2000
DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1097-0266(200002)21:2<155::aid-smj82>3.0.co;2-2
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Curvilinearity in the diversification-performance linkage: an examination of over three decades of research

Abstract: While an extensive literature examines the diversification‐performance relationship, little agreement exists concerning the nature of this relationship. Both theoretical and empirical disagreements abound. This study synthesizes findings from three decades of research to address major theoretical issues that remain open to debate. We derive three competing models from the literature and empirically assess these using meta‐analytic data drawn from 55 previously published studies. The results of our tests indica… Show more

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Cited by 823 publications
(803 citation statements)
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References 151 publications
(123 reference statements)
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“…Several authors suggest that there is a nonlinear relationship between risk and diversification (54,55), and a nonparametric fitting of the data suggests a concave relationship between CV and HHI (Fig. S1).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…Several authors suggest that there is a nonlinear relationship between risk and diversification (54,55), and a nonparametric fitting of the data suggests a concave relationship between CV and HHI (Fig. S1).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…While research on the scope of the firm started with a focus on product scope, more recent work has called for taking into account of both product scope and geographic scope of the firm (Delios & Beamish, 1999;Geringer, Tallman, & Olsen, 2000;Hitt, Hoskisson, & Kim, 1997;Hutzschenreuter & Grone, 2009;Kumar, 2009;Peng & Delios, 2006). While over three decades of research since Rumelt (1974) has shed considerable light on the scope of the firm (Palich, Cardinal, & Miller, 2000), no previous work has investigated the relationship between the scope of the firm and an important new phenomenon associated with globalization that we believe has significant ramifications on the scope of the firm-cross-listing.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These results seem to support the curvilinear model: firm performance increases as firms move from a single business strategy to related diversification but decreases as firms shift from related diversification to unrelated diversification. In addition, much other empirical evidence supports the curvilinear model directly or indirectly (e.g., Singh & Montgomery, 1987;Markides, 1992;Lubatkin & Chatterjee, 1994;Markides & Williamson, 1994;Palich et al 2000). Figure 1 demonstrates the conceptualized model of the overall relationships among dynamic capabilities, diversification, and firm performance.…”
Section: Dynamic Capabilities and Firm Performancementioning
confidence: 88%
“…Palepu's (1985) study shows that firms with predominantly related diversification show significantly better profit growth than do firms with predominantly unrelated diversification. After synthesizing more than three decades of research using meta-analysis, Palich, Cardinal, and Miller (2000) suggest that moderate levels of diversification produce higher levels of performance than either single or unrelated diversification. These results seem to support the curvilinear model: firm performance increases as firms move from a single business strategy to related diversification but decreases as firms shift from related diversification to unrelated diversification.…”
Section: Dynamic Capabilities and Firm Performancementioning
confidence: 99%
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