Communication, Incentives, and the Execution of a Strategic Initiative
37 Pages Posted: 30 Apr 2014 Last revised: 28 Jan 2017
Date Written: January 27, 2017
Abstract
Senior leadership has two primary levers to influence a direct report: incentives and communication. Financial incentives are credible and precisely specified but offer limited flexibility. In contrast, communication is flexible but lacks precision, and must be deemed credible to affect a direct report's actions. We study a setting where senior leadership seeks to add a new initiative to their organization's portfolio. The initiative's potential to create value is not initially well-understood. Senior leadership eventually obtains more precise information on the initiative's value, and subsequently, may communicate this information to their direct report. We analyze senior leadership's incentive and communication decisions, and ultimately their portfolio decision. We find senior leadership's communication only affects a direct report's actions when a new initiative's potential to create value is sufficiently uncertain. Additionally, we find instances where an organization may benefit from communication that offers less specificity.
Keywords: New Product Development, Incentives, Communication, Executing Strategy, Strategy Implementation, Strategy Cascading
JEL Classification: D23, J33, M52, M54, O31, O32
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation