preferences—alongside a novel interaction between these two preference dimensions—as well as an endogenous transition in market structure triggered by the successful introduction of eco-differentiated products. Our equilibrium analysis establishes explicit innovative capability thresholds that delineate equilibrium regions and characterize firms’ optimal environmental investment choices. Our theoretical findings provide actionable insights to help firms—particularly those with limited resources—tailor their environmental investment choices to industry- and market-specific constraints, enabling them to translate sustainability efforts into sources of sustained profitability and competitive advantage.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 989-1006 |
| Number of pages | 18 |
| Journal | European Journal of Operational Research |
| Volume | 328 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jul 5 2025 |
Scopus Subject Areas
- General Computer Science
- Modeling and Simulation
- Management Science and Operations Research
- Information Systems and Management
Keywords
- Competitive strategy
- Eco-differentiation
- Eco-efficiency
- Environmental investments
- Game theory