TY - JOUR
T1 - BEFORE BIRTH
T2 - HOW PROVISIONAL SPACES SHAPE THE LOCALIZED EMERGENCE OF NEW ORGANIZATIONAL FORMS
AU - Li, Ying
AU - Khessina, Olga M.
N1 - Annual Meeting, the EGOS Colloquium, the Organizational Ecology Conference, the Medici Summer School, the TIM/UNC PDW on emergence, and the MIT Economic Sociology Job Market Showcase. We are sincerely thankful to Paul Moore for sharing his book manuscript that contains part of the data we used in this study, and to Patrick Seymour for categorizing the types of movie-showing venues. Finally, we gratefully acknowledge financial support from the Spanish FEDER/Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion\u2014Agencia Estatal de Investigacion (Grant PID2021-123450OB-I00) and the Gies College of Business at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Correspondence concerning this article should be directed to Olga M. Khessina. Accepted by Reddi Kotha
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The literature on evolution of organizational forms has remained largely silent on where the first organizational instance of a new form comes from, treating it as either a given or an outcome of random variation. We challenge this agnostic assumption by putting the first organizational founding into a specific spatiotemporal context and revealing the role of provisional spaces, defined as small-scale, easily accessible settings where market pioneers temporarily experiment with applications of an innovation before dedicated organizations emerge. We theorize that provisional spaces disseminate necessary information about an innovation and enable potential entrepreneurs to envision a new template for organizing. Therefore, geographic communities with a higher number of provisional spaces are more likely to host the first organization embodying a new form sooner than others. Using archival data on all movie-showing venues in Chicago communities, 1896–1927, we find empirical support for our theorizing. Community variance in volume and types of provisional spaces for movie projectors, such as opera houses and penny arcades, led to community-level differences in the emergence of distinct movie theater forms: nickelodeon, movie house, and movie palace. We advance scholarship on organizational form emergence by uncovering the role of provisional spaces in shaping localized opportunity structures.
AB - The literature on evolution of organizational forms has remained largely silent on where the first organizational instance of a new form comes from, treating it as either a given or an outcome of random variation. We challenge this agnostic assumption by putting the first organizational founding into a specific spatiotemporal context and revealing the role of provisional spaces, defined as small-scale, easily accessible settings where market pioneers temporarily experiment with applications of an innovation before dedicated organizations emerge. We theorize that provisional spaces disseminate necessary information about an innovation and enable potential entrepreneurs to envision a new template for organizing. Therefore, geographic communities with a higher number of provisional spaces are more likely to host the first organization embodying a new form sooner than others. Using archival data on all movie-showing venues in Chicago communities, 1896–1927, we find empirical support for our theorizing. Community variance in volume and types of provisional spaces for movie projectors, such as opera houses and penny arcades, led to community-level differences in the emergence of distinct movie theater forms: nickelodeon, movie house, and movie palace. We advance scholarship on organizational form emergence by uncovering the role of provisional spaces in shaping localized opportunity structures.
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U2 - 10.5465/AMJ.2022.0897
DO - 10.5465/AMJ.2022.0897
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85191607586
SN - 0001-4273
VL - 67
SP - 494
EP - 525
JO - Academy of Management Journal
JF - Academy of Management Journal
IS - 2
ER -