Firm Lifecycles: Linking Employee Incentives and Firm Growth Dynamics

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Bennett, Victor M.; Levinthal, Daniel A.
署名单位:
Duke University; University of Pennsylvania
刊物名称:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
ISSN/ISSBN:
0143-2095
DOI:
10.1002/smj.2644
发表日期:
2017
页码:
2005-2018
关键词:
employee incentives firm growth Firm lifecycle Process innovation Employee compensation
摘要:
While the economic advantages of scale are well understood, implications of the rate of firm growth are arguably less appreciated. Since firms' growth rate influences employees' promotion opportunities, the growth rate can have significant implications for the incentives employees face. Rapid growth, by creating more promotion opportunities, motivates employees to engage in extra-role behaviors that might result in promotion should an opportunity arise. Building on this argument, we develop a formal model linking the design of firms' incentive structure to their rate of growth. The associated dynamics lead to three distinct epochs of firms' lifecycle: rapid growth and high-powered incentives driven by frequent promotion opportunities; moderate growth with infrequent promotion opportunities, but large salary increases contingent on promotion; and finally, stagnant firms with low-powered incentives. Managerial summary: While being innovative can lead to a firm growing quickly, the opposite may also he true. Growing quickly may contribute to a firm's ability to improve its processes. Employees are often a source of process improving ideas. Employees' primary incentive to go outside the job description to improve those processes is often promotion. The availability of promotions, however, is linked to the firm's growth rate. Firms that are growing quickly can credibly promise to reward their most innovative employees with promotions. Established and slowly growing firms have fewer opportunities for growth, which gives employees less incentive to go above and beyond. This can mean that rapid growth can reinforce afirm's competitive advantage. Copyright (C) 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.