IPO公司中人与绩效的平衡:CEO财务背景的影响

The People/Performance Balance in IPO Firms: The Effect of the Chief Executive Officer's Financial Orientation

ENTREPRENEURSHIP THEORY AND PRACTICE · 2000
被引 62
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

研究发现CEO的财务背景与IPO公司较低的人力资源价值相关,但并未带来短期财务收益最大化,为理解IPO公司如何平衡短期与长期绩效提供了新视角。

Abstract

Welbourne and Andrews (1996) studied IPO firms and found that Tobin's Q, at the time of the IPO, was lower for firms that they coded as having higher levels of human resource value (HR Value). However, those same firms were more likely to survive five years after the IPO. Given that finding, this study examines one factor that may influence the firm's choice between maximizing short-term financial performance (doing well at the IPO) or long-term performance (maximizing HR value). Using the theory of upper echelons (Hambrick & Mason, 1984), we show that the decision on how to balance these forces is shaped in part by the chief executive officer's (CEO) functional background. We focus on CEOs with primary training in finance because they will most closely identify with investment community pressures to perform well at the time of the IPO. In two different samples of IPO firms, we find that the CEO's financial background is associated with lower levels of human resource value, but, contrary to what we expected, having a finance-oriented CEO does not maximize short-term gains in the IPO.

首次公开募股CEO背景人力资源管理公司绩效高层梯队理论