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Evolution of Capabilities and Industry: The Evolution of Mutual Fund Processing

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  • Daniel A. Levinthal
  • Jennifer Myatt

Abstract

The field of Strategic Management, or Business Policy, has as a primary mission the analysis of diversity. Recently, the field has shifted from an emphasis on the diversity of industry to firm level differences. This shift has had a profound impact on the discourse of practitioners whose conversations are now replete with words such as core competence and capabilities. This research stream, generally labeled the resource view of the firm, has made substantial progress in identifying what attributes of a firm may provide a source of competitive advantage as well as significant insight as to the sustainability of these advantages. The literature has far less to say about the emergence of these distinctive capabilities. There also is a sense that the ebb and flow of strategy research may have swung excessively to firm centered analyses and has tended to ignore industry dynamics. The authors attempt to redress these weaknesses. They consider performance from the perspective of evolutionary systems emphasizing the role of positive feedback effects that reinforce a process in its current trajectory. They explore the implications of the positive feedback of market activity on capability formation. Some of these are relation-specific - within a particular customer-supplier pair. Other are diffuse and result from overall market activity. They also consider the organizational factors that influence the degree to which a firm might pursue a given set of opportunities. Managers make choices concerning resource allocation and market initiatives based on anticipated feedback effects, feedforward effects in the language of the authors. This conceptual framework is applied to the development of the mutual fund processing industry. The authors find that heterogeneity in competitive position among firms in the transfer and custody business is influenced by a variety of forces. Some, such as market share, amplify the existing heterogeneity. Firms with a strong market position tend to have a higher probability of sustaining on-going relationships and a greater tendency to initiate new relationships. The more extensive the ties between the fund complex and the processor, the greater the stability of the relationship. The powerful effect of geography suggests that these ties do not consist of only narrow task specific knowledge, but may reflect a more socially embedded relationship. Some relational factors sustain existing competitive positions, while others amplify the existing heterogeneity. Processors that have an existing tie with a mutual fund complex are much more likely to acquire additional funds within that complex as clients. The results suggest that the evolution of competitive position is driven by market position and external relationships and that organizational commitments and resource allocations do not exert an independent effect on the trajectory. The evidence offers rather strong support for the arguments regarding amplification of heterogeneity by market activity and the inertial effect on heterogeneity of the relational nature of the exchange relationships. In these two respects, the evolution of a given firm's competitive position can be seen as an outcome of linkages to particular clients and the overall market.

Suggested Citation

  • Daniel A. Levinthal & Jennifer Myatt, 1994. "Evolution of Capabilities and Industry: The Evolution of Mutual Fund Processing," Center for Financial Institutions Working Papers 94-30, Wharton School Center for Financial Institutions, University of Pennsylvania.
  • Handle: RePEc:wop:pennin:94-30
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    Cited by:

    1. Chen, Ping-Chuan & Hung, Shiu-Wan, 2016. "An actor-network perspective on evaluating the R&D linking efficiency of innovation ecosystems," Technological Forecasting and Social Change, Elsevier, vol. 112(C), pages 303-312.
    2. Takehiko Isobe & Shige Makino & David Montgomery, 2008. "Technological capabilities and firm performance: The case of small manufacturing firms in Japan," Asia Pacific Journal of Management, Springer, vol. 25(3), pages 413-428, September.
    3. Busch, Timo, 2011. "Organizational adaptation to disruptions in the natural environment: The case of climate change," Scandinavian Journal of Management, Elsevier, vol. 27(4), pages 389-404.
    4. Schriber, Svante & Löwstedt, Jan, 2015. "Tangible resources and the development of organizational capabilities," Scandinavian Journal of Management, Elsevier, vol. 31(1), pages 54-68.
    5. Ji Youn (Rose) Kim & Haemin Dennis Park, 2017. "Two Faces of Early Corporate Venture Capital Funding: Promoting Innovation and Inhibiting IPOs," Strategy Science, INFORMS, vol. 2(3), pages 161-175, September.
    6. Corinne A. Coen & Catherine A. Maritan, 2011. "Investing in Capabilities: The Dynamics of Resource Allocation," Organization Science, INFORMS, vol. 22(1), pages 99-117, February.

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