Turnover at the Top: Executive Team Departures and Firm Performance

In a departure from the historical focus on individual-level turnover, scholars have recently examined turnover at the collective level. Building on this work, we invoke human and social capital arguments and analyze the implications of varying rates of top management team (TMT) turnover for firm pe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Organization science (Providence, R.I.) R.I.), 2014-05, Vol.25 (3), p.776-793
Hauptverfasser: Messersmith, Jake G., Lee, Jeong-Yeon, Guthrie, James P., Ji, Yong-Yeon
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In a departure from the historical focus on individual-level turnover, scholars have recently examined turnover at the collective level. Building on this work, we invoke human and social capital arguments and analyze the implications of varying rates of top management team (TMT) turnover for firm performance. Our principal finding is that TMT departures have deleterious effects on subsequent firm performance, though we find evidence to suggest that this effect is nonlinear. Results also suggest that higher levels of average organizational tenure of the TMT will modestly attenuate this negative effect. Contrary to arguments grounded in the managerial discretion literature, environmental munificence weakened the negative effects of TMT turnover rates on subsequent firm performance, whereas the hypothesized moderating effects for both industry complexity and instability were not supported.
ISSN:1047-7039
1526-5455
DOI:10.1287/orsc.2013.0864