Although studies of "core competence" appear frequently, the concept lacks a clear definition that allows one to operationalize it and Use it to develop falsifiable predictions. We propose a definition based oil the phenomenon that core competence is typically applied to - adaptations to different external context. Sourcing insight form the paradigm of organizational ecology, we develop arguments rooted in theories of structural inertia and environmental imprinting. Empirical analyses of failure rates of entrants in the Italian automobile industry confirm our propositions that core competence is a source of competitive advantage when industry entry is based on relevant capabilities and a source of inertia and obsolescence when core competences need to be substantially altered. We conclude that whether core competence materializes as a dynamic capability or exposes the firm to liability to selection and obsolescence is a random process. Its outcome hinges on environmental variation and the resulting firm-environment (mis)alignment and is thus largely beyond managerial control.

The two sides of the coin: core competence as capability and obsolescence / S.D. Dobrev, T.Y. Kim, L. Solari - In: Business strategy over the industry life cycle / [a cura di] J.A.C. Baum, A.M. McGahan. - Amsterdam : Elsevier/JAI Press, 2004. - ISBN 0762311355. - pp. 255-285

The two sides of the coin: core competence as capability and obsolescence

L. Solari
Ultimo
2004

Abstract

Although studies of "core competence" appear frequently, the concept lacks a clear definition that allows one to operationalize it and Use it to develop falsifiable predictions. We propose a definition based oil the phenomenon that core competence is typically applied to - adaptations to different external context. Sourcing insight form the paradigm of organizational ecology, we develop arguments rooted in theories of structural inertia and environmental imprinting. Empirical analyses of failure rates of entrants in the Italian automobile industry confirm our propositions that core competence is a source of competitive advantage when industry entry is based on relevant capabilities and a source of inertia and obsolescence when core competences need to be substantially altered. We conclude that whether core competence materializes as a dynamic capability or exposes the firm to liability to selection and obsolescence is a random process. Its outcome hinges on environmental variation and the resulting firm-environment (mis)alignment and is thus largely beyond managerial control.
English
organization ecology ; learning ; adaptation
Settore SECS-P/10 - Organizzazione Aziendale
Capitolo o Saggio
Business strategy over the industry life cycle
J.A.C. Baum, A.M. McGahan
Amsterdam
Elsevier/JAI Press
2004
255
285
0762311355
21
Volume a diffusione internazionale
S.D. Dobrev, T.Y. Kim, L. Solari
Book Part (author)
none
268
The two sides of the coin: core competence as capability and obsolescence / S.D. Dobrev, T.Y. Kim, L. Solari - In: Business strategy over the industry life cycle / [a cura di] J.A.C. Baum, A.M. McGahan. - Amsterdam : Elsevier/JAI Press, 2004. - ISBN 0762311355. - pp. 255-285
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
3
Prodotti della ricerca::03 - Contributo in volume
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/15080
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