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Purpose

In the 1990s, a growing number of companies adopted value‐based management (VBM) techniques in the UK. The purpose of this paper is to explore the motivations for the adoption or non‐adoption of VBM for managing a business.

Design/methodology/approach

An interview‐based study of 37 large UK companies. Insights from diffusion theory and institutional theory are utilised to theorise these motivations.

Findings

It was found that the rate of adoption of VBM in the sample companies does follow the classical S‐shape. It also suggests that the supply‐side of the diffusion process, most notably the role played by consultants, was an influence on many companies. This was not, however, a sufficient condition for companies to adopt the technique. The research also finds evidence of relocation diffusion, as several adopters are influenced by new officers, for example chief executive officers and finance directors, importing VBM techniques that they have used in organizations within which they have previously worked.

Research limitations/implications

It is quite a small scale study and further work would be needed to develop the findings.

Practical implications

Understanding and theorising the adoption of new management techniques will help understand the management of a business.

Originality/value

This research adds further evidence to the value of studying management accounting, and more specifically management accounting change, in practice. It shows the developments in the adoption of a new technique and hence how a technique becomes accepted in practice.

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