天生爱冒险?CEO出生顺序对战略风险承担的影响

Born to Take Risk? The Effect of CEO Birth Order on Strategic Risk Taking

ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL · 2018
被引 144
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

基于进化理论,研究CEO出生顺序与战略风险承担的关系,发现出生较早的CEO风险承担较少,且受兄弟姐妹竞争因素调节,对理解高管决策有参考价值。

Abstract

The importance of birth order has been the subject of debate for centuries, and has captured the attention of the general public and researchers alike. Despite this interest, scholars have little understanding of the impact birth order has on CEOs and their strategic decisions. With this in mind, we develop theory that explains how CEO birth order may be associated with strategic risk taking. Drawing from evolutionary theory arguments related to birth order, we theorize that CEO birth order is positively associated with strategic risk taking; that is, earlier-born CEOs will take less risk than later-born CEOs. As evolutionary theory proposes that birth order effects are driven by sibling rivalry, we also argue that this relationship is moderated by three factors related to sibling rivalry: age gap between a CEO and the closest born sibling, CEO age, and the presence of a sibling CEO. Our results provide support for our theorizing and suggest that birth order may have important implications for organizations. We believe this study helps advance strategic management research, the broader multidisciplinary “family science” literature, and the much-needed cross-pollination of ideas between the two.

战略管理公司治理行为金融高管决策