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Organizational Identity and Interorganizational Alliances

Emily Wu Choi
TLDR
In this article, the authors examined the relationship between organizational identity and the formation and performance implications of interorganizational alliances and developed a theory of how this variation affects the search for alliance partners in terms of the speed of alliance formation and the diversity between the new organization and its partners.
Abstract
This dissertation examines the relationship between organizational identity and the formation and performance implications of interorganizational alliances. The first study investigates the effect of an organization's identity on its initial alliance portfolio formation, addressing how becoming comprehensible through organizational identity is a fundamental step in order for a new organization to be accepted by the market. Through different categorizations, some new organizations will be more comprehensible and possess clearer identities in the market than others. I develop a theory of how this variation affects the search for alliance partners in terms of the speed of alliance formation and the diversity between the new organization and its partners. The second study investigates how organizational identity affects the impact of alliances on performance outcomes. Alliances that explore and experiment tend to affect organizational outcomes negatively, at least in the short term. Although exploration strategies facilitate learning and adaptation in the long run, they incur costs due to the nature of experimentation. I advance an alternative perspective that organizational identity plays a role in this alliance-performance link. Depending on the strength of an organization's identity in terms of how coherent and taken-for-granted its categorization or social grouping is, the effect on performance may be more or less negative. Overall, this research indicates that organizational identity matters both to an organization's initial alliance portfolio formation and to the impact of this alliance portfolio on performance outcomes. This work contributes to the literature streams of both organizational identity and alliances, and presents the first systematic investigation of the link between them.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The interplay between exploration and exploitation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors address four related issues related to exploration and exploitation in organizational adaptation research, and propose a framework to address them in the context of organizational adaptation and exploitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Don't go it alone: alliance network composition and startups' performance in Canadian biotechnology

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the impact of variation in startups' alliance network composition on their early performance and show that variation in the alliance networks startups configure at the time of their founding produces significant differences in their early performances.
Journal ArticleDOI

Resource-based View of Strategic Alliance Formation: Strategic and Social Effects in Entrepreneurial Firms

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors combine these alternative social and strategic explanations for alliance formation and find that alliances form when firms are in vulnerable strategic positions either because they are competing in emergent or highly competitive industries or because they attempting pioneering technical strategies.
Book

Organizations and Environments

TL;DR: Aldrich's organizational change model as mentioned in this paper focuses on the processes of variation, selection, retention, and struggle of an organization and its environment, rather than a set of focal organizations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interorganizational Endorsements and the Performance of Entrepreneurial Ventures

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate how the interorganizational networks of young companies affect their ability to acquire the resources necessary for survival and growth and propose that third parties rely on the prominence of the affiliates of those companies to make judgments about their quality and that young companies "endorsed by prominent exchange partners will perform better than otherwise comparable ventures that lack prominent associates.
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