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INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITIES AND ENTREPRENEURIAL ADVANTAGE PDF

377 Pages·2014·5.9 MB·English
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INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITIES AND ENTREPRENEURIAL ADVANTAGE: BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN REGULATORY MANAGEMENT AND OPPORTUNITY By CHRISTOPHER GARRETT PRYOR Bachelor of Arts/Journalism University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma 2004 Master of Business Administration Oklahoma State University Stillwater, Oklahoma 2009 Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate College of the Oklahoma State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY July 2014 INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITIES AND ENTREPRENEURIAL ADVANTAGE: BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN REGULATORY MANAGEMENT AND OPPORTUNITY Dissertation Approved: Justin Webb Dissertation Adviser Robert Baron Michael Morris David Knottnerus ii Name: CHRISTOPHER GARRETT PRYOR Date of Degree: JULY 2014 Title of Study: INSTITUTIONAL CAPABILITIES AND ENTREPRENEURIAL ADVANTAGE: BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN REGULATORY MANAGEMENT AND OPPORTUNITY Major Field: Ph.D., Entrepreneurship Abstract: Firms are increasingly using tactics to manipulate their regulatory constraints, while at the same time regulatory environments are becoming increasingly complex and dynamic. Although scholars have described many of the activities firms use to change their institutional environments, this research has largely examined the manipulation and creation of informal institutions, such as organizational forms or social customs or traditions. We have much less understanding about 1) what drives firms to manipulate formal, regulatory institutions, and 2) why firms might differ in their abilities to create institutional change. This dissertation addresses these issues by linking regulatory constraint manipulation to entrepreneurial outcomes – specifically, the pursuit of valuable business opportunities – and it proposes that firms may develop institutional capabilities, which enable them to pursue competitive advantage strategies that rely considerably on institutional manipulation. iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter Page I. INTRODUCTION .....................................................................................................1 II. LITERATURE REVIEW ..........................................................................................8 Institutional Theory ..................................................................................................8 Organizational Capabilities ....................................................................................28 III. HYPOTHESES ......................................................................................................46 IV. METHODOLOGY ................................................................................................58 V. RESULTS .............................................................................................................85 VI. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION ..................................................................92 REFERENCES ..........................................................................................................109 APPENDICES ...........................................................................................................182 iv LIST OF TABLES Table Page 1 129 2 131 3 132 4 133 5 134 6 142 7 145 8 146 9 150 10a-10o 151 11 165 12 165 13 166 14 167 15 168 16 169 17 170 18 171 19 172 20a-20b 172 v LIST OF FIGURES Figure Page I 174 II 175 III 176 IVa 177 Va 177 IVb 178 Vb 178 VI 179 VII 180 VIII 180 IX 181 vi CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION A wide array of legal statutes, regulations, codes, laws, and constitutions constrain the objectives organizations may pursue and how they pursue them, and when these constraints are violated by an organization, the organization, its employees and its leaders may face punitive measures, including fines or prison sentences. While organizations retain a great deal of discretion in setting and pursuing objectives, many of their activities are nevertheless closely monitored and constrained by the proscriptions of national, state, and local governments (Edelman & Suchman, 1997; Laeven & Levine, 2009). Some industries, such as defense contracting, nuclear energy production, banking and finance, and healthcare, are heavily regulated and subject to multiple levels of regulations, which are often produced and enforced by government agencies specifically created to monitor a particular industry. For example, hospitals are constrained by regulations from several federal-level agencies, such as the Department of Health and Human Services and the Food and Drug Administration, as well as state- and local- level agencies. Even organizations in lightly regulated environments are still subject to complex, federal- and state-level proscriptions regarding how they hire, pay and fire employees, how they maintain workplace safety, and even how they build their buildings and install wiring, hot water tanks, and other hardware. Table 1 provides many more examples of industries and agencies that regulate them. -------------------------------- Please see Table 1 --------------------------------- 1 These regulatory constraints, which are a type of formal institution (e.g., North, 1990; Scott, 2001), constitute a critical part of the broader mosaic of the “rules of the game” that constrain the behavior of all individuals and organizations within society.1 Formal institutions are codified and enforceable constraints, which range from unwritten contracts to the written constitutions of states and nations. Organizations are compelled to obey formal institutions because they are enforced through the coercive power of the legal entities of state (Ostrom, 1986). Informal institutions may also be defined as constraints in that they limit the range of behavior that may characterize social interactions between actors. However, in contrast with formal institutions, informal institutions are not explicit or codified, they are not usually