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From a dyadic to a triadic perspective: Divestiture research implications for understanding pre- and post-acquisition processes

Author

Listed:
  • Kochura, Oleksandra
  • Mirc, Nicola
  • Lacoste, Denis

Abstract

Acquisition and divestiture studies remain surprisingly disconnected, although both fields address corporate restructuring modes that are tightly linked. Acquisitions entail buying a business that another company divests or even, in many cases, a subsequent sale of formerly acquired activities. In this paper, we adopt a seller perspective, explore cross-fertilization areas, and identify important complementary and challenging insights that divesture research can bring to acquisition research. Focusing on sell-off, a major divesture type that is considered symmetrical to an acquisition, we discuss how divestiture research can shed novel light on pre- and post-acquisition stakeholders and processes. We propose two ways in which a divestiture perspective invites rethinking: 1) regarding actors, by stressing the need to consider triadic (divester–target–acquirer) rather than dyadic configurations (target–acquirer) and 2) regarding processes and time, by enlarging the temporal horizon of acquisition processes by divestiture processes, which precede but also sometimes exceed the acquisition. We contribute to acquisition research by providing a fresh look at stakeholder and process perspectives and identifying important future research avenues.

Suggested Citation

  • Kochura, Oleksandra & Mirc, Nicola & Lacoste, Denis, 2022. "From a dyadic to a triadic perspective: Divestiture research implications for understanding pre- and post-acquisition processes," European Management Journal, Elsevier, vol. 40(6), pages 943-951.
  • Handle: RePEc:eee:eurman:v:40:y:2022:i:6:p:943-951
    DOI: 10.1016/j.emj.2022.10.003
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