ENTRY, EXIT, AND THE POTENTIAL FOR RESOURCE REDEPLOYMENT

Research summary: Combining the concept of resource relatedness with the economic notion of sunk costs, we assess how the potential for resource redeployment affects market entry and exit by multi-business firms. If the performance of a new business falls below expectations, a diversified firm may b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Strategic management journal 2017-03, Vol.38 (3), p.526-544
Hauptverfasser: LIEBERMAN, MARVIN B., LEE, GWENDOLYN K., FOLTA, TIMOTHY B.
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container_title Strategic management journal
container_volume 38
creator LIEBERMAN, MARVIN B.
LEE, GWENDOLYN K.
FOLTA, TIMOTHY B.
description Research summary: Combining the concept of resource relatedness with the economic notion of sunk costs, we assess how the potential for resource redeployment affects market entry and exit by multi-business firms. If the performance of a new business falls below expectations, a diversified firm may be able to redeploy its resources back into related businesses. In effect, relatedness reduces the sunk costs associated with a new business, which facilitates exit. This, in turn, has implications for entry: By decreasing the cost of failure, the potential for redeployment justifies the undertaking of riskier entries and greater experimentation. These dynamic benefits of relatedness are distinct from standard notions of "synergy." To show support for this idea, we provide a mathematical model, descriptive data, and company examples. Managerial summary: The ability to redeploy resources inside the firm reduces the cost of entry "mistakes." If a new business turns out to have poor profitability, the ability to redeploy more of its resources back into the firm's other businesses allows recycling of investment and can speed up the retreat. This reduces not only the cost of exit, but also the cost of entry. Managers should therefore be more willing to experiment and take risks in developing businesses that are more related to the firm's existing businesses, whereas if redeployment is likely to be difficult, managers should be cautious about entering. New businesses should be chosen in ways that facilitate redeployment, and managers should consider the implications of redeployment when setting the performance thresholds that justify entry and exit.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/smj.2501
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source Wiley Online Library - AutoHoldings Journals; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Companies
corporate strategy
diversification
Errors
Falls
Market entry
market entry/exit
Mathematical models
Profitability
Recycling
Relatedness
resource redeployment
Startups
Strategic management
Thresholds
title ENTRY, EXIT, AND THE POTENTIAL FOR RESOURCE REDEPLOYMENT
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