Predicting Labor Market Competition: Leveraging Interfirm Network and Employee Skills
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Liu, Yuanyang; Pant, Gautam; Sheng, Olivia R. L.
署名单位:
University of Tennessee System; University of Tennessee Knoxville; University of Iowa; Utah System of Higher Education; University of Utah
刊物名称:
INFORMATION SYSTEMS RESEARCH
ISSN/ISSBN:
1047-7047
DOI:
10.1287/isre.2020.0954
发表日期:
2020
页码:
1443-1466
关键词:
RESOURCE-BASED VIEW
institutional isomorphism
SPECIAL-ISSUE
KNOWLEDGE
mobility
performance
industry
firm
WAR
SUGGESTIONS
摘要:
Human capital is a key component of the knowledge economy that firms compete for in the labor market. Compared with the product market competition, the identification and prediction of labor market competitors have garnered little attention in the literature. In this study, we perform an interfirm labor market competitor analysis with a unique longitudinal employer-employee matched data set derived from online profiles of 89,943 employees, tracking their careers in 3,467 public firms from the years 2000 to 2014. Using employee migrations across firms, we derive and analyze a human capital flow network. We leverage this network to extract global cues about interfirm human capital overlap through structural equivalence and community classification. The online employee profiles also provide rich data on the explicit knowledge base of firms. In particular, they allow us to represent firms in the space of the skills possessed by their employees and measure the interfirm human capital overlap in terms of similarity in their employees' skills. We validate our proposed human capital overlap metrics in a predictive analytics framework using future employee migrations as an indicator of labor market competition. The results show that our proposed metrics have superior predictive power over conventional firm-level economic and human resource measures. We also demonstrate how our proposed metrics and the prediction framework can be incorporated into a comprehensive competitor analysis that includes both product and labor overlap between firms.