回到学校:ceo在职业生涯前对宗教的接触、公司的冒险和创新

IF 0.7 Q4 MANAGEMENT Irish Journal of Management Pub Date : 2022-09-15 DOI:10.1177/01492063221076816
Guoli Chen, S. Luo, Yi Tang, J. Tong
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引用次数: 4

摘要

最近的研究表明,首席执行官早期的个人经历会影响他或她后来作为高管的决策。我们的研究扩展了这一新兴的研究流,考察了首席执行官在职业生涯前对宗教的接触如何影响其公司的冒险行为和随后的创新绩效。根据发展心理学研究和印记理论,我们认为,上过宗教学院的首席执行官更有可能发展或强化他们的风险厌恶心态。当他们处于高层管理职位时,这种情况会延续到他们的职业生涯中,这会导致他们公司的冒险行为减少,最终导致公司创新水平降低。通过对美国上市公司的大量样本分析,我们发现强有力地支持了我们的假设:由上过宗教学院的ceo管理的公司往往更不愿意承担风险;当公司有更多董事会成员在入职前接触过宗教时,这种影响会更强;此外,企业的风险承担行为在CEO职前宗教暴露与企业创新的负向关系中起中介作用。我们讨论了本研究对战略领导文献、企业风险承担和创新研究的启示。
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Back to School: CEOs’ Pre-Career Exposure to Religion, Firm's Risk-Taking, and Innovation
Recent research has shown that a CEO's personal experiences in his or her early days have an influence on his or her decision-making as an executive later on. Our study extends this emerging stream of research by examining how CEOs’ pre-career exposure to religion affects their firms’ risk-taking and subsequent innovation performance. Drawing upon developmental psychology research and imprinting theory, we argue that CEOs who have attended a religious college are more likely to develop or reinforce their risk-averse mentality. This carries over to their professional life when they are in a top management position, and it leads to less risk-taking behavior in their firms and ultimately a lower level of firm innovation. Using a large sample of U.S. publicly listed companies, we find strong support on our hypotheses: Firms managed by CEOs who attended a religious college tend to be less risk-taking; this effect is stronger when the firm has more board members with pre-career exposure to religion; in addition, the firm's risk-taking behavior mediates the negative relationship between CEO pre-career religious exposure and firm innovation. We discuss the implications of our study for the strategic leadership literature, firm's risk-taking, and innovation research.
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