Several markers define the glorious outpouring of theorizing and systematic empirical research that has supported management, organization, and strategy since the mid-1950s. Any list of these markers should include two seminal reports published in 1959. The first, commissioned by the Ford Foundation and written by Robert Aaron Gordon and James Edwin Howell was Higher Education for Business. The second, commissioned by the Carnegie Foundation and written by Frank C. Pierson was The Education of American Businessmen: A Study of University-College Programs in Business Administration. The reports gave a jolt to the established research and education in management, propelling them into the realm of social sciences. They initiated a 50-year-long effort to establish scholarly respect for business school research.
Any discussions of markers must also include the publication, around the same time, of Simon's Administrative Behavior (Reference Simon1947); Blau's The Dynamics of Bureaucracy (Reference Blau1955); Gouldner's Patterns of Industrial Bureaucracy (1955); March and Simon's Organizations (Reference March and Simon1958); Burns and Stalker's The Management of Innovation (Reference Burns and Stalker1961); Blau and Scott's Formal Organizations (Reference Blau and Scott1962); and Cyert and March's Behavioral Theory of the Firm (Reference Cyert and March1963). The list of markers should also include the founding, on December 1, 1953, of the Institute of Management Sciences and the journal Management Science, with C. West Churchman as its founding Editor-in-Chief. By the time Churchman stepped down as editor, Management Science was recognized as a leading management journal, publishing research in the disciplines related to business, including game theory, organization psychology, leadership, and the epistemology of science, which was a concern for Churchman. In 1956, Administrative Science Quarterly was founded. In its inaugural essay, On Building an Administrative Science, James D. Thompson voiced an aspiration for research patterned after the rigor and precision of physics and the practice of engineering. This essay probably hastened the race for quantification in management research. In 1961, the Aston group of organization researchers, led by Derek S. Pugh, began to conduct surveys and statistical analyses in organization research, as the pioneer on the journey toward a science of administration (Loveridge, Reference Loveridge, Witzel and Warner2013).
‘Science is highly esteemed’, wrote Chalmers (Reference Chalmers1999: xix), and the word ‘science’ in the name of the two pioneering journals signified the hope of elevating management research to a respectable social science discipline. It is true that whether a subject is regarded as scientific is a matter of convention (Popper, Reference Popper1959), but the ‘science’ label was not attached arbitrarily. The fact that management research differs from physics did not imply that it had to adopt completely different methods or norms of practice. Rather, then as now, social and natural sciences share similar methods and norms – they share a certain degree of scientificity (see Tsang, Reference Tsang2017: ch. 8). This editorial assumes that management researchers still consider themselves social scientists, who conduct research that strives to affect managers, employees, stakeholders, and society at large.
RECENT CRITICISMS OF MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION THEORY
Recently, the field has been criticized for its pursuit of novelty over truth, its lack of connection with the practice of management and organization practice, and the vulnerability of its scientific claims.
On the sixtieth anniversary of Administrative Science Quarterly, Gerald Davis, its Editor-in-Chief, lamented that organization theory had come to value novelty, curious oddities, and supposed counterintuitive findings over ‘truth’ and the accumulation of knowledge (Reference Davis2015). Stephen R. Barley (Reference Barley2016), a past editor of ASQ, concurred and pointed out that this tendency is reinforced in the way doctoral students are trained, journal reviewers and editors select manuscripts, and universities award positions and promotions. Their protests recall the observation by the Nobel laureate Paul Krugman (Reference Krugman2009) that a scientific preference for beauty over truth led to the neglect of the limitations of human rationality, institutions, and markets, making theories elegant but hardly predictive. Such tendencies may be institutionalized but should not be taken for granted: Einstein's theory of relativity replaced Newtonian mechanics not because it was novel or counterintuitive but because it explained observed reality better (Tsang, 2017).
Business schools err when they choose a performance evaluation convention that overemphasizes the number of publications over their quality and when they, somewhat arbitrarily, rank journals as A, B, or C. It seems that business schools are substituting journal impact scores, a notoriously unreliable measure of a scholar's productivity (Baum, Reference Baum2011, Reference Baum2012, Reference Baum2013), for careful evaluation of substance. Thus, researchers have neglected central issues of the times, such as the sharing economy, on-demand employment of workers, the demands and consequences of economies in transition, and social issues, such as the growing income gap, social inequality, and sustainability. Not only has management research failed to find practical applications for theoretical ideas but the field has avoided addressing serious challenges facing organizations and society. Moreover, an unanticipated consequence of the quest for novelty and ‘interesting’ theoretical tweaks has been the fragmentation of theoretical frameworks as well as the emergence of ideologically based theories and supporting empirical research (Lewin et al. Reference Lewin, Weigelt, Emery, Poole and Van de Ven2004). Tsui (Reference Tsui2016) contends that business school research is disconnected from practice and has an overwhelming pro-management bias. She develops a strong argument that business school research must also consider the societal challenges that are consequences of the existing business system in the United States but also in other economies, especially transition economies (see also Corley & Gioia, Reference Corley and Gioia2011; Ghoshal, Reference Ghoshal2005; Sarasvathy, Reference Sarasvathy2003; Shapiro, Kirkman, & Courtney, Reference Shapiro, Kirkman and Courtney2007; Starbuck, Reference Starbuck2004; Walsh, Arora, & Cohen, Reference Walsh, Arora and Cohen2003). We see a serious disconnect between management research and practice. For example, few faculty members use their research for teaching. Fewer still write articles that managers find useful.
