Founding Conditions, Learning, and Organizational Life Chances: Age Dependence Revisited

Empirical evidence about the relation between organizational age and failure is mixed, and theoretical explanations are conflicting. We show that a simple model of organizational evolution can explain the main patterns of age dependence and reconcile the apparently conflicting theoretical predictions. In our framework, the predicted pattern of age dependence depends crucially on the quality of organizational performance immediately after founding and its subsequent evolution, which in turn depends on the intensity of competition. In developing our theory, we clarify issues of levels of analysis as well as the relations between organizational fitness, endowment, organizational capital, and the hazard of failure. We show that once organizational learning is considered, founding conditions affect the fate of organizations in ways more complex than previously acknowledged. We illustrate how the predictions of our theory can be tested empirically and evaluate the effect of aging on the mortality hazards of American microbreweries and brewpubs by estimating the parameters of a random walk with time-varying drift. We also make some conjectures about expected patterns in other empirical settings.

[1]  M. Hannan,et al.  On the Dynamics of Organizational Mortality: Age-Dependence Revisited , 2010 .

[2]  J. Vaupel,et al.  The impact of heterogeneity in individual frailty on the dynamics of mortality , 1979, Demography.

[3]  R Smith Halo Effect , 1988, Encyclopedia of Biometrics.

[4]  P. Rosenzweig The Halo Effect , 2007 .

[5]  Glenn R. Carroll,et al.  Logics of Organization Theory: Audiences, Codes, and Ecologies , 2007 .

[6]  James N. Baron,et al.  Organizational identities and the hazard of change , 2006 .

[7]  Jerker Denrell,et al.  Random Walks and Sustained Competitive Advantage , 2004, Manag. Sci..

[8]  Michael T. Hannan,et al.  A logic for theories in flux: a model-theoretic approach , 2004 .

[9]  Michael T. Hannan,et al.  4. Reasoning with Partial Knowledge , 2002 .

[10]  M. Diane Burton,et al.  7. Coming from good stock: Career histories and new venture formation , 2002 .

[11]  Scott Shane,et al.  Special Issue on University Entrepreneurship and Technology Transfer: Organizational Endowments and the Performance of University Start-ups , 2002, Manag. Sci..

[12]  G. Carroll,et al.  Why the Microbrewery Movement? Organizational Dynamics of Resource Partitioning in the U.S. Brewing Industry1 , 2000, American Journal of Sociology.

[13]  Jesper B. Sørensen,et al.  Aging, Obsolescence, and Organizational Innovation , 2000 .

[14]  H. Rao,et al.  The Demography of Corporations and Industries , 1999 .

[15]  Stanislav D. Dobrev,et al.  Organizational mortality in European and American automobile industries. Part I : Revisiting the effects of age and size , 1998 .

[16]  M. Hannan Rethinking Age Dependence in Organizational Mortality: Logical Fromalizations1 , 1998, American Journal of Sociology.

[17]  Carolyn Y. Woo,et al.  Survival of the Fittest? Entrepreneurial Human Capital and the Persistence of Underperforming Firms , 1997 .

[18]  M. Hannan,et al.  A Time to Grow and a Time to Die: Growth and Mortality of Credit Unions in New York City, 1914-1990 , 1994, American Journal of Sociology.

[19]  Samuel B. Bacharach,et al.  Research in the Sociology of Organization. , 1994 .

[20]  Paul A. Ruud,et al.  Handbook of Econometrics: Classical Estimation Methods for LDV Models Using Simulation , 1993 .

[21]  K. Delaney,et al.  Strategic Bankruptcy: How Corporations and Creditors Use Chapter 11 to Their Advantage , 1992 .

[22]  Daniel A. Levinthal Random Walks and Organizational Mortality , 1991 .

[23]  Daniel A. Levinthal,et al.  Honeymoons and the Liability of Adolescence: A New Perspective on Duration Dependence in Social and Organizational Relationships , 1991 .

[24]  J. Brüderl,et al.  Organizational Mortality: The Liabilities of Newness and Adolescence. , 1990 .

[25]  G. Carroll,et al.  Density Delay in the Evolution of Organizational Populations: A Model and Five Empirical Tests , 1989 .

[26]  Glenn R. Carroll,et al.  Ecological models of organizations , 1988 .

[27]  Donald C. Hambrick,et al.  Large Corporate Failures as Downward Spirals , 1988 .

[28]  Glenn R. Carroll,et al.  Concentration and Specialization: Dynamics of Niche Width in Populations of Organizations , 1985, American Journal of Sociology.

[29]  M. Hannan,et al.  Social Dynamics: Models and Methods. , 1986 .

[30]  Glenn R. Carroll,et al.  A stochastic model of organizational mortality: Review and reanalysis☆ , 1983 .

[31]  G. Carroll,et al.  The Liability of Newness: Age Dependence in Organizational Death Rates , 1983 .

[32]  S. Winter,et al.  An evolutionary theory of economic change , 1983 .

[33]  G. Carroll,et al.  Errata: Organizational Mortality in the Newspaper Industries of Argentina and Ireland: An Ecological Approach , 1982 .

[34]  Gavin J. Wright An evolutionary theory of economic change , 1982 .

[35]  J. March,et al.  Handbook of organizations , 1966 .

[36]  N. Ryder The cohort as a concept in the study of social change. , 1965, American sociological review.

[37]  A. Stinchcombe Organizations and Social Structure , 1965 .