Crossed Wires: Endorsement Signals and the Effects of IPO Firm Delistings on Venture Capitalists’ Reputations
- Author(s)
- Gomulya, David; Jin, Kyuho; Lee, Peggy; Pollock, Tim
- Type
- Article
- Citation
- Academy of Management Journal, v.62, no.3, pp.641 - 666
- Issued Date
- 2019-06
- Abstract
- Signaling theorists have paid a great deal of attention to the costs of acquiring characteristics that
can serve as signals, such as endorsements from reputable third parties. However limited
attention has been devoted to the penalty costs associated with providing inaccurate signals and
the factors that can exacerbate or attenuate the penalties.We examine the effect of negative
feedback loops on venture capital firms’ reputations that result from the failures (delistings) of
the newly-public firms they once endorsed. Drawing on signaling and attribution theories, we
argue that endorsements by reputable VC firms create high expectations that when violated cause
stakeholders to look for scapegoats, resulting in reputational damage to the endorsing VCs. We
find empirical support for this argument, and for the attenuating effect of both post-IPO market
performance and survival. Our study contributes to the conversation about endorsements as
signals, and empirically tests the implicit assumption that endorsements place the reputation of
the endorser at risk.
- Publisher
- Academy of Management
- ISSN
- 0001-4273
- DOI
- 10.5465/amj.2016.0796
- URI
- https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/12705
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