Founding the Future: Path Dependence in the Evolution of Top Management Teams from Founding to IPO

  • Christine M. Beckman
    Paul Merage School of Business, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California 92697
  • M. Diane Burton
    Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142

Description

<jats:p> We contrast life-cycle and path-dependent views of entrepreneurial firms by examining the evolution of top management teams. We show how initial conditions constrain subsequent outcomes by demonstrating that the founding team's prior functional experiences and initial organizational functional structures predict subsequent top manager backgrounds and later functional structures. We find that narrowly experienced teams have trouble adding functional expertise not already embodied in the team. We also find that firms beginning with a limited range of functional positions are less likely to develop complete functional structures. Importantly, we do not find functional structure and functional experience to be interchangeable. We find that firms beginning with more complete functional structures are likely to go public faster, and firms beginning with broadly experienced team members obtain venture capital more quickly regardless of the experience and structural composition of the top management team in place at the time of these outcomes. Further, broadly experienced founding teams that build an early team with a full complement of functional positions achieve important milestones faster than firms that start with neither experience nor structure. This suggests that creating positions as “placeholders” in new ventures, where positions are created and filled with the intent of bringing individuals with more relevant experience onboard later, is not obviously a path by which to succeed. By examining the origins of top management team experience and functional structures, we illustrate the lasting imprint of founders on top management team composition and firm outcomes. </jats:p>

Journal

  • Organization Science

    Organization Science 19 (1), 3-24, 2008-02

    Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)

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