Yet perhaps most damning is the prevailing critique of empirical social science, which questions the validity of our scientific claims.
RESEARCH RIGOR, REVISITED
More than six decades after the Ford Foundation and Carnegie Commission reports, social science frequently falls short of scientific standards of falsifiability, replicability, and data transparency, which are foundational for accumulating scientific knowledge, the ideal that Thompson (Reference Thompson1956) envisioned.
‘The truth is under attack’, observed Levine (Reference Levine2012), and this impression has only intensified since he expressed that sentiment. An extensive survey shows how common ‘questionable research practices’ are among psychologists (John, Loewenstein, & Prelec, Reference John, Loewenstein and Prelec2012): Roughly two-thirds of respondents admitted failing to report all the dependent measures in a study. Half of them confessed to reporting selectively, discussing only results that ‘worked’. A third acknowledged HARKing: claiming unexpected results as if they had been hypothesized in advance (Kerr, Reference Kerr1998). Even more troubling is that respondents often acted naively, not realizing that such selective reporting can constitute ‘p-hacking’: disguising a false proposition as a true one with supposedly high statistical significance (Simmons, Nelson, & Simonsohn, Reference Simmons, Nelson and Simonsohn2011). Such practices can generate findings that are ‘counterintuitive’ simply because they are false positives. If a researcher rummages through data to look for ‘statistically significant’ relationships, which are then used to form hypotheses, this researcher is lending false support to a theory, reporting as if the theory were predictive of these results. In reality, the theoretical predictions were never tested; they were just found in the data. The findings may be true or may be just coincidental – that is never ascertained. This violation makes theories appear stronger than they are, causing scholars to mistakenly rely on them rather than question their validity (Starbuck, Reference Starbuck2016: 172).
Backed by extensive analysis, van Witteloostuijn (Reference van Witteloostuijn2015) argues that social science research and management research specifically have been overwhelmingly violating basic falsifiability principles as advocated by Popper (Reference Popper1959). According to him, the obsession and preference among journals to publish ‘cutting-edge’ and ‘groundbreaking’ findings have had the unfortunate negative consequence of leading journals and the peer review process almost always publish only positive empirical findings, not requiring reporting or discussion of negative or null findings or analysis of outlier observations and rarely, if ever, publishing replication studies (see also Bedeian, Taylor, & Miller [Reference Bedeian, Taylor and Miller2010], which reports on 11 different types of questionable research conduct, including data fabrication, data falsification, plagiarism, HARKing, inappropriately accepting or assigning authorship credit, and publishing the same data or results in two or more publications).
Public attention is drawn to stories of data fabrication, but lax research practices can be more damaging: They are less dramatic yet swamp journals, monographs, and textbooks with false conclusions. Recently, two herculean projects sought to assess the veracity of published research. In psychology, the Open Science Collaboration (2015), composed of 270 scholars from around the world, attempted to replicate 100 studies, randomly selected. Most of the original studies reported positive findings (many of them, when published, were surely regarded as ‘significant’ and ‘counterintuitive’). But when researchers attempted to replicate the findings, they were able to do so for only 39% of the studies. Averaging across studies, the effect size was half of that originally reported.
In economics, a similar effort examined 18 experiments published in the American Economic Review and the Quarterly Journal of Economics (Camerer, Dreber, Forsell, Ho, Huber, Johannesson, Wu, Reference Camerer, Dreber, Forsell, Ho, Huber, Johannesson and Wu2016). In this case, researchers replicated only 61% of the findings. They found that average effect sizes were considerably smaller than originally reported. Closer to home, Goldfarb and King (Reference Goldfarb and King2016) assessed a sample of 300 published studies. They estimated that 24–40% of the studies could not be replicated. A recent special issue on replication (Ethiraj, Gambardella, & Helfat, Reference Ethiraj, Gambardella and Helfat2016) yielded a multitude of nonreplicable findings, including some that have been cited frequently (e.g., Tsang & Yamanoi, Reference Tsang and Yamanoi2016). The situation is not necessarily better in the life sciences. After all, it was a medical journal in which Ioannidis (Reference Ioannidis2005) declared that ‘most published research findings are false’. In cancer research, Begley and Ellis (Reference Begley and Ellis2012) disclosed that scientists could replicate only 11% of published findings. A large replication project is now underway (Errington et al., Reference Errington, Iorns, Gunn, Tan, Lomax and Nosek2014).
