I guess you can consider this issue from two dimensions: theory level or phenomenon level. Here are some questions you may want to think about in terms of potential research directions: In terms of the theory-level issues, are you interested in econ-oriented or sociology-based strategy research? Or, are you equipped with decent econometric/ statistics skills for quantitative research? The major theoretical perspectives for the econ-based camp would be transaction cost, industrial organization, agency theory or game theory, etc. On the other hand, social network/ social capital/ embeddedness, new institutional theory, resource dependence and organizational ecology/ demography are among the most popular theories for the latter type of strategy research. Others, like resource-based view, upper echelon perspective are kind of in between. As for the phenomenon- or topic-wise issues, there are tons of topics that may fall within the category of "strategy" research-- essentially anything. For example, corporate governnance, org boundary, org design, org change, org learning, alliances, M&A, international business, industry dynamics, diversification, technology and innovation, signals and symbols, entrepreneurship, effects of business practices (incluign accounting practices, financial disclosure, and of course HR policies), etc. A topic can usually be explored from different theoretical perspective; for example, "alliances" can be studies with either social network or TCE perspective. Among all these topics and thepretical perspectives, I guess the upper echelon perspective may be the best fit in terms of your background (it's both a theory and a phenomenom-- the major figures of this perspective believe that the demographic compisition of the upper echelon matters a lot, and they have empirically examined the effects on performance or decision makiing). But, to be honest, it's not an emerging theory, and few prestigious schools are focusing on this line of research. Also, some sociologists in the business school (especially those new institutional folks) have been inspecting diversity management/ HR issues in organizations, like Frank Dobbin and Erin Kelly. But this type of research is very discipline-oriented (to be specific, sociology-oriented). Good luck! |