journal article Feb 01, 2000

A Resource-Based Theory of Strategic Alliances

View at Publisher Save 10.1177/014920630002600105
Abstract
The resource-based view of the firm has not been systematically applied to strategic alliances. By examining the role of firm resources in strategic alliances, we attempt, in this paper, to put forward a general resource-based theory of strategic alliances, synthesizing the various findings in the literature on alliances from a resource-based view. The proposed theory covers four major aspects of strategic alliances: rationale, formation, structural preferences, and performance. The resource-based view suggests that the rationale for alliances is the value-creation potential of firm resources that are pooled together. We note that certain resource characteristics, such as imperfect mobility, imitability, and substitutability, promise accentuated value-creation, and thus facilitate alliance formation. We discuss how the resource profiles of partner firms would determine their structural preferences in terms of four major categories of alliances: equity joint ventures, minority equity alliances, bilateral contract-based alliances, and unilateral contract-based alliances. As part of the theory, we propose a typology of inter-partner resource alignment based on the two dimensions of resource similarity and resource utilization, yielding four types of alignment: supplementary, surplus, complementary, and wasteful. We also discuss how partner resource alignment directly affects collective strengths and inter-firm conflicts in alliances, which in turn contribute to alliance performance. Finally, we develop a number of propositions to facilitate empirical testing of the theoretical framework, suggest ways to carry out this testing, indicate future research directions, and list some of the more significant managerial implications of the framework.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
131
[2]
Axelrod, R. (1984)
[4]
Firm Resources and Sustained Competitive Advantage

Jay Barney

Journal of Management 10.1177/014920639101700108
[5]
Beamish, P. W. Management International Review (1987)
[6]
Black, J. A. Strategic Management Journal (1994) 10.1002/smj.4250151009
[7]
Blau, P. M. (1964)
[10]
Buckley, P. J. (1988)
[15]
Chisholm, D. (1989) 10.1525/9780520352070
[16]
Coase, R. H. Economica (1937)
[22]
Das, T. K.
[27]
Das, T. K.
[28]
Das, T. K.
[29]
Das, T. K. Academy of Management Executive (1999)
[30]
Das, T. K.
[33]
Asset Stock Accumulation and Sustainability of Competitive Advantage

Ingemar Dierickx, Karel Cool

Management Science 10.1287/mnsc.35.12.1504
[36]
Doz, Y. L. (1988)
[37]
Doz, Y. L. (1998)
[40]
Gates, S. (1993)
[44]
Gomes-Casseres, B. (1996)
[45]
The Resource-Based Theory of Competitive Advantage: Implications for Strategy Formulation

Robert M. Grant

California Management Review 10.2307/41166664
[46]
Toward a knowledge‐based theory of the firm

Robert M. Grant

Strategic Management Journal 10.1002/smj.4250171110

Showing 50 of 131 references

Cited By
1,607
Cross Cultural & Strategic Mana...
Technological Forecasting and Socia...
Strategic Organization
Academy of Management Perspectives
Academy of Management Annals
Journal of Management Studies
Metrics
1,607
Citations
131
References
Details
Published
Feb 01, 2000
Vol/Issue
26(1)
Pages
31-61
License
View
Cite This Article
T. K. Das, Bing-Sheng Teng (2000). A Resource-Based Theory of Strategic Alliances. Journal of Management, 26(1), 31-61. https://doi.org/10.1177/014920630002600105
Related

You May Also Like

Firm Resources and Sustained Competitive Advantage

Jay Barney · 1991

34,171 citations

Self-Reports in Organizational Research: Problems and Prospects

Philip M. Podsakoff, Dennis W. Organ · 1986

11,783 citations

Social Exchange Theory: An Interdisciplinary Review

Russell Cropanzano, Marie S. Mitchell · 2005

6,208 citations

Signaling Theory: A Review and Assessment

Brian L. Connelly, S. Trevis Certo · 2010

4,191 citations