Extant research on CEO hubris has amassed substantial evidence on the positive association of this prominent managerial disposition and CEOs’ attraction to challenging and consequential strategic activities. Similarly, one may well anticipate more hubristic CEOs to strive for frequent transformations of their firms’ overarching trajectories as they overestimate their ability to reap the fruits of such challenging and highly consequential endeavors. In contrast to these arguments, however, higher levels of hubris might also lead CEOs to see little reason for scrutinizing and adapting extant paths in light of the magnificent prospects under their outstanding leadership. We explicate this theoretical obscurity surrounding the dispositional pre...
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY The purpose of this thesis is to study whether highly overconfident or hubrist...
Research suggests that a CEO may have more influence in the context of small entrepreneurial firms, ...
Academic researchers, business commentators, and board of directors have all debated whether new and...
To Change or Not to Change? Evidence on the Steadiness of More Hubristic CEOs Marc Kowalzick Moritz...
The Upper Echelons Theory has been proved to play an important role in strategic management research...
CEOs play a central role for the strategic outcomes of their firms. Although research has provided m...
In the present paper, we raise the question whether CEO transformational leadership invariably makes...
Are CEOs unable to learn? This surprising question deserves to be raised in the light of the declini...
This study linked CEO hubris to firm risk taking and examined the moderating role of managerial disc...
How do CEOs react to attainment discrepancies in their organizations' performance? Scholars have gen...
The hubris hypothesis complements the extant debate on how people make judgments and decisions in or...
While mandates for strategic change may accompany the selection of new Chief Executive Officer (CEOs...
Prior research on strategic changes has asserted that long-tenured CEOs are less likely to initi-ate...
Hubris among corporate leaders has recently gained much academic attention, with strategy and corpor...
Drawing on the upper echelons, managerial discretion and strategic contingency perspectives we exami...
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY The purpose of this thesis is to study whether highly overconfident or hubrist...
Research suggests that a CEO may have more influence in the context of small entrepreneurial firms, ...
Academic researchers, business commentators, and board of directors have all debated whether new and...
To Change or Not to Change? Evidence on the Steadiness of More Hubristic CEOs Marc Kowalzick Moritz...
The Upper Echelons Theory has been proved to play an important role in strategic management research...
CEOs play a central role for the strategic outcomes of their firms. Although research has provided m...
In the present paper, we raise the question whether CEO transformational leadership invariably makes...
Are CEOs unable to learn? This surprising question deserves to be raised in the light of the declini...
This study linked CEO hubris to firm risk taking and examined the moderating role of managerial disc...
How do CEOs react to attainment discrepancies in their organizations' performance? Scholars have gen...
The hubris hypothesis complements the extant debate on how people make judgments and decisions in or...
While mandates for strategic change may accompany the selection of new Chief Executive Officer (CEOs...
Prior research on strategic changes has asserted that long-tenured CEOs are less likely to initi-ate...
Hubris among corporate leaders has recently gained much academic attention, with strategy and corpor...
Drawing on the upper echelons, managerial discretion and strategic contingency perspectives we exami...
PURPOSE OF THE STUDY The purpose of this thesis is to study whether highly overconfident or hubrist...
Research suggests that a CEO may have more influence in the context of small entrepreneurial firms, ...
Academic researchers, business commentators, and board of directors have all debated whether new and...