The cornerstone of my research interests is the intersection between strategy and organizational theory. I study market and non-market responses to adverse events, such as natural disasters, which includes decision-making under uncertainty and risk and organizational learning. I seek to understand the conditions and mechanisms under which firms react to and learn from exogenous disruptive phenomena and the consequences of such responses on firm efficiency and competitiveness.
JOB MARKET PAPER
Halos or Horns?
The Social Construction of Timing Advantages under High Uncertainty, Ambiguity, and Time Pressure
The prevailing wisdom in the strategy literature is that the rents associated with the timing of organizational choices are endogenous to firm performance. Higher-performing first movers are more likely, on average, to accrue rents than lower-performing first movers. Likewise, followers will be better off imitating the former type of first mover, and differing or deviating from the choices of the latter type. Drawing upon institutional theory, I argue that the literature has overlooked the possibility that the stakeholders (e.g., customers) reacting to firms’ choices focus on features that are not only different from but also inversely correlated with firm performance. Elaborating upon this intuition, I develop a theoretical argumentation that identifies media reputation as a key firm-specific feature that stakeholders use in forming beliefs about the firm’s capacity and willingness to meet their expectations in the face of uncertainty and ambiguity. Analysis of the corporate giving of 5,845 firms from 74 countries in the aftermath of 4,637 natural disasters affecting the world in the period 2003-2015 provides support for my arguments. In the context of my sample, firms underestimate the value of media reputation and overestimate the value of financial standing. This explains the frequent observation of firms with bad reputations moving first and being mimicked by other firms, with both the first mover and the following firms suffering performance losses. Similarly, I find that the reputation of the first mover, on average, overrides the reputation of the follower: a bad-reputation imitator of a reputable first mover is likely to realize performance benefits. Finally, my findings suggest that in settings where uncertainty, ambiguity, and time pressure are pervasive, rents are not strongly associated with the physical characteristics of the firm or its choices, thus contradicting previous research suggesting that moving fast with a large and substantive action is more likely to accrue rents than a late, small and symbolic choice.
DISSERTATION
(SRF Dissertation Scholar)
Drivers and Consequences of Non-Market Decision-Making under Uncertainty, Ambiguity, and Time Pressure:
Evidence from Global Corporate Disaster Giving
In my dissertation, I use a proprietary dataset that I collected and coded during four years and comprises 74,131 responses of 34,258 firms to the population of natural disasters that affected the world in the period 2000-2015. I seek to understand whether, how, and the extent to which corporate engagement in the strategic provision of public goods in the aftermath of disasters explains variance in firm performance across national markets and social welfare. I do this with three lines of research:
- How the strength of a firm’s economic connection with a national market affects its decision to help such market in the context of disasters;
- How first movers’ public image, not associated with disaster giving, in combination with high uncertainty, affects stakeholder preferences of a contextually appropriate donation, creates strategic isomorphism among followers, and explains first-mover and follower advantages;
- How firms’ dynamic capabilities in disaster response help countries recover faster and greater than through aid from foreign national and multilateral agencies. (A study forthcoming in Academy of Management Journal).
My professional endeavors prior to Wharton–at JP Morgan, the United Nations Development Program, and the World Bank–inspired and fueled this interest and my understanding of business responses to systemic risk.
Dissertation Committee:
Mauro Guillen
Witold Henisz (Chair)
Exequiel Hernandez
Uri Simonsohn (OPIM)
Michael Useem
Tyler Wry