2016
DOI: 10.5465/amj.2014.0526
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Misfit and Milestones: Structural Elaboration and Capability Reinforcement in the Evolution of Entrepreneurial Top Management Teams

Abstract: We examine how "top management team (TMT) misfit," or discrepancies between the TMT's functional roles and the qualifications of the managers who fill those roles, affects the evolution of TMT composition and structure in a longitudinal study of entrepreneurial ventures. We distinguish two types of misfit-overqualification and underqualificationand study how each is associated with TMT changes. We further consider the moderating effect of firm development. Results reveal that underqualified TMTs hire new manag… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Exactly how research‐intensive firms develop, create value, and thrive and exactly whose competences are the driving force behind success are topics of considerable complexity and interest in the field of entrepreneurship. Yet, few prior studies have addressed organizational design issues related to the competences and roles of a venture's managers, such as their functional specialization (Beckman & Burton, ; Ferguson, Cohen, Burton, & Beckman, ), the adoption of managerial practices (Baron, Burton, & Hannan, ; Colombo, Piva, & Rossi‐Lamastra, ), and changes in terms of founder control of the board and/or the CEO position (Wasserman, ). An important organizational design issue that has yet to receive significant research attention relates to the design of research and development (R&D) teams and the role of founders in R&D in particular.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Exactly how research‐intensive firms develop, create value, and thrive and exactly whose competences are the driving force behind success are topics of considerable complexity and interest in the field of entrepreneurship. Yet, few prior studies have addressed organizational design issues related to the competences and roles of a venture's managers, such as their functional specialization (Beckman & Burton, ; Ferguson, Cohen, Burton, & Beckman, ), the adoption of managerial practices (Baron, Burton, & Hannan, ; Colombo, Piva, & Rossi‐Lamastra, ), and changes in terms of founder control of the board and/or the CEO position (Wasserman, ). An important organizational design issue that has yet to receive significant research attention relates to the design of research and development (R&D) teams and the role of founders in R&D in particular.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nonetheless, the departure of team members also affects resources and competencies. Eventually, they can lead to a critical lack that teams aim to compensate by hiring new members (Goi and Kokuryo 2016;Ferguson et al 2016). Furthermore, authors claim that ETMEs alter team-level characteristics because a change in the entrepreneurial team potentially aligns the shared beliefs and views of the remaining team members.…”
Section: Consequencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These early practices allow entrepreneurial organizations to be very flexible and attuned to their environment and they also create organizational inefficiencies (Sine et al, ). Typical constraints imposed by nascent organizational design are the inability to grow revenues (Sine et al, ) or mobilize financial and human resources (Beckman & Burton, ; Ferguson, Cohen, Burton, & Beckman, ; Gedajlovic et al, ). Over time, inefficiencies are amplified, and the early management team may experience insurmountable hurdles in building scalable structures that afford further growth—a typical characteristic of threshold firms (Daily & Dalton, ).…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%