Short-Term Projects and Emergent Careers: Evidence from Hollywood

The Hollywood film industry is considered as a system of recurrent ties among the various major participants who usually work under short-term contracts for single films. This form of project-based organization in seen as a response to uncertainty and risk in the film industry. The Paper examines the ways in which independent contractors-producers, directors, cinematographers, and actors-organize and operate to reduce uncertainty and risk and to increase profits. The analysis of data from 2,430 films made in the period 1965-80 establishes patterns of recurrent ties among participants who are at comparable levels of cumulative productivity with respect to earnings, Oscars, Oscar nominations, and number of previous films. The paper also considers the degree to which film earnings are influenced by the past productivity of the major participants.

[1]  Tom R. Burns,et al.  The Management of Innovation. , 1963 .

[2]  James G. March,et al.  Almost Random Careers: The Wisconsin School Superintendency, 1940-1972. , 1977 .

[3]  C. Perrow A FRAMEWORK FOR THE COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF ORGANIZATIONS , 1967 .

[4]  S. Spilerman,et al.  Careers, Labor Market Structure, and Socioeconomic Achievement , 1977, American Journal of Sociology.

[5]  A. Stinchcombe Stratification and Organization: Bureaucratic and craft administration of production: a comparative study , 1959 .

[6]  O. Williamson Markets and Hierarchies , 1975 .

[7]  A. Stinchcombe Constructing Social Theories , 1970 .

[8]  Kathleen L. Gregory Signing-up : the culture and careers of Silicon Valley computer people , 1984 .

[9]  H. White,et al.  Where do markets come from , 1981 .

[10]  Dieter Suhr The Transaction Cost Approach , 1989 .

[11]  Henry Mintzberg,et al.  The Structuring of Organizations , 1979 .

[12]  D. Garvin Blockbusters: The economics of mass entertainment , 1981 .

[13]  Chains of Opportunity: System Models of Mobility in Organizations. , 1971 .

[14]  A. Strauss,et al.  Careers, Personality, and Adult Socialization , 1956, American Journal of Sociology.

[15]  O. Williamson The Economics of Organization: The Transaction Cost Approach , 1981, American Journal of Sociology.

[16]  H. White,et al.  Chains of Opportunity , 2014 .

[17]  P. Hirsch Processing Fads and Fashions: An Organization-Set Analysis of Cultural Industry Systems , 1972, American Journal of Sociology.

[18]  L. Urwick Papers on the science of administration , 1938 .

[19]  J. S. Long,et al.  Cumulative Advantage and Inequality in Science , 1982 .

[20]  Henry Mintzberg,et al.  Strategy Formation in an Adhocracy. , 1985 .

[21]  Jerome L. Martin,et al.  Chains of Opportunity , 1971 .

[22]  Joan C. Woodward Industrial Organization: Theory and Practice , 1966 .

[23]  Jay R. Galbraith Designing Complex Organizations , 1973 .

[24]  M. Wolfson,et al.  The Motion-Picture Industry , 1953 .

[25]  Wayne E. Baker,et al.  The Social Structure of a National Securities Market , 1984, American Journal of Sociology.

[26]  Judith R. Blau,et al.  Architects and Firms , 1984 .

[27]  R. Eccles The quasifirm in the construction industry , 1981 .

[28]  Mark S. Granovetter Economic Action and Social Structure: The Problem of Embeddedness , 1985, American Journal of Sociology.

[29]  P. Lawrence,et al.  Organization and environment , 1967 .

[30]  K. Weick Educational organizations as loosely coupled systems , 1976, Gestión y Estrategia.