Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5109889 | Journal of Business Research | 2016 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
The resource-based theory suggests that profitable growth of the firm is bound by firm-specific managerial capability, which has to be internally developed via accumulation of firm-specific managerial experience over time. In this study, I investigate the contingency of rent-generating potential of firm-specific managerial experience by focusing on two particular organizational characteristics - slack and uncertainty. I propose that firm-specific managerial experience realizes its rent-generating potential in conjunction with organizational slack, and firm-specific managerial experience has greater rent-generating potential when organizational uncertainty is high. Empirical evidence based on large-scale longitudinal data from 921Â U.S. manufacturing firms in almost 20Â years corroborates the theory. Novel implications for the resource-based theory are discussed.
Related Topics
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Authors
John Qi Dong,