Publication | Closed Access
Effect of Service Transition Strategies on Firm Value
475
Citations
49
References
2008
Year
Customer SatisfactionFirm PerformanceOrganizational EconomicsCorporate InnovationCorporate StrategyManagementService CompetitionValue CreationService SalesService Transition StrategiesFirm ValueStrategyCorporate GovernanceStrategic ManagementMarketingBusiness GrowthService StrategyBusinessBusiness StrategyCorporate Finance
The authors investigate the effectiveness of service transition strategies for generating shareholder value by evaluating secondary data pertaining to 477 publicly traded manufacturing firms during 1990–2005. The impact of a firm's transition to services on firm value (as measured by Tobin's q) remains relatively flat or slightly negative until the firm reaches a critical mass of service sales (20%–30%), after which point they have an increasingly positive effect. Furthermore, the effect of service sales on firm value depends on both firm and industry factors. Service transition strategies are more effective at enhancing value when the service offerings are related more to the firm's core business and when firms have more available resources (i.e., resource slack). The impact of adding services to core products on firm value amplifies as industry turbulence increases but diminishes when the firm's core products are in high-growth industries.
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