Leveraging and transferring management practices in organizations

dc.contributor.advisorLazzarini, Sérgio Giovanetti
dc.contributor.authorTeodorovicz, Thomaz
dc.contributor.otherCabral, Sandro
dc.coverage.spatialSão Paulopt_BR
dc.creatorTeodorovicz, Thomaz
dc.date.accessioned2020-02-13T17:47:02Z
dc.date.accessioned2021-09-13T02:20:34Z
dc.date.available2019
dc.date.available2020-02-13T17:47:02Z
dc.date.available2021-09-13T02:20:34Z
dc.date.issued2019
dc.date.submitted2019
dc.description.otherStrategy focuses on explaining heterogeneous performance across agents, firms, and organizational arrangements. In the last couple of decades, a growing body of empirical research has started to study how heterogeneous adoption to management practices could be a main driver of performance differentials across and within organizations.. In this dissertation, I intend to jointly advance these literatures while refining strategic management theory. In my first study, I theoretically argue and empirically verify that traditional resource-based and practice-based explanations of superior performance are intrinsically intertwined. I use data from over 9,000 public and private high schools in Brazil to show that if resources and practices both have a direct effect on performance, resource endowments also affect the adoption of superior management practices. In my second study, I explore how organizations could benefit from strategically leveraging the performance enhancing potential of management practices by investing in partners’ management capital. In a setting of a partnership with Base-of-the-Pyramid entrepreneurs, I use highly detailed data from a single firm to show that investing in partners’ management capital may both boost performance and increase partnership strength. I argue that such dual role for management capital transfer is due to a relational cue given by the firm to a resource-constrained partner. Finally, in my last study I continue studying strategies to leverage management practices by turning my focus to the relative performance of alternative methods to disseminate practices across organizational units. Using two field experiment with real managers from a real firm, I show how the credibility of the individual transferring a practice may be a double-edged sword: while it may enhance practice adoption, it may encourage the adoption of only a subset of practices associated with the source’s expertise. I also show that tacit transfer methods, i.e. methods allowing for interaction between individuals and personalization, outperform explicit transfer methods, i.e. methods without interaction and personalization, in terms of the transfer of previously unscripted knowledge content of a practices. In sum, in this dissertation I cover not only the effects of management practices on performance and actionable strategies to leverage their potential to create value, but I also do it so while proposing refinements and advances to strategic management theory.pt_BR
dc.format.extent159 f.pt_BR
dc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.insper.edu.br/handle/11224/2555
dc.language.isoInglêspt_BR
dc.rights.uriTODOS OS DOCUMENTOS DESSA COLEÇÃO PODEM SER ACESSADOS, MANTENDO-SE OS DIREITOS DOS AUTORES PELA CITAÇÃO DA ORIGEM.pt_BR
dc.subjectPráticas de administração; Capital humano; Transferência de conhecimento; Insider econometricspt_BR
dc.titleLeveraging and transferring management practices in organizationspt_BR
dc.typedoctoral thesis
dspace.entity.typePublication
local.typeTesept_BR

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