{"title":"When Liability Becomes Potential: The Survival Chances of Multiunit Entrants in U.S. Beer Wholesaling","authors":"Tunde Cserpes","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.3246656","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This paper analyzes how entrepreneurs fare in an intermediary market segment when the segment is closely attached to a single supplier market. While focusing on two structural constraints, organizational structure and competitive pressure, I build off of the fact that in the past thirty years in the U.S. beer industry, as the number of beer producers (i.e. brewers) proliferated, their intermediaries (i.e. wholesalers) declined. Using establishment-level restricted-access economic microdata from the Longitudinal Business Database, I examine what happens with intermediaries when (some) producers start competing on product variety instead of competing on scale. Piecewise exponential survival models show that Stinchcombe’s ‘liability of newness’ principle can get suspended and certain newcomers have better survival chances than industry incumbents. I call this effect the potential of newness under which entrepreneurial establishments fare better if they are part of well-resourced multiunit firms. Furthermore, I show that these resource-rich entrepreneurs benefit from the potential of newness especially in areas with competition-laden history and where the industry experiences shakeouts. For market incumbents, the more competition-laden the history of the local market, the higher the hazards of current time establishment failure. For multiunit entrepreneurs, however, a more competition-laden history of the local market is associated with a decrease in the hazards of current time establishment failure. This paper highlights that market structure not only enables but sometimes traps already existing organizations and make them less adaptive to changing logics of competition. The results highlight how organizational factors and geography create inequalities among intermediary organizations.","PeriodicalId":325993,"journal":{"name":"Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Research Paper Series","volume":"92 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-04-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation Research Paper Series","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3246656","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This paper analyzes how entrepreneurs fare in an intermediary market segment when the segment is closely attached to a single supplier market. While focusing on two structural constraints, organizational structure and competitive pressure, I build off of the fact that in the past thirty years in the U.S. beer industry, as the number of beer producers (i.e. brewers) proliferated, their intermediaries (i.e. wholesalers) declined. Using establishment-level restricted-access economic microdata from the Longitudinal Business Database, I examine what happens with intermediaries when (some) producers start competing on product variety instead of competing on scale. Piecewise exponential survival models show that Stinchcombe’s ‘liability of newness’ principle can get suspended and certain newcomers have better survival chances than industry incumbents. I call this effect the potential of newness under which entrepreneurial establishments fare better if they are part of well-resourced multiunit firms. Furthermore, I show that these resource-rich entrepreneurs benefit from the potential of newness especially in areas with competition-laden history and where the industry experiences shakeouts. For market incumbents, the more competition-laden the history of the local market, the higher the hazards of current time establishment failure. For multiunit entrepreneurs, however, a more competition-laden history of the local market is associated with a decrease in the hazards of current time establishment failure. This paper highlights that market structure not only enables but sometimes traps already existing organizations and make them less adaptive to changing logics of competition. The results highlight how organizational factors and geography create inequalities among intermediary organizations.
本文分析了当中间细分市场与单一供应商市场紧密相连时,企业家在中间细分市场中的表现。在关注两种结构性约束,组织结构和竞争压力的同时,我建立了一个事实,即在过去的三十年里,在美国啤酒行业,随着啤酒生产商(即酿造商)的数量激增,他们的中间商(即批发商)减少了。利用纵向商业数据库(Longitudinal Business Database)中企业层面的限制访问经济微观数据,我研究了当(一些)生产商开始在产品种类而不是规模上竞争时,中间商会发生什么。分段指数生存模型显示,Stinchcombe的“新责任”原则可以被暂停,某些新来者比行业现有者有更好的生存机会。我把这种效应称为新颖性的潜力,在这种效应下,如果创业机构是资源充足的多部门企业的一部分,它们就会发展得更好。此外,我还指出,这些资源丰富的企业家受益于创新的潜力,特别是在历史上竞争激烈的地区和行业经历洗牌的地区。对于市场现有者来说,当地市场的历史竞争越激烈,当前时间建立失败的风险就越高。然而,对于多单位企业家来说,当地市场竞争更激烈的历史与当前建立失败的危险减少有关。本文强调,市场结构不仅使现有组织成为可能,有时还会使它们陷入困境,使它们对不断变化的竞争逻辑的适应能力下降。研究结果突出了组织因素和地理因素如何导致中介组织之间的不平等。