(Press-News.org) In markets where producers drive the creative process, high-status producers can opt for more radical changes for their artists’ image, whereas middle-status producers are likely to shift their artists’ image to follow popular categories. The new research, published in Strategic Management Journal, uses Korean pop music — or K-pop — to demonstrate how the status of entertainment agencies affects how idol groups shift categories, an effect that is also limited by the artists’ gender.
The research — from Heeyon Kim of Cornell University, Yoonjeoung Heo of Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, and Chi-Nien Chung of Hong Kong Polytechnic University — expanded on prior studies that explored the limitations of category shifting for artists. Instead, the team considered how, when social actors shift categories over time, they develop multifaceted identities, which can offer substantial advantages to the artist.
The authors began by proposing three ways in which an actor's status influences category shifting. First, they suggest that middle-status actors are most motivated to follow market trends to gain more attention from the broad audience. Second, they hypothesized that high-status actors are under more pressure to create distinct identities in the short run, but more likely to take risks and shift in the long run to pursue the goal of creating multifaceted identities. Lastly, knowing that status is embedded in larger societal and institutional norms such as gender roles, the team considered limits to status-based identity shifts.
To test their theories, the research team looked at the K-pop industry, where producers exert significant control over their artists and are known to manufacture the idol groups’ concept categories. The team could also explore the impact of gender-based societal norms on identity shifts, as male and female K-pop idol groups are often classified into separate subcategories and are managed by agencies using different strategies.
The researchers determined a list of possible K-pop concepts, and stratified agencies into high, middle or low status based on the number of awards they received. They explored a sample of 680 songs by 122 idol groups from 76 agencies of varying statuses between 2004 and 2016. They measured concept category shifts of the groups by coding the concepts displayed in music videos, and matched the groups to the agencies. The results of the study supported all three of the team’s hypotheses: Idol groups from middle-status producers or agencies are most likely to follow market-dominant concept trends. Groups from high-status agencies pursue less frequent shifts in the short term — instead focusing on establishing distinct identities — but they tend to pursue the most radical shifts when they do change concepts.
“The fans of high-status agencies’ groups support their idols no matter what,” Kim says. “The high-status agencies then are able to experiment to figure out what will get a broader audience’s support. We also find that middle-status agencies’ idol groups tend to follow the dominant trend because they want to be at the center of attention, they want to be in that consideration set. They're a follower, and the high-status agencies tend to be the trendsetter with their experimentation.”
Lastly, the research team found these effects to be true most frequently with male idol groups, suggesting agency status is limited for changing the concepts for female groups, who are more constrained by societal gender expectations.
“There is a set image for female groups that, regardless of the agency’s status, they have to follow the broader societal norm,” Kim says.
The study suggests that high-status producers, agencies, or creatives have the support of fans, resources, and collaborators to experiment with identity more, compared with lower statuses. This higher status puts producers and artists in a position to create a multifaceted identity — an ultimate goal for many in the creative industry. For managers, understanding whether they’re high or middle status can determine whether to spend time following trends to solidify their fandom, or whether they have loyalty to experiment without major consequence.
To read the full context of the study and its methods, access the full paper available in the Strategic Management Journal.
About the Strategic Management Society
The Strategic Management Society (SMS) is the leading global member organization fostering and supporting rigorous and practice-engaged strategic management research. SMS enjoys the support of 3,000 members, representing more than 1,100 institutions and companies in more than 70 countries. SMS publishes three leading academic journals in partnership with Wiley: Strategic Management Journal, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal, and Global Strategy Journal. These journals publish top-quality work applicable to researchers and practitioners with complementary access for all SMS Members. The SMS Explorer offers the latest insights and takeaways from the SMS Journals for business practitioners, consultants, and academics.
Click here to subscribe to the monthly SMS Explorer newsletter.
Click here to learn more about the programs and opportunities SMS has to offer.
END
High-status producers have the support to radically shift their artists’ image, while mid-status producers follow trends
2025-09-16
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
High-performance electrode material that withstands seawater!
2025-09-16
Dr. Juchan Yang’s research team at the Hydrogen & Battery Materials Center, from the Energy & Environment Materials Research Division of the Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS), has developed a composite catalyst using the novel material MXene that suppresses the generation of chloride ions-one of the key challenges in seawater electrolysis. This research outcome is expected to accelerate the practical application of seawater electrolysis technology by enabling stable hydrogen production even in seawater.
Hydrogen is gaining attention as an eco-friendly energy source that emits no carbon. However, conventional water electrolysis ...
