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Manifestations of Higher-Order Routines: The Underlying Mechanisms of Deliberate Learning in the Context of Postacquisition Integration

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TLDR
It is argued that experience codification gives rise to inertial forces that hamper the customization of routines to any given acquisition, and that successful acquirers develop higher-order routines that prevent the generalization of inapplicable ('zero-order') codified routines.
Abstract
Building on the codification and dynamic capabilities literatures, we pursue deeper insight into the underlying mechanisms of deliberate learning in the context of postacquisition integration. We argue that experience codification gives rise to inertial forces that hamper the customization of routines to any given acquisition. We theorize, therefore, that successful acquirers develop higher-order routines-as manifested in two complementary sets of concrete organizational practices-that prevent the generalization of inapplicable ('zero-order') codified routines. After drawing on in-depth qualitative data to help build our theoretical argument, we test it formally with unique survey data on 85 active acquirers.

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Building firm capabilities through learning: the role of the alliance learning process in alliance capability and firm-level alliance success

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References
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Book ChapterDOI

Conceptualization of Experience and Learning in Acquisitions: A Thematic Evolution

TL;DR: The evolution from an undifferentiated notion of acquisition experience toward the appreciation of the role played by specific types of experience is discussed in this paper, where the authors focus on the evolution from a focused approach that directs attention only to acquisition-related experiences to experiences that, although not gathered from acquisitions, may still be fungible in an acquisition context.
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The Canonical Correlation Analysis between the Fitness of Organizational Condition and Integration Possibility: The Evidence of Configurational Approach

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors surveyed top managers working for publicly-traded Taiwanese companies which had processed M&A in the past five years and found that high organizational fit companies are more likely to implement organizational management than companies with low organizational fit.
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