Competence Attrition: A linguistic theory of the effects of external competence acquisition for organizations

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Abstract

What happens to old competences in organizations when new competences are acquired? In this paper, we propose a competence attrition theory to explain the effects of acquiring new competences on previously acquired ones. While the presumed positive role of available competences for the acquisition of new competences has been the subject of extensive research, the potentially negative effect of the acquisition of external competences on the availability and use of existing competences has not been sufficiently theorized. We aim to do so by extending existing learning and absorptive capacity theories with insights from linguistics on competence attrition. Specifically, informed by parallel patterns in language acquisition and attrition, we develop a set of focused propositions on competence acquisition and attrition in organizations. We end the paper by discussing the implications of our theorizing for existing theory and research.

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Guercini, S., & Lechner, C. (2023). Competence Attrition: A linguistic theory of the effects of external competence acquisition for organizations. Organization Theory, 4(2). https://doi.org/10.1177/26317877231180890

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