Article ID: | iaor20113356 |
Volume: | 57 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 549 |
End Page Number: | 565 |
Publication Date: | Mar 2011 |
Journal: | Management Science |
Authors: | Balasubramanian Natarajan |
Keywords: | learning, economics |
Prior firm experience, firm capabilities, and the industry environment are known to be important determinants of new‐venture performance. We hypothesize that firm experience prior to setting up a new venture influences the ability to learn from experience after start‐up (which is a key capability), and that this relationship is moderated by the importance of learning by doing within the new venture's industry (which is a critical aspect of the industry environment). We argue that together, these relationships influence performance differences among new plant ventures of incumbents, diversifying entrants, and entrepreneurial (de novo) entrants. Using data on 47,915 new plant ventures in U.S. manufacturing, we find that incumbents and diversifying entrants establish significantly more productive new plants than de novo entrants, and that this advantage significantly increases with the importance of learning by doing in an industry (