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Showing papers by "Justin J. P. Jansen published in 2013"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, an attention-based perspective is adopted, focusing on attention scope as well as distributed and situated attention, to assess how senior team attributes moderate the relationship between EO and firm performance.

114 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a multidimensional concept of journal impact as a concept manifested most prominently in the magnitude, prestige, breadth, dispersion, and duration dynamics of citations accruing to a journal.
Abstract: While the question of what makes a journal impactful continues to draw scholarly attention and debate, the lack of conceptual foundation as to what journal impact represents, and how it manifests itself, has impeded efforts to establish a richer understanding. Drawing from the theory of innovation diffusion, we propose journal impact as a multidimensional concept manifested most prominently in the magnitude, prestige, breadth, dispersion, and duration dynamics of citations accruing to a journal. In doing so, we complement extant representations of journal impact as a unidimensional concept with insights into the pattern and profile of a journal impact across space and time. We illustrate the multidimensionality of journal impact as a diffusion process in a longitudinal analysis of citation patterns at the Journal of Management Studies over a 40-year period.

25 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the authors use meta-analytic methods to shed light on three of these debates: the statistical impact of behavior versus outcome-based conceptualizations of exploration and exploitation, the tension between exploitative and explorative innovations have been widely covered but conclusive evidence on the level of anal...
Abstract: Over the past two decades, despite burgeoning research, scholars interested in the interplay of exploration and exploitation still face a number of unanswered questions. To a greater or lesser degree, what these core debates have in common is a focus on the boundaries conditions driving the association between exploration and exploitation. In this study, we use recent developments in meta-analytic methods to shed light on three of these debates. The first one pertains to the statistical impact of behavior versus outcome based conceptualizations of exploration and exploitation. Conceptualizations of the two focal concepts vary substantially in extant research and our results indicate that associated operationalizations have important implications as the association between exploration and exploitation is stronger for outcome than for behavior based operationalizations. Second, the tensions between exploitative and explorative innovations have been widely covered but conclusive evidence on the level of anal...

1 citations