Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long‐term performance in China
Research summary: This study investigates the long-term performance of growth-oriented versus profit-oriented strategies in emerging markets. Theoretical justifications exist for superior performance for both types of strategic orientations, but we argue each orientation will have different implicat...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1441412023-05-19T07:31:16Z Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long‐term performance in China Zhou, Nan Park, Seung Ho Nanyang Business School Management Department, Business School of Nankai University, Tianjin, China Business Emerging Markets Firm Survival Research summary: This study investigates the long-term performance of growth-oriented versus profit-oriented strategies in emerging markets. Theoretical justifications exist for superior performance for both types of strategic orientations, but we argue each orientation will have different implications on firms' long-term survival in emerging markets. The growth-oriented strategy faces a shortage of non-scale free resources that would limit the firm's long-term survival, while the profit-oriented strategy would improve the chance of long-term survival by developing and leveraging firm-specific advantages for sustained growth. The study also examines the moderating effects of both the level of non-scale free resources and the extent to which the economic context favors growth. The empirical testing utilizes a sample of Chinese firms during 2008–2017. Managerial summary: Emerging markets present many growth opportunities. Firms often fall into the trap of blindly pursuing these opportunities without considering internal managerial capability. This study presents the theory-based logic and empirical evidence supporting the view that the profit-oriented strategy is likely to outperform the growth-oriented strategy on a long-term basis. The growth orientation strains managerial attention that is in short supplies in emerging markets and leads to inefficiencies that cause a decline in firm performance. These results are more apparent when firms lack managerial capability and in the context of growth-inducing economic policy during an economic downturn. Nanyang Technological University Accepted version Nankai University Asia Research Center, Grant/Award Number: AS1906 National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant/Award Number: 71902091 Nanyang Technological University, Nanyang Center for Emerging Markets 2020-10-15T07:25:13Z 2020-10-15T07:25:13Z 2020 Journal Article Zhou, N., & Park, S. H. (2020). Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long-term performance in China. Strategic Management Journal, 41(11), 2050–2071. doi:10.1002/smj.3193 0143-2095 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144141 10.1002/smj.3193 11 41 2050 2071 en AS1906 71902091 Strategic Management Journal This is the accepted version of the following article: Zhou, N., & Park, S. H. (2020). Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long-term performance in China. Strategic Managementt Journal, 41(11), 2050–2071. doi:10.1002/smj.3193, which has been published in final form at10.1002/smj.3193. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with the Wiley Self-Archiving Policy [https://authorservices.wiley.com/authorresources/Journal-Authors/licensing/self-archiving.html]. application/pdf |
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Business Emerging Markets Firm Survival Zhou, Nan Park, Seung Ho Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long‐term performance in China |
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Research summary: This study investigates the long-term performance of growth-oriented versus profit-oriented strategies in emerging markets. Theoretical justifications exist for superior performance for both types of strategic orientations, but we argue each orientation will have different implications on firms' long-term survival in emerging markets. The growth-oriented strategy faces a shortage of non-scale free resources that would limit the firm's long-term survival, while the profit-oriented strategy would improve the chance of long-term survival by developing and leveraging firm-specific advantages for sustained growth. The study also examines the moderating effects of both the level of non-scale free resources and the extent to which the economic context favors growth. The empirical testing utilizes a sample of Chinese firms during 2008–2017.
Managerial summary: Emerging markets present many growth opportunities. Firms often fall into the trap of blindly pursuing these opportunities without considering internal managerial capability. This study presents the theory-based logic and empirical evidence supporting the view that the profit-oriented strategy is likely to outperform the growth-oriented strategy on a long-term basis. The growth orientation strains managerial attention that is in short supplies in emerging markets and leads to inefficiencies that cause a decline in firm performance. These results are more apparent when firms lack managerial capability and in the context of growth-inducing economic policy during an economic downturn. |
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Nanyang Business School |
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Nanyang Business School Zhou, Nan Park, Seung Ho |
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Zhou, Nan Park, Seung Ho |
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Zhou, Nan |
title |
Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long‐term performance in China |
title_short |
Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long‐term performance in China |
title_full |
Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long‐term performance in China |
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Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long‐term performance in China |
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Growth or profit? Strategic orientations and long‐term performance in China |
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growth or profit? strategic orientations and long‐term performance in china |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144141 |
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