Relational Contracts and Organizational Capabilities
Author(s)
Gibbons, Robert S.; Henderson, Rebecca
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A large literature identifies unique organizational capabilities as a potent source of competitive advantage, yet our knowledge of why capabilities fail to diffuse more rapidly—particularly in situations in which competitors apparently have strong incentives to adopt them and a well-developed understanding of how they work—remains incomplete. In this paper we suggest that competitively significant capabilities often rest on managerial practices that in turn rely on relational contracts (i.e., informal agreements sustained by the shadow of the future). We argue that one of the reasons these practices may be difficult to copy is that effective relational contracts must solve the twin problems of credibility and clarity and that although credibility might, in principle, be instantly acquired, clarity may take time to develop and may interact with credibility in complex ways so that relational contracts may often be difficult to build.
Date issued
2011-12Department
Sloan School of ManagementJournal
Organization Science
Publisher
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS)
Citation
Gibbons, R., and R. Henderson. “Relational Contracts and Organizational Capabilities.” Organization Science 23.5 (2011): 1350–1364.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
1047-7039
1526-5455