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The fallacy of “only the strong survive”: The effects of extrinsic motivation on the persistence decisions for under-performing firms
Authors:Dawn R. DeTienne   Dean A. Shepherd  Julio O. De Castro  
Affiliation:a207 Rockwell Hall, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80523, United States;bIndiana University, Kelley School of Business, Bloomington, IN 47406, United States;cInstituto de Empresa, Serrano 105, 28006 Madrid, Spain
Abstract:Under-performing firms persist even though existing theoretical perspectives indicate that they should be selected out of the market. Building upon threshold theory [Gimeno, J., Folta, T., Cooper, A., Woo, C., 1997. Survival of the fittest? Entrepreneurial human capital and the persistence of underperforming firms. Administrative Science Quarterly 42, 750–783.] and using Staw's [Staw, B.M., 1981. The escalation of commitment to a course of action. Academy of Management Review 6 (4), 577–587.] theoretical model of commitment to a course of action, we explore and test the factors that lead entrepreneurs to persist with under-performing firms. We found environmental munificence, personal investment, personal options, previous organizational success, and perceived collective efficacy impact the decision to persist with an under-performing firm. In addition, extrinsic motivation moderates those relationships. This research adds to the growing literature on highly persistent, under-performing firms and complements and extends threshold theory.
Keywords:Threshold theory   Persistence   Commitment   Conjoint analysis
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