Although the niche figures prominently in contemporary theories of organization, analysts often fail to tie micro processes within the niche to long-term changes in the broader environment. In this paper, we advance arguments about the relationship between an organization's niche and evolution in the structure of its organizational population over time. We focus on the technological niche and processes of positioning and crowding among firms in the niche space, relating them to the level of concentration among all firms in the market. Building on previous empirical studies in organizational ecology, we study the evolution of concentration in the American automobile industry from 1885 to 1981 and estimate models of the hazard of exit of indi...
Although the concept of niche has been extremely useful in sociological theory and research, some as...
The performance of firms depends not just on the structure of the industries in which they compete b...
When international organizations expand and proliferate, why do they fail to spread more evenly in t...
Although the niche figures prominently in contemporary theories of organization, analysts often fail...
This article examines the effects of crowding in a market center on rates of change in organizationa...
We examine how experiential learning affects organizational change and its consequences on firm mort...
This paper uses the information on 648 manufacturers during the period included between 1895 and 199...
This article examines the effects of crowding in a market center on rates of change in organizationa...
Although strategy research typically regards firm scope as a positional characteristic associated wi...
This paper uses the information on 648 manufacturers during the period included between 1895 and 199...
Significant reductions in greenhouse emissions from personal transportation will require a transitio...
I evaluate two processes, niche formation and resource-partitioning, that could independently accoun...
Technological innovation is widely considered as one of the most influential determinants of industr...
We examine how experiential learning affects organizational change and its consequences on firm mort...
Organizational ecology models of market dynamics emphasize the competition-inducing role of inter-or...
Although the concept of niche has been extremely useful in sociological theory and research, some as...
The performance of firms depends not just on the structure of the industries in which they compete b...
When international organizations expand and proliferate, why do they fail to spread more evenly in t...
Although the niche figures prominently in contemporary theories of organization, analysts often fail...
This article examines the effects of crowding in a market center on rates of change in organizationa...
We examine how experiential learning affects organizational change and its consequences on firm mort...
This paper uses the information on 648 manufacturers during the period included between 1895 and 199...
This article examines the effects of crowding in a market center on rates of change in organizationa...
Although strategy research typically regards firm scope as a positional characteristic associated wi...
This paper uses the information on 648 manufacturers during the period included between 1895 and 199...
Significant reductions in greenhouse emissions from personal transportation will require a transitio...
I evaluate two processes, niche formation and resource-partitioning, that could independently accoun...
Technological innovation is widely considered as one of the most influential determinants of industr...
We examine how experiential learning affects organizational change and its consequences on firm mort...
Organizational ecology models of market dynamics emphasize the competition-inducing role of inter-or...
Although the concept of niche has been extremely useful in sociological theory and research, some as...
The performance of firms depends not just on the structure of the industries in which they compete b...
When international organizations expand and proliferate, why do they fail to spread more evenly in t...