Rhetorical history as a source of competitive advantage
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Published:2010
Roy Suddaby, William M. Foster, Chris Quinn Trank, 2010. "Rhetorical history as a source of competitive advantage", The Globalization of Strategy Research, Baum Joel A.C., Joseph Lampel
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This paper develops a framework for understanding history as a source of competitive advantage. Prior research suggests that some firms enjoy preferential access to resources as a result of their past. Historians, by contrast, understand past events as more than an objective account of reality. History also has an interpretive function. History is a social and rhetorical construction that can be shaped and manipulated to motivate, persuade, and frame action, both within and outside an organization. Viewed as a malleable construct, the capacity to manage history can, itself, be a rare and inimitable resource.
