In 1956, a group of trade associations representing publishers and independent advertising agencies signed a consent decree aimed at ending a set of trade practices that for half a century effectively precluded advertisers from owning and operating in-house agencies. Since then, large firms have internalized more and more of the services formerly performed by external agencies, perhaps as many as half. We use this phenomenon to test a theory of the firm, thereby simultaneously offering an explanation for it. The theory suggests that firms should internalize activities for which their competitive position implies (1) that it is more important for human capital to be firm specific as opposed to function specific and (2) that frequent modific...
This study examines the effect of the viscidity of the corporate client-advertising agency relations...
In this paper we study whether the progressive liberalization of the U.S. telecommunications industr...
While there is increased interest in marketing’s changing role within the firm, there is little emp...
This study investigates the extent to which U.S. advertisers use in-house rather than indepen-dent a...
We present empirical evidence that cross industry diversification, geographic diversification, and f...
The common perception appears to be that vertical integration of advertising services is more the ex...
While existing literature assumes that the human capital intensity of professional services leads to...
The rise of publicly traded professional service firms seems puzzling. Where skilled human capital i...
This case study of the advertising industry from 1985 to 1986 focuses on the costs of agency interna...
Institutional theory of the firm focuses on firm boundaries and the activities firms internalize wit...
This paper analyses how a firm chooses between direct ownership and licensing or franchising contrac...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, Operations Resea...
Internalization theory is usually applied at the firm level to analyse FDI, licensing and subcontrac...
The potential effect of external environmental forces on an internal dyadic relationships has not re...
This article engages in a methodological experiment by using historical evidence to challenge a comm...
This study examines the effect of the viscidity of the corporate client-advertising agency relations...
In this paper we study whether the progressive liberalization of the U.S. telecommunications industr...
While there is increased interest in marketing’s changing role within the firm, there is little emp...
This study investigates the extent to which U.S. advertisers use in-house rather than indepen-dent a...
We present empirical evidence that cross industry diversification, geographic diversification, and f...
The common perception appears to be that vertical integration of advertising services is more the ex...
While existing literature assumes that the human capital intensity of professional services leads to...
The rise of publicly traded professional service firms seems puzzling. Where skilled human capital i...
This case study of the advertising industry from 1985 to 1986 focuses on the costs of agency interna...
Institutional theory of the firm focuses on firm boundaries and the activities firms internalize wit...
This paper analyses how a firm chooses between direct ownership and licensing or franchising contrac...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, Operations Resea...
Internalization theory is usually applied at the firm level to analyse FDI, licensing and subcontrac...
The potential effect of external environmental forces on an internal dyadic relationships has not re...
This article engages in a methodological experiment by using historical evidence to challenge a comm...
This study examines the effect of the viscidity of the corporate client-advertising agency relations...
In this paper we study whether the progressive liberalization of the U.S. telecommunications industr...
While there is increased interest in marketing’s changing role within the firm, there is little emp...