Better to have led and lost than never to have led at all? Lost leadership and effort provision in dynamic tournaments

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Gutierrez, Cedric; Obloj, Tomasz; Frank, Douglas H.
署名单位:
Bocconi University; Bocconi University; Hautes Etudes Commerciales (HEC) Paris; Analysis Group Inc.
刊物名称:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
ISSN/ISSBN:
0143-2095
DOI:
10.1002/smj.3247
发表日期:
2021
页码:
774-801
关键词:
behavioral strategy COMPETITIVE DYNAMICS dynamic tournaments lost leadership reference points
摘要:
Research Summary In this paper, we develop and test a behavioral theory of lost leadership. Using insights from the literature on goals as reference points and goal-setting theory, we predict that former leaders exert more effort compared to otherwise identical competitors. We test this prediction using two contexts. The first data comes from an educational business simulation game. The second setting draws on field data from a 2-month banking sales contest. We find that provision of effort increases following the loss of leadership. We also explore whether past leaders exert more effort in general or shift effort from other, potentially less-salient goals. We find evidence of both mechanisms. Finally, investigating the temporal effects, we find that having been a leader has an attenuating effect on subsequent behavior. Managerial Summary Many competitions-such as sports championships, sales contests, idea-sourcing challenges, and competitions for promotions-can be understood as dynamic tournaments, in which rivals rise and fall in the provisional rankings as they compete over time for a terminal prize. This performance volatility can have important consequences for contestants' behavior. Focusing on the event of lost leadership, we show that former leaders try harder: those that are displaced from a prize-eligible position exert more effort in subsequent rounds, compared with identically placed rivals who have never led. Former leaders provide more effort overall, and also shift attention away from other tasks. Our results, which suggest that setbacks can be motivational, have implications for the optimal design of dynamic competitions.