The myth of the flat start-up: Reconsidering the organizational structure of start-ups

被引:41
|
作者
Lee, Saerom [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Penn, Wharton Sch, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
关键词
entrepreneurship; hierarchy; organizational design; organizational structure; start-up; HIERARCHY; POWER; PERFORMANCE; CREATIVITY; MANAGEMENT; SELECTION; SUCCESS; ENTREPRENEURSHIP; DIFFERENTIATION; INNOVATION;
D O I
10.1002/smj.3333
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Research summary There has been an ongoing debate over whether start-ups should be "flat" with minimal hierarchical layers. To reconcile this debate, this article distinguishes between creative and commercial success (i.e., novelty vs. profitability), and examines how these outcomes are variously influenced by a start-up's hierarchy. This study suggests that while a flatter hierarchy can improve ideation and creative success, it can result in haphazard execution and commercial failure by overwhelming managers with the burden of direction and causing subordinates to drift into power struggles and aimless idea explorations. I find empirical support for this trade-off using a large sample of game development start-ups. These findings offer one resolution to the debate by sorting out the conditions under which hierarchy can be conducive or detrimental to start-ups. Managerial summary Academics, management gurus, and popular media outlets have argued that "authoritarian," tall hierarchies are outmoded and will be supplanted by "egalitarian," flat structures. In recent years, this argument has been largely substantiated by a few "successful" flat start-ups, such as Valve, Zappos, Github, Medium, and Buffer. As these nascent firms constantly garner much attention for their egalitarian ideal-which itself is a signal of their rarity-the myth that start-ups should be flat (often referred to as "flat organization," "holacracy," or "boss-less firm") has become widespread among entrepreneurs. My study cautions against this myth, suggesting that adding a few hierarchical levels of managers can substantially help start-ups achieve commercial success and survive in their hostile environments, albeit at a potentially marginal cost of creativity.
引用
收藏
页码:58 / 92
页数:35
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] GARAGE START-UPS
    不详
    BYTE, 1995, 20 (09): : 165 - 165
  • [32] Steeling the start-ups
    不详
    PROFESSIONAL ENGINEERING, 1999, 12 (06) : 16 - 16
  • [33] Strategies for start-ups
    Smith, JA
    LONG RANGE PLANNING, 1998, 31 (06) : 857 - 872
  • [34] FUNDING START-UPS
    Reisch, Marc
    CHEMICAL & ENGINEERING NEWS, 2012, 90 (43) : 28 - 29
  • [35] Start-ups in Chile
    Janubova, Barbora
    EDAMBA 2016: INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE FOR DOCTORAL STUDENTS AND POST-DOCTORAL SCHOLARS: OPEN SCIENCE & OPEN INNOVATION: OPPORTUNITIES FOR ECONOMICS, BUSINESS, MANAGEMENT AND RELATED DISCIPLINES, 2016, : 114 - 121
  • [36] Leadership in start-ups
    Zaech, Simon
    Baldegger, Urs
    INTERNATIONAL SMALL BUSINESS JOURNAL-RESEARCHING ENTREPRENEURSHIP, 2017, 35 (02): : 157 - 177
  • [37] PERFORMANCE OF START-UPS
    Hintosova, Aneta Bobenic
    Bruothova, Michaela
    SGEM 2015: POLITICAL SCIENCES, LAW, FINANCE, ECONOMICS AND TOURISM, VOL III: ECONOMICS AND TOURISM, 2015, : 653 - 660
  • [38] Subsidized start-ups out of unemployment: a comparison to regular business start-ups
    Caliendo, Marco
    Hogenacker, Jens
    Kuenn, Steffen
    Wiessner, Frank
    SMALL BUSINESS ECONOMICS, 2015, 45 (01) : 165 - 190
  • [39] The city of start-ups: Location determinants of start-ups in emergent industries in Barcelona
    Coll-Martinez, Eva
    Jove-Llopis, Elisenda
    Teruel, Mercedes
    GROWTH AND CHANGE, 2022, 53 (02) : 972 - 1007
  • [40] Subsidized start-ups out of unemployment: a comparison to regular business start-ups
    Marco Caliendo
    Jens Hogenacker
    Steffen Künn
    Frank Wießner
    Small Business Economics, 2015, 45 : 165 - 190