The performance-orientation is based on the shareholder supremacy view, which originated from the field of orthodox economic theory. It could generate two paradoxes: the first one is whether the value of an enterprise should be based on a single indicator or a multi-dimensional performance indicator; the second one is whether the performance-orientation should guide the manager to pursue short-term goals or long-term goals. Financial measurement of performance-orientation will increase managers’ attitudes and preferences on risk-taking avoidance and Not- Invented-Here syndrome. However, in order to achieve sustainable development, managers need to constantly innovate, learn, experiment, test new ideas, and have risk-taking capabilities. Adhering to too much " good” performance standards will create " competence traps” and an " Icarus Paradox”, which is a misleading signal for continuous improvement and innovation. Therefore, the performance-orientation could inhibit creativity and learning and reduce the resilience and adaptability of enterprises, thus further increasing the probability of firm failure. Western scholars developed the methods of balanced scorecard and anti-fragility to resolve this paradox, but they didn’t fully address the paradox of performance orientation. Unlike extant studies, this paper proposes a new theoretical framework of " Sheng-sheng-bu-xi” orientation (or " Live long and prosper”, the Vulcan salutation in the television series Star Trek) to solve the performance-oriented paradox. We like to bring back organizational goals to " Tao”—the most essential energy of Chinese seminal philosophy, the creation, constantly surging and continuous change of " Tao”, that is the so-called " the great virtue of life” proposed by the Book of Changes. " Sheng-sheng-bu-xi” orientation emphasizes the competing intra-organizational forces of " yin” and " yang”. In other words, the manager should pay attention to the opposing forces and the welfare of marginal stakeholders. In addition, we explore how the antecedent factor—All-under-heaven (" Tianxia”) mindset in the corporate board could influence the two mediating variables of corporate governance, the representatives of stakeholders at boards and boards’ cooperative orientation, which further affect the likelihood of adopting " Sheng-sheng-bu-xi” orientation. " Sheng-sheng-bu-xi” orientation will positively enhance the degree of open innovation and have a good balance of co-opetition among partners or rivals. Finally, we also examine how " Sheng-sheng-bu-xi”, as an Eastern management concept, dialogues with some Western management concepts. This paper makes these contributions: First, unlike the performance-orientation based on the shareholder supremacy view, we propose a novel concept construct, namely " Sheng-sheng-bu-xi” orientation, based on the traditional Chinese yin-yang thinking, the Western organizational resilience theory, and the stakeholder theory. Second, this theory, with an Eastern root, could generate a good dialogue with Western strategic theories, such as organizational ambidexterity, sustainability, and dynamic capabilities. Finally, " Sheng-sheng-bu-xi” orientation has a good inheritance and innovative development for combining Western stakeholder theory and Chinese traditional " yin-yang” theory.
/ Journals / Foreign Economics & Management
Foreign Economics & Management
LiZengquan, Editor-in-Chief
ZhengChunrong, Vice Executive Editor-in-Chief
YinHuifang HeXiaogang LiuJianguo, Vice Editor-in-Chief
“Live Long and Prosper”: A Dialogue with the Performance-Orientation Paradox
Foreign Economics & Management Vol. 41, Issue 05, pp. 128 - 140 (2019) DOI:10.16538/j.cnki.fem.2019.05.010
Summary
References
Summary
[1] Cao Y F, Li P. Haier, Chinese-style Don Quixote: Zhang Ruimin talks to James March[J]. Harvard Business Review, 2013, (10): 154-159.
[2] Chen C H, Liu Z. Water-form Organizations: A New Organizational Concept [J]. Foreign Economics & Management, 2017, 39(7):3-14.
[3] Lu Y D, Fu Z P. The application of water metaphor in management theory with Chinese characteristics[J]. Foreign Economics & Management, 2016, 38(1): 3-14.
[4] Luo X Y, Sun L. Looking at “Zhi-xing-he-yi” from paradoxical metetheory perspective[J]. Tsinghua Business Review, 4: 89-95.
[5] Sun L, Wei G. The arrival of the “round decision” era[J]. CEIBS Review, 2015, (1): 29-33.
[6] Sun L. Blue army strategy[M]. Beijing: Mechanical Industry Press, 2018.