Getting Back on Track
Journals including the Strategic Management Journal (SMJ; Bettis, Ethiraj, Gambardella, Helfat, & Mitchell, Reference Bettis, Ethiraj, Gambardella, Helfat and Mitchell2016), Organization Behavior and Human Decision Processes (OBHDP; Chen, Reference Chen2015), and the American Economic Review have adopted policies to counteract flaws in empirical social science. For example, the new guidelines for SMJ state that the journal no longer accepts papers that report asterisks or specific cutoff points for statistical significance (p-values). Authors are expected to report complete empirical results, including negative or null results, and discuss size effect and its interpretation. The editors of SMJ have also begun to publish replication studies as well as null results (Bettis, Helfat, & Shaver, Reference Bettis, Helfat and Shaver2016).
The OBHDP policies are directed specifically at increasing the reliability of published empirical papers. At the time that a manuscript is submitted, the accompanying cover letter must clearly state whether the data in the article are also the basis of articles in press or considered for publication elsewhere. Authors may be asked to include a table of variables, instruments, or participants in the study submitted to the journal that have been published elsewhere. The policy regarding data access and retention states: ‘authors may be asked to provide the raw data in connection with a paper for editorial review, and should be prepared to provide public access to such data if practicable, and should in any event be prepared to retain such data for a reasonable time after publication’. Moreover, OBHDP expects to implement a requirement that, as part of the review process, authors upload their data, syntax, and materials to an open depository, such as the one maintained by the Open Science Framework.
New Policies at Management and Organization Review
As guardians of scientific truth, leading journals cannot discount the need for reforms. But putting reforms in place is rarely easy (Starbuck, Reference Starbuck2016). As the editors of MOR, we are extremely mindful of the challenges ahead in counteracting and addressing the criticisms of empirical social science research. The challenge and the direction are clear, yet we are sensitive to the imperative to find a way that best serves this journal and its unique community of management scholars. In the sections that follow, we outline new editorial policies and several initiatives that we believe can differentiate MOR from other journals.
Training and education
We will begin by engaging MOR Senior Editors and Editorial Review Board members to arrive at a shared understanding of new norms for conducting and reporting empirical results, which can accumulate into a reliable body of knowledge in management in the context of China and all other transforming economies. Because we believe that this journal reveals indigenous management theories, we are committed to helping scholars design and undertake research that satisfies the criteria of falsifiability and replicability, including data transparency, robustness, treatment of outliers, and null findings. MOR will offer workshops in China and in other transforming economies to establish a renewed understanding of the philosophical underpinnings of management research: the nature of assumptions, theory testing, generalization, post hoc analyses, replication, and qualitative case research.
Recognition for authors who share their work
‘If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants’, wrote Isaac Newton.[1] We recognize that science is a collective effort. Scholars build on the efforts of their predecessors and contemporaries: refining theories, testing predictions, honing instruments. To benefit from others’ work, one must have access to it. That is why the scientific currency is a peer-reviewed publication – making one's work publicly available. Yet any journal article has limitations on its length, so it necessarily omits some information that may be useful for those who wish to build on its author's research. Because of the current reproducibility crisis in science, in which the validity of much published research is questionable, fuller disclosure can bolster validity and renew trust in scientific findings.
MOR will recognize authors who share more than a manuscript by featuring designated badges that recognize exemplary scientific practices. Such badges have been introduced in leading journals in other disciplines, such as Psychological Science and the American Journal of Political Science, and are based on the principles of the Open Science Framework.
MOR will grant an Open Materials badge to authors who deposit their research materials in an open-access depository, such as those of the Open Science Framework (https://osf.io/) or As Predicted (https://aspredicted.org). The deposited materials should be as complete as possible to allow an independent researcher to reproduce the reported methodology. Depending on the methodology, materials may include statistical code, questionnaires, interview questions, experimental procedures, and participant instructions (but not data). Separately, MOR will grant an Open Data badge to authors who deposit their data in such an open-access repository. Authors can satisfy this requirement by depositing their entire dataset or by depositing a slice of it as long as it allows an independent researcher to reproduce the reported results. If confidentiality is sought, authors may also deposit a transformed dataset, as long as it allows reproduction of the reported results. Depending on the methodology, data may include quantitative and qualitative materials, but deposited data may not compromise the anonymity of participants or undermine promises of confidentiality.
