Abstract
This study integrates perspectives from the literature on science parks, environment dynamism, and on the resources-based view of the firm, to develop an integrative model of the park location value to resident firms. Consistent with our theorizing, the externalities generated by the science park, the firm’s idiosyncratic endowment in a wide range of resources, and its heterogeneous competitive environment jointly influence the differential performance of science park firms. The results suggest that firms residing in science parks with more co-located complementary firms demonstrate better sales and sales growth performance. A firm’s certain internal and external resource endowment and the munificent environments within which a firm operates serve as enabling conditions for better sales and sales growth performance.
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Notes
Sales growth from 2008 to 2010 represents the most recent 3-year period in the NETS data and includes the Great Recession in the USA. An alternative measure would be to calculate sales growth across different 3-year periods, but such a measure would distort the results since some of the 3-year periods would be during robust economic growth, some during market adjustments (post 2000), some during recovery from mild recessions, some during the great recession, and some during the recovery from the great recession. As such, the comparisons would likely be confounded by the 3-year period during which growth is measured, the time since firm creation and the general economic conditions in the 3-year period. Thus, the period 2008–2010, albeit during the great recession and recovery, allows for the firms to be measured during the same economic cycle. Since the great recession was experienced broadly, it did affect most firms in the economy.
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The authors thank Laura Hill and Christine Westgate for their help with the research and writing of this paper and The Institute for Exceptional Growth Companies and the Edward Lowe Foundation for providing access to the database used in this research.
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Gwebu, K.L., Sohl, J. & Wang, J. Differential performance of science park firms: an integrative model. Small Bus Econ 52, 193–211 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-018-0025-5
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-018-0025-5