2019
DOI: 10.1177/2158244018822379
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Corporate Sustainable Longevity: Scale Development and Validation

Abstract: From the roots of corporate longevity that has been built by previous researchers, this article enhances existing work toward measuring the concept of corporate sustainable longevity (CSL) beyond an average firm's age. By adopting the sequential exploratory mixed method, we performed this study in two phases: qualitative followed by quantitative. In the first phase, we used the Delphi method to verify and validate the thematic elements of the construct and generated a pool of items from the extant literature. … Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(47 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(111 reference statements)
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“…These findings have significant theoretical, managerial, and contextual contributions as well as practical implications for family firms. This paper responds to the calls from Ahmad et al (2019) and Napolitano et al (2015) to better understand survival or longevity in other types of businesses (family firms).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These findings have significant theoretical, managerial, and contextual contributions as well as practical implications for family firms. This paper responds to the calls from Ahmad et al (2019) and Napolitano et al (2015) to better understand survival or longevity in other types of businesses (family firms).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A five-point Likert scale was used to measure the agreement of respondents for each item or statement, where 1 represented "strongly disagree" and 5 represented "strongly agree." For sustainable survival, a five-dimensional scale of CSL constructed and validated by Ahmad et al (2019) was adopted. The five dimensions included financial strength, customer orientation, internal capabilities, strategic perspective, and learning and growth perspective, whereas FIB was operationalized by adapting the conceptualization of Debicki et al (2016).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One of the fundamental objectives of any business is to survive in the long run. The ability of a firm to sustain its longevity essentially depends on maintaining the profitability of the business along with numerous other factors (Ahmad et al , 2019; Napolitano et al , 2015). Despite the fact that family firms are the dominant form of business representing around 80% of global business structure (Gagné et al , 2019), survival or longevity is the biggest common challenge for them across the world.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%