Markets are increasingly perceived as malleable systems constituted by actors that endogenously generate and shape the market. This view extends the traditional market view beyond the buyer-seller dyad and encompasses both directly market-related actors such as companies, suppliers, and buyers but also nonmarket actors such as regulators, lobbyists, journalists, activists, and the wider public. This alternative view has led to the emergence of market-shaping strategies, which refer to a focal company's deliberate efforts to alter market characteristics, such as price levels or nonmarket elements, such as regulations, in its favor.Most descriptions of market-shaping strategies suggest that they influence both the market and nonmarket environments synergistically, and thus resemble the concept of an integrated strategy. However, given the systemic nature of markets, a company shaping a market may need to combine intended actions aimed at realizing the focal company's market-shaping vision and emergent actions as response to emerging system dynamics. This implies that a marketshaping strategy may be constituted by different strategies with different but synergistic goals unified by the overarching goal of realizing the focal company's market-shaping goal. In other words, a market-shaping strategy may be a strategy of strategies -a meta-strategy.Moreover, previous research has indicated the significant potential of market-shaping strategies to improve the financial performance of companies as well as the overall market performance by increasing market size, market growth and value creation. However, despite this potential, the notion of market-shaping strategies has remained conceptually and empirically underdeveloped.This dissertation seeks to improve our understanding of market-shaping strategies by analyzing the constituent dimensions of market-shaping strategies and by presenting new empirical insights into how such strategies are employed. Hereby, two papers synthesize extant literature on market-shaping to analyze and conceptualize the underlying process of market-shaping strategies as well as a typology of distinct market-shaping strategies. The other two papers provide new empirical evidence concerning the employment of market-shaping strategies by investigating the influence of market-shaping roles and capabilities on the market-shaping efforts of a focal company. I would also like to thank all the people I met abroad that made my stays in Auckland, Adelaide and Perth unforgettable. Thank you, Julia Fehrer, for inviting me to visit the Auckland Business VIII School and the great time I've had there! Here, I would also like to thank you, Stefano Pascucci, it was a true pleasure to meet you and listen to your wisdom! Thank you, Jonathan Baker, for inviting me to the University of Adelaide and the great conversations we have had and are still having! Thank you Valtteri Kaartemo for being so welcoming and open to new ideas! I would also like to thank all the people that were indirectly part of my journey. Thank ...