Certifications and Reputation: Determining the Standard of Desirability Amidst Uncertainty

We develop a theory that examines how a particular type of third-party quality signal, certifications, influences an actor's long-term reputation by addressing two different types of uncertainty. The first type deals with the degree to which the capabilities of an actor can be inferred over time based on known performance dimensions. We label this technical uncertainty. The second type deals with assessing whether the perceived capabilities of the actor meet the standard of desirability, which we call performance standard uncertainty. We propose and test that certifications will positively influence the long-term reputation of actors in situations that involve minimal technical uncertainty, and that, across levels of technical performance, certifications will have an inverted U-shaped relationship with assessments of actors such that certifications will have the greatest impact on assessments of actors who are close to the uncertain standard of desirability. We test our hypotheses in the context of the voting for Major League Baseball's Hall of Fame, an environment where comprehensive technical performance measures leave little technical uncertainty. Our results support our hypotheses and suggest that certifications can influence an actor's reputation by reducing performance standard uncertainty rather than just technical uncertainty, as previously presumed.

[1]  Timothy G. Pollock,et al.  Media Legitimation Effects in the Market for Initial Public Offerings , 2003 .

[2]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect theory: an analysis of decision under risk — Source link , 2007 .

[3]  J. M. Macpherson,et al.  Global Competition, Institutions, and the Diffusion of Organizational Practices: The International Spread of ISO 9000 Quality Certificates , 2002 .

[4]  W. W. Muir,et al.  Regression Diagnostics: Identifying Influential Data and Sources of Collinearity , 1980 .

[5]  I. Fulmer,et al.  ARE THE 100 BEST BETTER? AN EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATION OF THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BEING A “GREAT PLACE TO WORK” AND FIRM PERFORMANCE , 2003 .

[6]  Gayle Woodside,et al.  ISO 14000 Guide: The New International Environmental Management Standards , 1996 .

[7]  Jeffrey Pfeffer,et al.  The Effect of Uncertainty on the Use of Social Influence in Organizational Decision Making. , 1976 .

[8]  Olivier Boiral,et al.  ISO 9000: Outside the Iron Cage , 2003, Organ. Sci..

[9]  E. Zajac,et al.  Status Evolution and Competition: Theory and Evidence , 2005 .

[10]  Jitendra V. Singh,et al.  Organizational Legitimacy and the Liability of Newness , 1986 .

[11]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect theory: analysis of decision under risk , 1979 .

[12]  L. Festinger A Theory of Social Comparison Processes , 1954 .

[13]  Charles J. Fombrun,et al.  Reputation: Realizing Value from the Corporate Image , 1996 .

[14]  Joel Podolny,et al.  Status, Quality, and Social Order in the California Wine Industry , 1999 .

[15]  Mark C. Suchman,et al.  Legitimacy in Organizational Institutionalism , 2009 .

[16]  James D. Thompson Organizations in Action , 1967 .

[17]  Pratima Bansal,et al.  Seeing the need for ISO 14001 , 2003 .

[18]  Freda Kemp Applied Multiple Regression/Correlation Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences , 2003 .

[19]  Richard A. D'Aveni A Multiple-constituency, Status-based Approach to Interorganizational Mobility of Faculty and Input-output Competition among Top Business Schools , 1996 .

[20]  Mustafa V. Uzumeri,et al.  ISO 9000 and other metastandards: Principles for management practice? , 1997 .

[21]  James B. Wade,et al.  The Impact of CEO Status Diffusion on the Economic Outcomes of Other Senior Managers , 2008, Organ. Sci..

[22]  Robert B. Wilson,et al.  Game-theoretic models of bargaining: Reputations in games and markets , 1985 .

[23]  Ulrike Malmendier,et al.  Superstar CEOS , 2005 .

[24]  Andrew A. King,et al.  The effect of certification with the ISO 9000 Quality Management Standard: A signaling approach , 2006 .

[25]  Peter Walgenbach,et al.  Technical Efficiency or Adaptation to Institutionalized Expectations? The Adoption of ISO 9000 Standards in the German Mechanical Engineering Industry , 2005 .

[26]  Rodolphe Durand,et al.  Legitimating Agencies in the Face of Selection: The Case of AACSB , 2005 .

[27]  H. Rao The Social Construction of Reputation: Certification Contests, Legitimation, and the Survival of Organizations in the American Automobile Industry: 1895–1912 , 1994 .

[28]  Nicole Darnall Why Firms Mandate ISO 14001 Certification , 2006 .

[29]  K. Weick,et al.  The Social Psychology of Organizing, 2d ed. , 1980 .

[30]  L. L. Martins,et al.  The Very Visible Hand of Reputational Rankings in US Business Schools , 1998 .

[31]  Roderick M. Kramer,et al.  Members' Responses to Organizational Identity Threats: Encountering and Countering the Business Week Rankings , 1996 .

[32]  C. Fombrun,et al.  What's in a Name? Reputation Building and Corporate Strategy , 1990 .

[33]  K. Weick The social psychology of organizing , 1969 .

[34]  David L. Deephouse,et al.  Media Reputation as a Strategic Resource: An Integration of Mass Communication and Resource-Based Theories , 1999 .

[35]  A. Tversky,et al.  Prospect Theory : An Analysis of Decision under Risk Author ( s ) : , 2007 .

[36]  Catherine M. Dalton,et al.  The influence of the financial press on stockholder wealth: the case of corporate governance , 2005 .

[38]  Hitoshi Mitsuhashi,et al.  From Plan to Plant: Effects of Certification on Operational Start-up in the Emergent Independent Power Sector , 2007, Organ. Sci..

[39]  J. Porac,et al.  FORTHCOMING IN ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL The Burden of Celebrity: The Impact of CEO Certification Contests on CEO Pay and Performance , 2006 .

[40]  T. Liao Interpreting Probability Models: Logit, Probit, and Other Generalized Linear Models , 1994 .

[41]  T. Ruefli,et al.  Intra-Industry Reputation Dynamics Under a Resource-Based Framework: Assessing the Durability Factor , 2006 .

[42]  A. Raveh,et al.  Conceptual maps of the leading MBA programs in the United States: core courses, concentration areas, and the ranking of the school , 1999 .

[43]  Antoaneta P. Petkova,et al.  Being good or being known: An empirical examination of the dimensions, antecedents, and consequences of organizational reputation , 2005 .

[44]  Ezra W. Zuckerman,et al.  The Categorical Imperative: Securities Analysts and the Illegitimacy Discount , 1999, American Journal of Sociology.

[45]  K. Weick FROM SENSEMAKING IN ORGANIZATIONS , 2021, The New Economic Sociology.

[46]  The Growth and Transformation of Educational Accrediting Agencies: An Exploratory Study in Social Control of Institutions , 1968 .