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Interactive effects of CEO's firm-specific experience and versatile experiences on pursuit of new growth opportunity

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Prior research has opposing views about the merits of firm-specific managerial experience and empirical findings are mixed. To address this problem, we ask when firm-specific managerial experience is helpful versus harmful in pursuit of new growth opportunities. We propose that when CEOs’ firm-specific experience is combined with versatile managerial experience, its growth constraining effect is alleviated due to increased adaptability of the CEO’s human capital to support growth in new business domains. We find support for this argument in a sample of U.S. food firms and their pursuit of the organic food opportunity during 1997-2007. We also find that CEOs’ versatile experience by itself is not sufficient for the pursuit of new growth, but it is when the two types of experience are combined synergistically that firms could achieve higher rates of opportunity pursuit. In this vein, our research reconciles the alternative theoretical perspectives on firm-specific experience and invites further consideration of experience combinations where both positive and negative synergies drive the ultimate impact of key managerial experiences.

Description

Journal Title

Journal of Management

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0149-2063
1557-1211

Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 4.0 International
Sponsorship
The study received funding from Taiwan National Science and Technology Council (NSC-99-2410-H-004-012-MY2)