“…Further, tactics such as dormancy (i.e., temporary reduction in firms' activity in response to detrimental public policy; Kozhikode, 2016), venue shifting (Georgallis, Pimentel, & Kondratenko, 2021;Ingram & Rao, 2004;Kozhikode, 2016;Somaya & McDaniel, 2012), self-regulation, and regulatory co-creation (Delmas & Montes-Sancho, 2010;Gao & McDonald, 2022;Hou & Yao, 2022;Werner, 2012) may not necessarily be classified as financial, informational, or constituency-building strategies. Although such tactics undoubtedly represent CPA in that they allow firms to influence their governmental outcomes, most of them do not require interaction with focal governmental actors (i.e., those that currently have jurisdiction over the firm, and therefore have the power to decide on its political outcomes), instead shifting the interaction to future governmental actors (e.g., dormancy), governmental actors in other jurisdictions (e.g., venue shifting), and even the firm itself (e.g., self-regulation and regulatory co-creation).…”