[7] Zhao T Y. Bad world studies: political philosophy as the first philosophy[M]. Beijing: Renmin University Press, 2009.
[8] Andriopoulos C, Lewis M W. Exploitation-exploration tensions and organizational ambidexterity: Managing paradoxes of innovation[J]. Organization Science, 2009, 20(4): 696–717.
[9] Bansal P, Song H C. Similar but not the same: Differentiating corporate sustainability from corporate responsibility[J]. Academy of Management Annals, 2017, 11(1): 105–149.
[10] Barkema H G, Chen X P, George G, et al. West meets East: New concepts and theories[J]. Academy of Management Journal, 2015, 58(2): 460.
[11] Blair M M. Post-Enron reflections on comparative corporate governance[J]. Journal of Interdisciplinary Economics, 2003, 14(2): 113–124.
[12] Chen M J. Transcending paradox: The Chinese "middle way" perspective[J]. Asia Pacific Journal of Management, 2002, 19(2–3): 179–199.
[13] Daily C M, Schwenk C. Chief executive officers, top management teams, and boards of directors: Congruent or countervailing forces?[J]. Journal of Management, 1996, 22(2): 185–208.
[14] Eisenhardt K M. Agency theory: An assessment and review[J]. Academy of Management Review, 1989, 14(1): 57–74.
[15] Freeman, R. E. Ending the so-called ‘Friedman-Freeman’ debate[J]. Business Ethics Quarterly, 2008, 18(2): 162–166.
[16] Friedman M. Capitalism and freedom[M]. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1962.
[17] Gunderson L H, Holling C S. Panarchy: understanding transformations in human and natural systems[M]. Washington, DC: Island Press, 2002.
[18] Hambrick D C, Mason P A. Upper echelons: The organization as a reflection of its top managers[J]. Academy of management Review, 1984, 9(2): 193–206.
[19] Harrison J S, Bosse D A, Phillips R A. Managing for stakeholders, stakeholder utility functions, and competitive advantage[J]. Strategic Management Journal, 2010, 31(1): 58–74.
[20] Jensen M C. Value maximization, stakeholder theory, and the corporate objective function[J]. Business Ethics Quarterly, 2002, 12(2): 235–256.
[21] Lewis M W, Smith W K. Paradox as a meta-theoretical perspective: Sharpening the focus and widening the scope[J]. The Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 2014, 50(2): 127–149.
[22] Li P P. The unique value of Yin-Yang balancing: A critical response[J]. Management and Organization Review, 2014, 10(2): 321–332.
[23] March J G, Sutton R I. Crossroads-organizational performance as a dependent variable[J]. Organization Science, 1997, 8(6): 698–706.
[24] March J G. Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning[J]. Organization Science, 1991, 2(1): 71–87.
[25] Mitchell R K, Weaver G R, Agle B R, et al. Stakeholder agency and social welfare: Pluralism and decision making in the multi-objective corporation[J]. Academy of Management Review, 2016, 41(2): 252–275.
[26] Plambeck N, Weber K. When the glass is half full and half empty: CEOs’ ambivalent interpretations of strategic issues[J]. Strategic Management Journal, 2010, 31(7): 689–710.
[27] Porter M E, Kramer M R. The big idea: Creating shared value[J]. Harvard Business Review, 2011, 89(1): 2–17.
[28] Quinn R E, Rohrbaugh J. A spatial model of effectiveness criteria: Towards a competing values approach to organizational analysis[J]. Management Science, 1983, 29(3): 363–377.
[29] Smith W K, Lewis M W. Toward a theory of paradox: A dynamic equilibrium model of organizing[J]. Academy of management Review, 2011, 36(2): 381–403.
[30] Sundaram A K, Inkpen A C. The corporate objective revisited[J]. Organization Science, 2004, 15(3): 350–363.
[31] Sundaramurthy C, Lewis M. Control and collaboration: Paradoxes of governance[J]. Academy of Management Review, 2003, 28(3): 397–415.
Cite this article
Luo Xiaoyi, Sun Sunny Li. “Live Long and Prosper”: A Dialogue with the Performance-Orientation Paradox[J]. Foreign Economics & Management, 2019, 41(5): 128-140.
Export Citations as:
For
ISSUE COVER
RELATED ARTICLES