Abstract

I present argument and evidence for a structural ecology of social capital that describes how the value of social capital to an individual is contingent on the number of people doing the same work. The information and control benefits of bridging the structural holes—or, disconnections between nonredundant contacts in a network—that constitute social capital are especially valuable to managers with few peers. Such managers do not have the guiding frame of reference for behavior provided by numerous competitors, and the work they do does not have the legitimacy provided by numerous people doing the same kind of work. I use network and performance data on a probability sample of senior managers to show how the value of social capital, high on average for the managers, varies as a power function of the number of people doing the same work.

Keywords

Social capitalValue (mathematics)EconomicsSociologySocial scienceMathematicsStatistics

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

The Capital Structure Puzzle

Stewart C. Myers President of American Finance Association 1983 This paper's title is intended to remind you of Fischer Black's well-known note on “The Dividend Puzzle,” which h...

1984 The Journal of Finance 7515 citations

The Social Control of Impersonal Trust

How do societies control trust relationships that are not embedded in structures of personal relations? This paper discusses the guardians of impersonal trust and discovers that...

1987 American Journal of Sociology 1672 citations

Tough Choices: Managers Talk Ethics

Partial table of contents: Ethical Situations at Work The Managers Who Talked Ethics In Their Own Words'' Stop that SOB from Giving Away Any More of This Bank (M. Williams) Anot...

1986 DigitalGeorgetown (Georgetown Univers... 97 citations

Publication Info

Year
1997
Type
article
Volume
42
Issue
2
Pages
339-339
Citations
3366
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Altmetric

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

3366
OpenAlex

Cite This

Ronald S. Burt (1997). The Contingent Value of Social Capital. Administrative Science Quarterly , 42 (2) , 339-339. https://doi.org/10.2307/2393923

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/2393923