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The Role of Socially Constructed Temporal Perspectives in the Emergence of Rapid-Growth Firms

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  • Eileen Fischer
  • A. Rebecca Reuber
  • Moez Hababou
  • William Johnson
  • Steven Lee

Abstract

This study examined how owners and top management team members in firms that are growing very rapidly socially construct time so as to facilitate rapid growth. A blend of interview and text-based qualitative methods was used to study some firms that have achieved rapid growth and some that have yet to do so. Analysis led to the identification of several thematic patterns regarding the enactment of time. The first was simultaneity: informants appeared to sustain a simultaneous focus on the events actually occurring in the present and the outcomes desired in the future, so that strategies to deal with the present are emergent but the goals and time-frames for obtaining them remain relatively fixed. The second was selectivity: rather than passively accepting the time-frames of key customers or employees, these firms sought out customers and staff who shared a pace and movability of enacted time in congruence with the firms’ goals. The third theme was shaping: top managers in rapid-growth firms adopted or developed systems and procedures that allow them to shape the enactment of time throughout their organizations. The paper concludes with some propositions about the nature of enacted time in firms that are more versus less successful in growing rapidly.

Suggested Citation

  • Eileen Fischer & A. Rebecca Reuber & Moez Hababou & William Johnson & Steven Lee, 1998. "The Role of Socially Constructed Temporal Perspectives in the Emergence of Rapid-Growth Firms," Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, , vol. 22(2), pages 13-30, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:entthe:v:22:y:1998:i:2:p:13-30
    DOI: 10.1177/104225879802200203
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    Cited by:

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    3. Friesenbichler, Klaus S. & Hoelzl, Werner, 2022. "Firm-growth and Functional Strategic Domains: Exploratory evidence for differences between frontier and catching-up economies," Journal of Economics and Business, Elsevier, vol. 119(C).

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