enforced through coercion, and they are less malleable than formal institutions because they are the outcome of generations’ worth of past interactions (North, 1990). Entrepreneurs, who uncover and exploit opportunities to create customer value through introducing innovative products and services (Choi, Levesque, & Shepherd, 2008; Shane & Venkataraman, 2000; Shane, 2012) are constrained by extensive and complex regulatory environments. Regulations shape the environment in which entrepreneurs are embedded and influence the variety of opportunities entrepreneurs may uncover as well as limit their means of exploitation (Baumol, 1990; Meek, Pacheco, & York, 2010; Shane, 1993). Consider, for example, the opportunity to manufacture and sell roulette machines to casinos. Such an opportunity exists in Oklahoma for roulette machine manufacturers while it does not in Texas, 1 North (1990) draws sharp contrast between institutions, which he refers to as the “rules of the game,” and organizations. He writes: “what must be clearly differentiated are the rules from the players.” This dissertation takes into consideration both regulation and regulatory agencies; therefore, to avoid confounding both as “institutions,” I adopt herein a strict adherence to North’s definition of institutions as constraints on individual and organizational behavior, which are distinct from the organizations that create them. In other words, a regulation, law, or statute may be an institution, while an agency, political body, social movement, or any other organization are not institutions. Furthermore, to maintain this conceptual clarity for myself and for the reader, I will refer to institutions primarily by their function; hence, constraints, proscriptions, restraints or limits. 2 which is an outcome of the difference between regulatory environments across both states. Or consider the example of the front-yard lemonade stand. While the opportunity to have such a stand is not prohibited, entrepreneurs hoping to exploit the opportunity must first obtain licenses for food handling or risk being shut down. While organizations may accept, acquiesce, and conform to their regulatory environments (Meyer & Rowan, 1977; Zucker, 1987), organizations that encounter constraints that are especially burdensome or costly may be more likely to attempt to alter their regulatory environments (Oliver, 1991; Seo & Creed, 2002). Scholars have increasingly examined the relationship between firms and their regulatory or broader institutional environments. Institutional theorists have described the strategic approaches firms may adopt in relation to their institutional constraints, such as attempting to avoid, manipulate, or defy these constraints (e.g., Oliver, 1991; Zimmerman & Zeitz, 2002). Under the aegides of institutional entrepreneurship and corporate political activity, scholars have also cataloged the various tactics firms and other actors use to manipulate institutions or to create new ones (e.g., Lawrence & Suddaby, 2006; Pacheco, York, Dean, Sarasvathy, 2010; Hillman, Keim, & Schuler, 2004). These tactics include a wide range of activities, including simple political advocacy to more complex activities such as framing and social movement organization. Scholars have also described the means through which these activities take place, especially the role discourse (i.e., spoken or written interactions) plays in creating and maintaining new or altered institutions (e.g., Lawrence & Phillips, 2004). And finally, scholars, in attempting to address the paradox constituted by the notion of constrained actors altering their constraints (Garud, Hardy, & Maguire, 2007; Leca & Naccache, 2006), have attempted to describe the conditions under which actors may nevertheless escape their restraints to effect change, such as the existence of conflicting or contradictory 3 constraints (e.g., Battilana, Leca, & Boxenbaum, 2009; Greenwood & Suddaby, 2006; Maguire, Hardy, & Lawrence, 2004), and the resources deployed by these actors, such as power and knowledge (e.g., Kahn, Munir, & Willmott, 2007; Levy & Scully, 2007). Although past research has made notable progress regarding the tactics and strategies organizations may use to alter their institutional environments, scholars have largely examined issues related to the neoinstitutionalism of DiMaggio and Powell (1983) and have therefore focused on explaining how new forms of organizations are created and institutionalized and how actors may surmount institutional pressures to effect this type of change. We have much less understanding regarding why and how already-established firms may pursue institutional change as a central component of obtaining and sustaining competitive advantage and why some firms may be better at wielding such influence than others. More specifically, no framework yet exists that describes firms’ routine activities to interact with and manipulate legal regulatory constraints and the role these routine activities play in facilitating regulatory change, despite scholars’ suggestion that such routine activities may be vital to firm performance (Bagley, 2008, 2010). In addition, the links between these routines and entrepreneurial outcomes, such as opportunity identification and exploitation, have not yet been established. This dissertation tells the story of why and how firms may pursue the core entrepreneurial functions of opportunity identification and exploitation through developing capabilities to interact with and manipulate the legal regulatory institutions that constrain them. To tell this story, this dissertation integrates institutional theory, especially institutional entrepreneurship research, and organizational capabilities perspective. Institutional theory (DiMaggio & Powell, 1983; North, 1990; Scott, 2001) concerns the relationship between formal and informal constraints and organizations’ behavior. Organizational capabilities perspective (Barney & 4

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federal- and state-level proscriptions regarding how they hire, pay and fire maintain workplace safety, and even how they build their buildings and institutional constraints, such as attempting to avoid, manipulate, or defy .. of simplicity, Figure 1 presents a single formal institutional constra
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