Quantifying the Importance of Firms by Means of Reputation and Network Control

Open access
Date
2021-06Type
- Journal Article
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
As recently argued in the literature, the reputation of firms can be channeled through their ownership structure. We use this relation to model reputation spillovers between transnational companies and their participated companies in an ownership network core of 1,318 firms. We then apply concepts of network controllability to identify minimum sets of driver nodes (MDSs) of 314 firms in this network. The importance of these driver nodes is classified according to their control contribution, their operating revenue, and their reputation. The latter two are also taken as proxies for the access costs when utilizing firms as driver nodes. Using an enrichment analysis, we find that firms with high reputation maintain the controllability of the network but rarely become top drivers, whereas firms with medium reputation most likely become top driver nodes. We further show that MDSs with lower access costs can be used to control the reputation dynamics in the whole network. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000493916Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Frontiers in Big DataVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Frontiers MediaSubject
network analysis; reputation; companies/firms; ownership; controllabilityOrganisational unit
03682 - Schweitzer, Frank / Schweitzer, Frank
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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