稳赢、长线博弈与势均力敌:活动家与企业之间的战略互动

Safe Bets, Long Shots, and Toss-Ups: Strategic Engagements Between Activists and Firms

Management Science · 2023
被引 4
人大 A+FT50UTD24ABS 4*

中文导读

通过博弈模型分析活动家不同动机如何影响其与企业的战略互动,预测企业何时选择自我监管、如何防御,以及三类互动(稳赢、长线博弈、势均力敌)的发生条件。

Abstract

We use a game-theoretic model to examine how different types of activist motivation affect strategic interactions between an activist and a firm in the context of a threatened adversarial engagement, in which the activist can benefit from “warm glow” and media publicity as well as from firm compliance with activist demands. The model yields novel predictions about when firms prefer to self-regulate to pre-empt a contested engagement, how vigorously firms defend themselves against the activist’s attack if an engagement occurs, and a new taxonomy of engagements, characterized by offensive and defensive strategies and the likelihood of activist success. The model predicts that when warm glow and campaign-driven wins are important motivations for activists, safe bet and long shot types of engagements are more likely to occur: These tend to be lower expenditure skirmishes where one party has a clear advantage and where a pre-emptive settlement is infeasible. By contrast, firms and activists are more likely to negotiate self-regulation that pre-empts resource-intensive toss-up engagements where each side is evenly matched and expends significant effort. Our findings contribute to strategic management research by developing new insights about how firms respond to different activist motivations and types of engagements. We explore extensions of the model and discuss implications for future empirical and theoretical research on the management of activist relations. This paper was accepted by Joshua Gans, business strategy. Supplemental Material: The online appendix is available at https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2022.01638 .

博弈论模型激进主义动机企业自我规制战略互动