The Reference Wars: Encyclopædia Britannica’s Decline and Encarta’s Emergence

An established and leading firm, such as Encyclopædia Britannica, would seem to have enormous advantages over its competitors in a new market. Why would a successful firm come to have severe difficulties organizing for a new market? Of particular importance for explaining Britannica’s decline are theories that stress its inherited capabilities, especially inherited technological (in)abilities and inherited (mis)perceptions about the potential for new market opportunities. This article argues that Britannica’s management did not misperceive the opportunities and threats, and Britannica did not lack technical prowess. This narrative stresses that Britannica’s management faced organizational diseconomies of scope between supporting lines of business in the old and new markets, which generated internal conflicts. The narrative directs attention at managing commercialization activity around new products using new technologies .

Published Date
20 May 2025

Written By
Shane Mitchell Greenstein

Article Type
Journal Article Video Abstract

Topics
Competitive Strategy, Innovation

Interest Group
Competitive Strategy IG, Knowledge & Innovation IG

Content Source
Strategic Management Journal