The Red Queen in organizational evolution

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Barnett, WP; Hansen, MT
署名单位:
Harvard University
刊物名称:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
ISSN/ISSBN:
0143-2095
DOI:
10.1002/smj.4250171010
发表日期:
1996
页码:
139-157
关键词:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT COMPETITION ORGANIZATIONAL EVOLUTION Organizational learning organizational ecology
摘要:
We propose that competitive success and failure evolve through an ecology of organizational learning. An organization facing competition is likely to engage in a search for ways to improve performance. When successful, this search results in learning that is likely to increase the organization's competitive strength, which in turn triggers learning in its rivals-consequently making them stronger competitors and so again triggering learning in the first organization. We elaborate the conditions under which this self-reinforcing process, known in evolutionary theory as the 'Red Queen,' is likely to be adaptive or maladaptive. Adaptive consequences are predicted only for recently experienced learning. Experience in the more distant past of an organization's life, by contrast, is predicted to backfire into a 'competency trap.' We predict maladaptive consequences when organizations face many, varied cohorts of rivals. We empirically distinguish these effects using ecological models of competition. Estimates of organizational failure rates reveal a Red Queen among Illinois banks, and support our predictions.