The corporate governance of digital transformation: the CEO’s digital orientation and board impact
The corporate governance of digital transformation: the CEO’s digital orientation and board impact
Building on the sociology-grounded perspective on capital markets we argue that in conditions of technological change, investor perceptions about firm value are enhanced by the CEO’s orientation towards digital technologies. This base relationship is moderated by the extent to which boards allow and support experimentation with, and implementation of, new technologies. To test our theory, we focus on the early phases of the so-called “digital transformation” (2003 to 2016). We test our hypotheses using a sample of S&P 500 companies and a unique, hand-collected, set of measures associated with digital technology orientation by the CEO, as well as board members’ digital expertise. We suggest that: (a) board monitoring power is not always positively perceived by investors as widely implied in the extant agency-grounded literature; and (b) effective board monitoring is associated with complementarities between digital expertise of independent directors and the knowledge requirements underpinning CEO’s strategic orientation.
Filatotchev, Igor
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Lanzolla, Gianvito
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Syrigos, Evangelos
b1c15e33-35b2-4c6a-ba96-02938a9b5174
1 August 2022
Filatotchev, Igor
0b0bb28c-d536-41be-81f6-4e89634ea5a1
Lanzolla, Gianvito
6c4a972c-8a38-4bad-820f-630383003650
Syrigos, Evangelos
b1c15e33-35b2-4c6a-ba96-02938a9b5174
Filatotchev, Igor, Lanzolla, Gianvito and Syrigos, Evangelos
(2022)
The corporate governance of digital transformation: the CEO’s digital orientation and board impact.
Academy of Management Proceedings, 2022 (1).
(doi:10.5465/AMBPP.2022.14061abstract).
Abstract
Building on the sociology-grounded perspective on capital markets we argue that in conditions of technological change, investor perceptions about firm value are enhanced by the CEO’s orientation towards digital technologies. This base relationship is moderated by the extent to which boards allow and support experimentation with, and implementation of, new technologies. To test our theory, we focus on the early phases of the so-called “digital transformation” (2003 to 2016). We test our hypotheses using a sample of S&P 500 companies and a unique, hand-collected, set of measures associated with digital technology orientation by the CEO, as well as board members’ digital expertise. We suggest that: (a) board monitoring power is not always positively perceived by investors as widely implied in the extant agency-grounded literature; and (b) effective board monitoring is associated with complementarities between digital expertise of independent directors and the knowledge requirements underpinning CEO’s strategic orientation.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 6 July 2022
Published date: 1 August 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 496499
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496499
ISSN: 2151-6561
PURE UUID: 490f31d4-2c96-4a32-b3bf-7669ce074d19
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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2024 17:34
Last modified: 17 Dec 2024 17:34
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Author:
Igor Filatotchev
Author:
Gianvito Lanzolla
Author:
Evangelos Syrigos
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