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(In)consistent performance feedback and the locus of search

(In)consistent performance feedback and the locus of search
(In)consistent performance feedback and the locus of search

Despite the prevalence and importance of multiple goals for organizations, research on how organizations respond to performance on multiple goals continues to be limited and has examined only search intensity as the focal response, ignoring that search may occur in different locations. We extend the research on multiple goals by developing and testing novel theory on the relationship between performance feedback on multiple goals and the locus of search. Drawing upon the behavioral theory of the firm and using panel data from global pharmaceutical firms, we first show that when performance is below aspirations on a primary goal, a firm's propensity to engage in distal search increases along both the technological (i.e., familiar vs. unfamiliar search) and the organizational dimension (i.e., internal vs. external search). However, building on more recent literature that points to the need to consider multiple goals of unequal importance and, specifically, the self-enhancement perspective, we argue and find that performance on a secondary goal modifies this pattern, particularly when performance on a primary goal is unsatisfactory. Under feedback inconsistency, where performance on a primary goal is low but performance on a secondary goal is high, decision-makers decrease distal search to both unfamiliar technological areas and areas external to the organization. Our theory and findings highlight the importance of performance feedback regarding multiple goals in regulating the key locus of search choices and extend research on self-enhancement and learning from performance feedback.

behavioral theory of the firm, inconsistent performance feedback, locus of search, multiple goals, self-enhancement
0149-2063
2927-2954
Keil, Thomas
807b2e1e-bb32-46ff-b3d0-0390af4d7c43
Syrigos, Evangelos
b1c15e33-35b2-4c6a-ba96-02938a9b5174
Kostopoulos, Konstantinos C.
2ed61e33-e1b9-49c5-bbce-40fe4f8002a8
D. meissner, Felix
3e4cf5ed-4c67-4c0e-85ed-44a9c73c964e
G. audia, Pino
fa5e9888-c6a3-49d0-b7be-821e98b98e96
Keil, Thomas
807b2e1e-bb32-46ff-b3d0-0390af4d7c43
Syrigos, Evangelos
b1c15e33-35b2-4c6a-ba96-02938a9b5174
Kostopoulos, Konstantinos C.
2ed61e33-e1b9-49c5-bbce-40fe4f8002a8
D. meissner, Felix
3e4cf5ed-4c67-4c0e-85ed-44a9c73c964e
G. audia, Pino
fa5e9888-c6a3-49d0-b7be-821e98b98e96

Keil, Thomas, Syrigos, Evangelos, Kostopoulos, Konstantinos C., D. meissner, Felix and G. audia, Pino (2024) (In)consistent performance feedback and the locus of search. Journal of Management, 50 (7), 2927-2954. (doi:10.1177/01492063231185519).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Despite the prevalence and importance of multiple goals for organizations, research on how organizations respond to performance on multiple goals continues to be limited and has examined only search intensity as the focal response, ignoring that search may occur in different locations. We extend the research on multiple goals by developing and testing novel theory on the relationship between performance feedback on multiple goals and the locus of search. Drawing upon the behavioral theory of the firm and using panel data from global pharmaceutical firms, we first show that when performance is below aspirations on a primary goal, a firm's propensity to engage in distal search increases along both the technological (i.e., familiar vs. unfamiliar search) and the organizational dimension (i.e., internal vs. external search). However, building on more recent literature that points to the need to consider multiple goals of unequal importance and, specifically, the self-enhancement perspective, we argue and find that performance on a secondary goal modifies this pattern, particularly when performance on a primary goal is unsatisfactory. Under feedback inconsistency, where performance on a primary goal is low but performance on a secondary goal is high, decision-makers decrease distal search to both unfamiliar technological areas and areas external to the organization. Our theory and findings highlight the importance of performance feedback regarding multiple goals in regulating the key locus of search choices and extend research on self-enhancement and learning from performance feedback.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 27 July 2023
Published date: 1 September 2024
Keywords: behavioral theory of the firm, inconsistent performance feedback, locus of search, multiple goals, self-enhancement

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496497
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496497
ISSN: 0149-2063
PURE UUID: 03dafeed-e207-4b54-967e-50eb2fc1fc6a

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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2024 17:34
Last modified: 17 Dec 2024 17:34

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Contributors

Author: Thomas Keil
Author: Evangelos Syrigos
Author: Konstantinos C. Kostopoulos
Author: Felix D. meissner
Author: Pino G. audia

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