Preapprovals — New support for authors
MOR will offer preapproval for studies, drawing on the model of registered reports in the natural and social sciences. To apply for preapproval, authors submit a proposal for a study, explaining its theoretical foundation, reviewing the relevant literature, elaborating on a research question, and proposing the source of data, whether existing or new. Essentially, authors submit what constitutes the sections about research question, literature review, and empirical design of a ready manuscript. But they do not provide analysis, results, or conclusion. The proposal will be reviewed, and, if it is accepted, the authors commit to collecting data and completing the study as proposed. In return, the journal guarantees publication – regardless of the findings. In other words, because of the importance of the subject matter, MOR will publish the results whether as hypothesized or not, whether positive or null.
The study is expected to be published in two parts: The first will report results of the study as approved, and the second will present and discuss post hoc analyses, which may arise while analyzing and reporting the originally approved study. A similar preapproval process will also be implemented for qualitative studies.
Preapproval is meant to counteract the prevalence of publication bias: Studies with positive results are more likely to be published than studies without results, thereby skewing the literature and miscommunicating the likelihood of certain outcomes (Begg & Berlin, Reference Begg and Berlin1988). The publication bias may have been exacerbated by the desire for novel results.
Hypothesis testing is not obligatory
MOR is encouraging authors to bypass the expectation of presenting exploratory research in the guise of hypothesis testing. We will consider exploratory research, meant to identify and describe phenomena, as well as confirmatory research, meant to test hypotheses generated from theory. We expect any manuscript to motivate a research question by framing it in existing literature, propose a plan for investigating it, and discuss the data for the study. Any statistical analysis should present and discuss all findings, positive, negative, or null.
Post hoc analysis is permitted if labeled as such. Hypothesizing after the results are known is a dubious practice (Kerr, Reference Kerr1998). But a study may include hypothesis testing alongside post hoc analyses, which explore relationships that were not originally hypothesized. This can happen, for instance, if new insights emerge during the analysis. Transparency in applying post hoc analyses will advance science by spurring researchers to conduct follow-up studies that compare findings.
Avoid cutoff points for statistical significance
When reporting statistical findings, authors should avoid referring to arbitrary cutoff points for statistical significance (p-values). As the American Statistical Association recently declared: ‘Practices that reduce data analysis or scientific inference to mechanical “bright-line” rules (such as p < 0.05) for justifying scientific claims or conclusions can lead to erroneous beliefs and poor decision making’ (Wasserstein & Lazar, Reference Wasserstein and Lazar2016: 131). In this, they join a chorus of statisticians (e.g., Gelman & Stern, Reference Gelman and Stern2006) and management researchers (e.g., Bettis et al., Reference Bettis, Helfat and Shaver2016b; Starbuck, Reference Starbuck2016). MOR will require authors to report coefficient estimates alongside exact p-values or standard errors.
Not all statistical effects are meaningful or important. For that, we expect that authors interpret the findings, especially effect size. Authors are expected to provide readers with a reasonable sense of how strongly an independent variable affects the dependent variable (see for example Aguinis et al., Reference Aguinis, Werner, Abbott, Angert, Park and Kohlhausen2010). Reviewers and editors may also require that authors offer alternative theoretical explanations, which may be analyzed post hoc using same data or new data.
Access to data may be required
The publication of a scientific paper implies that authors are inviting others to replicate and build upon their findings. MOR, therefore, encourages authors to make their instruments and data available and recognizes those who do. However, during the review process, authors may be asked to provide reviewers with access to instruments and data, including questionnaires and field notes, variable definitions, transformations, and statistical procedures. Such materials will be kept confidential (as all submitted manuscripts are). If authors foresee difficulty in complying with this policy, they must disclose it at the time the manuscript is submitted. Reviewers may be asked to comment on their access to instruments and data.
The complete details of the MOR revised editorial policy inluding on implementing the preapproval option will be available in issue 13.1.
CONCLUSION
The criticism of empirical social science will not disappear. During the administration of President Ronald Reagan, the behavioral science budget of the National Science Foundation (excluding the economics program) was severely cut. That happened, in part, because empirical social science was not viewed as deserving a designation as a science. Journals would do well to adopt reforms, such as those discussed here, and help administrators recognize that the current conventions of promotion reinforce the perceived irrelevance of business school research. Moreover, the aspiration of this journal, as envisioned by its founding editor Anne Tsui and articulated in her collective writings, was to focus on discovering and giving voice to indigenous management research in transforming economies, such as China. MOR, as a relative newcomer, is more vulnerable to criticism. Hence, MOR is taking the lead in promoting, recognizing, and requiring high-quality research.
In doing so, MOR has an opportunity to attract research inspired by ideas in indigenous traditions, which reveal their contemporary significance through progressive engagement, variation, and reformation. In response to the emphasis on novelty elsewhere, MOR aims to attract indigenous research that is scientific, in the truest sense of the term, yet relevant to management and business.