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Generalist versus specialist CEOs and acquisitions: Two‐sided matching and the impact of CEO characteristics on firm outcomes
Author(s) -
Chen Guoli,
Huang Sterling,
MeyerDoyle Philipp,
Mindruta Denisa
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
strategic management journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 11.035
H-Index - 286
eISSN - 1097-0266
pISSN - 0143-2095
DOI - 10.1002/smj.3258
Subject(s) - microfoundations , matching (statistics) , human capital , business , set (abstract data type) , endogeneity , empirical evidence , marketing , industrial organization , firm offer , microeconomics , economics , market economy , econometrics , philosophy , statistics , mathematics , epistemology , computer science , macroeconomics , programming language
Research Summary To address endogeneity concerns stemming from firm‐CEO matching, we deploy a two‐sided matching model that identifies the complementarities arising from the CEO‐firm match and subsequently account for these complementarities in empirical tests. Applying this approach, we examine how the nature of CEOs' human capital affects the acquisition behavior and performance of firms. We find that generalist CEOs (CEOs with a broader set of knowledge and skills) are more likely to engage in unrelated acquisitions than specialist CEOs (CEOs with a narrower but deeper set of knowledge and skills). We also find that the fit between the nature of CEOs' human capital and the type of acquisitions they undertake is associated with stronger performance. Our paper contributes to research on CEOs, human capital, M&As, and microfoundations. Managerial Summary We deploy an empirical approach that takes into account the complementarities that arise from the matching of CEOs and firms when testing hypotheses on how CEO attributes shape firm outcomes. Based on this approach, our study finds that CEOs with a broader set of managerial knowledge and skills (generalist CEOs) are more likely to engage in unrelated acquisitions (acquisitions outside a firm's main industry) than CEOs with a narrower but deeper set of knowledge and skills that is more closely tied to a particular industry, firm, or domain (specialist CEOs). We also find that the fit between the nature of CEOs' human capital and the type of acquisitions they engage in is associated with stronger performance.