Double-edged stars: Michelin stars, reactivity, and restaurant exits in New York City
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Sands, Daniel B.
署名单位:
University of London; University College London
刊物名称:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
ISSN/ISSBN:
0143-2095
DOI:
10.1002/smj.3651
发表日期:
2025
页码:
148-176
关键词:
evaluations
ratings and rankings
reactivity
restaurant industry
status
third parties
Value creation and capture
摘要:
Research SummaryThis article develops a theoretical framework to explicate how third parties, who are not transactionally involved in a given exchange relationship, can promote or impede the creation and capture of value by influencing market actor beliefs and behaviors. I investigate these issues empirically through an abductive mixed-method case study of the Michelin Guide's entry into New York City. An examination of two decades of the openings and closings of New York City's elite restaurants indicates that receiving a Michelin star corresponded to an increased likelihood of restaurant exit. Michelin stars appear to have fostered disruptions at recipients' upstream and downstream interfaces, which inhibited their ability to capture value. This ultimately underscores how value network reactivity to third-party evaluations may lead to unintended consequences for firms.Managerial SummaryThis article explains how third-party evaluators' reviews, ratings, and rankings can promote or impede the creation and capture of value. This occurs because third-party evaluations engender reactions by those being evaluated, as well as reactions by other market actors such as competitors and exchange partners. I study these issues within the context of the Michelin Guide's entry into New York City, and my findings indicate that restaurants that received a Michelin star were more likely to close in subsequent years. Evidence suggests that intensified bargaining problems with landlords, suppliers, and employees, along with heightened consumer expectations, created new challenges for these Michelin-starred restaurants, which ultimately made it more difficult for them to stay in business.