Deprecated: Using ${var} in strings is deprecated, use {$var} instead in /home1/olavsore/public_html/wp-content/plugins/bad-behavior/bad-behavior/blackhole.inc.php on line 55

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home1/olavsore/public_html/wp-content/plugins/bad-behavior/bad-behavior/blackhole.inc.php:55) in /home1/olavsore/public_html/wp-includes/feed-rss2.php on line 8
status – Olav Sorenson https://www.olavsorenson.net Research and teaching Fri, 11 Aug 2023 13:39:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 Building status in an online community https://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=595 Tue, 01 Nov 2022 16:21:00 +0000 http://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=595 Inna Smirnova, Markus Reitzig, and Olav Sorenson

We argue that the actions for which actors receive recognition vary as they move up the hierarchy. When actors first enter a community, the community rewards them for their easier-to-evaluate contributions to the community. Eventually, however, as these actors rise in status, further increases in stature come increasingly from engaging in actions that are more difficult to evaluate or even impossible to judge. These dynamics produce a positive feedback loop, in which those who have already been accorded some stature garner even greater status through quality-ambiguous actions. We present evidence from Stack Overflow, an online community, and from two online experiments consistent with these expected patterns.

Organization Science, 33(6): 2519-2540 (OPEN ACCESS)

Summarized on the UCLA Anderson Review

]]>
The persistent effect of initial success: Evidence from venture capital https://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=455 Fri, 15 May 2020 16:13:00 +0000 http://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=455 Ramana Nanda, Sampsa Samila, and Olav Sorenson

We use investment-level data to study performance persistence in venture capital (VC). Consistent with prior studies, we find that each additional IPO among a VC firm’s first ten investments predicts as much as an 8.5% higher IPO rate on its subsequent investments, though this effect erodes with time. In exploring its sources, we document several additional facts: successful outcomes stem in large part from investing in the right places at the right times; VC firms do not persist in their ability to choose the right places and times; but early success does lead to investing more in later rounds and in larger syndicates. This pattern of results seems most consistent with the idea that initial success improves access to deal flow. That preferential access raises the quality of subsequent investments, perpetuating performance differences in initial investments.

Journal of Financial Economics, 137(2020): 231-248 (OPEN ACCESS)

Summarized on Yale Insights

Summarized on Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance

]]>
Temporal issues in replication: The stability of centrality-based advantage https://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=398 Mon, 30 Jan 2017 19:42:58 +0000 http://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=398 Yuan Shi, David M. Waguespack, and Olav Sorenson

The results of archival studies may depend on when researchers analyze data for at least two reasons: (1) databases change over time and (2) the sampling frame, in terms of the period covered, may reflect different environmental conditions. We examined these issues through the replication of Hochberg, Ljungqvist, and Lu’s (2007) research on the centrality of venture capital firms and their performance. We demonstrate (1) that one can reproduce the results in the original article if one uses data downloaded at roughly the same time as the original researchers did, (2) that these results remain fairly robust to even a decade of database updating, but (3) that the results depend sensitively on the sampling frame. Centrality only has a positive relationship to fund performance during boom periods.

Sociological Science, 4 (2017): 107-122 (OPEN ACCESS)

]]>
Status and reputation: Synonyms or separate concepts? https://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=288 Mon, 03 Feb 2014 11:04:19 +0000 http://www.olavsorenson.net/?p=288 Olav Sorenson

Status and reputation have often been treated as synonyms. These concepts, however, arise from disconnected literatures in which they had quite distinct connotations. This article explores the similarities and differences between these theoretical constructs, discusses the extent to which research in the management literature has captured one versus the other, and proposes a path for moving forward our understanding of these concepts.

Strategic Organization, 12 (2014): 62-69

]]>