Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1019666 Journal of Business Venturing 2008 24 Pages PDF
Abstract

The 2003 Fortune 500 Index includes 358 firms that had been newly listed within the previous 10 years; historically this is a large number of firms in a relatively short time period. In particular, among the 358 new Fortune 500 entrants founded after 1975, 44 are defined as “rapid-growth” startups. Simulation results based on a discrete-choice racing model demonstrate that they were able to outperform their early competitors through a quality innovation race. They were resistant to hostile M&A attempts as well. According to the empirical results, a quality shock affects the size growth and profitability of the rapid-growth startups more than a market shock does, which indicates that such superior performance owes to firm-specific innovation ability rather than to market fluctuations.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Business and International Management
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