“…As shown in Table 1, of 85 empirical papers, we identified from these two journals that had to do with CEO succession, 27 (or about 32%) directly measured dismissal. Importantly, many of the other 58 papers considered CEO succession amidst situations that would implicitly be associated with dismissal (e.g., poor performance, financial misconduct, governance failures) (e.g., Arthaud‐Day et al, 2006; Dalton & Kesner, 1985; Ndofor et al, 2013; Wiersema & Zhang, 2013) or dealt with succession outcomes where dismissal may have different implications than more general turnover (e.g., inside versus outside succession, postsuccession performance, postsuccession TMT composition) (e.g., Ballinger & Marcel, 2010; Boeker & Goodstein, 1993; Keck & Tushman, 1993; Keum, 2020; Miller, 1993; Osborn, Jauch, Martin, & Glueck, 1981). Thus, these numbers provide one indication of the potential value—in terms of the amount of research activity in this area—of our open access database for increasing the precision of future succession studies.…”