Tautology, Managerial Relevance, and Predictive Power of the RBV: The Neglected Content Dimension of Organizational Capabilities
(2005) Strategic Management Society Annual Conference, 2005- Abstract
- This study examines “capabilities” in the conceptual and empirical literatures, to reveal whether indeterminateness of value is a problem within RBV, as suggested by the recent tautology debate. Conceptual studies typically relate to capabilities in terms of the desired ends of their use, whereas empirical studies conceptualize capabilities as composite constructs with desired ends and content-oriented elements. This difference is not coincidental, but reflects lack of clarity in RBV with regards to capability properties. Strikingly, major RBV works provide little input to the methodology of capability conceptualization. We propose that cross-fertilization with content fields enables examination of capabilities independently of... (More)
- This study examines “capabilities” in the conceptual and empirical literatures, to reveal whether indeterminateness of value is a problem within RBV, as suggested by the recent tautology debate. Conceptual studies typically relate to capabilities in terms of the desired ends of their use, whereas empirical studies conceptualize capabilities as composite constructs with desired ends and content-oriented elements. This difference is not coincidental, but reflects lack of clarity in RBV with regards to capability properties. Strikingly, major RBV works provide little input to the methodology of capability conceptualization. We propose that cross-fertilization with content fields enables examination of capabilities independently of performance. A clearer separation between the variables of the RBV equation would improve its predictive power and provide clearer management implications. The conceptualization process is elaborated upon and examplified utilizing e-business as a content field. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/4113157
- author
- Gibe, John LU and Hallberg, Niklas Lars LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2005
- type
- Contribution to conference
- publication status
- unpublished
- subject
- conference name
- Strategic Management Society Annual Conference, 2005
- conference location
- Orlando, FL, United States
- conference dates
- 0001-01-02
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 5fa26eab-b5ae-4df1-9c77-4e6a2829ef0c (old id 4113157)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 13:26:54
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 21:14:03
@misc{5fa26eab-b5ae-4df1-9c77-4e6a2829ef0c, abstract = {{This study examines “capabilities” in the conceptual and empirical literatures, to reveal whether indeterminateness of value is a problem within RBV, as suggested by the recent tautology debate. Conceptual studies typically relate to capabilities in terms of the desired ends of their use, whereas empirical studies conceptualize capabilities as composite constructs with desired ends and content-oriented elements. This difference is not coincidental, but reflects lack of clarity in RBV with regards to capability properties. Strikingly, major RBV works provide little input to the methodology of capability conceptualization. We propose that cross-fertilization with content fields enables examination of capabilities independently of performance. A clearer separation between the variables of the RBV equation would improve its predictive power and provide clearer management implications. The conceptualization process is elaborated upon and examplified utilizing e-business as a content field.}}, author = {{Gibe, John and Hallberg, Niklas Lars}}, language = {{eng}}, title = {{Tautology, Managerial Relevance, and Predictive Power of the RBV: The Neglected Content Dimension of Organizational Capabilities}}, year = {{2005}}, }