Year
2019
Authors
GARG Sam, JOHN LI Qiang, SHAW Jason D.
Abstract
An initial public offering (IPO) ushers in many changes to the organization’s boards of directors, including the installation of a formal and comprehensive board leadership structure. This paper shows that higher board undervaluation, that is, the average degree to which directors’ qualifications based on normatively accepted criteria for board leadership are not duly reflected in their appointments to the board chair and committee chair positions, is associated with higher director turnover, and with lower qualifications among new directors in the subsequent years. Further, the effect of board undervaluation on firm performance is mediated both by director turnover and new directors’ qualifications. But these two mediators operate as opposite forces on performance—director turnover is associated with lower firm performance, but counter-intuitively lower new-director-qualifications are associated with higher firm performance.
GARG, S., JOHN LI, Q. et SHAW, J.D. (2019). Entrepreneurial firms grow up: Board undervaluation, board evolution, and firm performance in newly public firms. Strategic Management Journal, 40(11), pp. 1882-1907.