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Don't go it alone: alliance network composition and startups' performance in Canadian biotechnology

✍ Scribed by Joel A. C. Baum; Tony Calabrese; Brian S. Silverman


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
227 KB
Volume
21
Category
Article
ISSN
0143-2095

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✦ Synopsis


We combine theory and research on alliance networks and on new firms to investigate the impact of variation in startups' alliance network composition on their early performance. We hypothesize that startups can enhance their early performance by 1) establishing alliances, 2) configuring them into an efficient network that provides access to diverse information and capabilities with minimum costs of redundancy, conflict, and complexity, and 3) judiciously allying with potential rivals that provide more opportunity for learning and less risk of intraalliance rivalry. An analysis of Canadian biotech startups' performance provides broad support for our hypotheses, especially as they relate to innovative performance. Overall, our findings show how variation in the alliance networks startups configure at the time of their founding produces significant differences in their early performance, contributing directly to an explanation of how and why firm age and size affect firm performance. We discuss some clear, but challenging, implications for managers of startups.