消失的企业案例:实证证据与启示

The case of the disappearing firms: empirical evidence and implications

JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR · 2006
被引 51
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

调查了企业寿命的实证发现,指出绝大多数企业(包括大型企业)存活时间较短,并讨论了这一现象的理论启示。

Abstract

Abstract Organizational survival represents a vital objective for firms, managers, and owners. Most organizational theories regard survival as the ‘correct’ outcome for firms whose managers successfully navigate across a hostile competitive landscape. On the other hand, when a firm ‘disappears,’ scholars, managers, and owners ask, What went wrong?' Failure, exit, bankruptcy, liquidation, hostile takeovers, are largely viewed as results of managerial ‘bungling.’ Many theories about performance, competitive advantage, legitimacy, and leadership rest upon a core assumption that firms, at least some of them, have long, perhaps limitless, life‐spans. Long‐term survival is not seen as merely a random outcome or an unattainable goal. This paper surveys a broad set of empirical findings about firms' life‐spans. It is consistently revealed in the empirical literature that the VAST majority of firms, even large firms, survive relatively short periods. Some themes and their implications are discussed. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

企业生存组织理论实证研究企业生命周期