Targeted delivery of microRNA sponge short-hairpin RNA via VIR-inspired biotechnical vector: Enhancing cancer therapy
2025-09-16
Gene therapy offers the possibility of addressing cancer at its molecular roots by targeting disease-causing genes rather than relying solely on surgery, chemotherapy, or radiotherapy. Among RNA-based strategies, microRNA (miRNA) sponges and short-hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) have emerged as promising tools to silence oncogenes and restore tumor-suppressor pathways. However, clinical application remains constrained by delivery inefficiency, instability, and off-target toxicity. Viral and non-viral vectors each present strengths and limitations: while viral vectors provide high transfection efficiency, they often cause immune responses and mutagenesis risks; non-viral ...
When politics drives entrepreneurial innovation
2025-09-16
In November 2016, India’s government abruptly invalidated its two highest-value banknotes, wiping out about 86 percent of the nation’s cash supply overnight. Known as the Great Indian Demonetization, the move was intended to curb corruption and encourage the adoption of digital payments.
The sudden shift sparked chaos. Long lines formed outside banks as people scrambled to exchange their money before it became worthless. Small business owners and street vendors, many of whom relied almost ...
FAU researchers show adopting healthy habits can improve cognitive decline
2025-09-16
An estimated 7.2 million Americans over age 65 currently live with Alzheimer’s disease (AD). That number is expected to nearly double to 13.8 million by 2060. These increases reflect more than demographic shifts; they point to a growing public health crisis that requires a new, proactive approach. While chronological age is the strongest known risk factor for cognitive decline, losing cognitive function is not an inevitable part of aging.
As AD and other forms of cognitive decline continue to rise at an alarming rate, researchers from Florida Atlantic University’s Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, highlight a powerful ...
Outstanding postdoctoral researchers honored with 2025 Blavatnik Regional Awards for Young Scientists
2025-09-16
NEW YORK – September 16, 2025 – The Blavatnik Family Foundation and The New York Academy of Sciences are proud to announce the three Laureates and six Finalists of the 2025 Blavatnik Regional Awards for Young Scientists, the Blavatnik Awards’ flagship prize that honors outstanding postdoctoral scientists from academic research institutions across New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut.
Honoring early-career excellence in the categories of Life Sciences, Physical Sciences & Engineering, ...
Fly through Gaia’s 3D map of stellar nurseries
2025-09-16
Scientists created the most accurate three-dimensional map of star-formation regions in our Milky Way galaxy, based on data from the European Space Agency’s Gaia space telescope. This map will teach us more about these obscure cloudy areas, and the hot young stars that shape them.
It is notoriously difficult to map and study regions in space where stars form because they are usually hidden from view by thick clouds of gas and dust, whose distances cannot be directly measured.
Gaia can’t see these clouds directly, but it can measure stellar positions and the ...
Precision targeting of the centromedian nucleus in drug-resistant epilepsy highlighted in brain network disorders
2025-09-16
It is estimated that one-third of the 50 million people worldwide with epilepsy are resistant to anti-seizure medications. These patients, having drug-resistant epilepsy, have limited treatment options beyond surgery to control their seizures. Even surgical interventions become difficult in many of these patients due to challenges in pinpointing the anatomical source of their seizures, such as the seizures originating from multiple regions of the brain. Deep brain stimulation (DBS), a treatment that involves an implanted device that delivers an electrical current directly to areas of the brain, has emerged as a promising alternative, offering partial seizure control for patients who are ...
Better understanding of bitter taste receptors: An AlphaFold3-based structure study
2025-09-16
Receptor proteins, expressed on the cell surface or within the cell, bind to different signaling molecules, known as ligands, initiating cellular responses. Taste receptors, expressed in oral tissues, interact with tastants, the molecules responsible for the sensation of taste. Bitter taste receptors (T2Rs) are responsible for the sensation of bitter taste. However, apart from oral tissue, these receptors are also expressed in the neuropod cells of the gastrointestinal tract, which are responsible for transmitting signals from the gut to the brain. Thus, T2Rs might play a crucial role in maintaining the gut-brain axis.
25 types of human T2Rs have been identified to date. However, due ...
Artificial intelligence spots hidden signs of depression in students’ facial expressions
2025-09-16
Depression is one of the most common mental health challenges, but its early signs are often overlooked. It is often linked to reduced facial expressivity. However, whether mild depression or subthreshold depression (StD) (a mild state of depressive symptoms that does not meet the criteria for diagnosis but is a risk factor for developing depression) is associated with changes in facial expressions remains unknown.
In light of this, Associate Professor Eriko Sugimori and doctoral student Mayu Yamaguchi ...
UT San Antonio astronomy professor awarded for advancements in planetary science
2025-09-16
Xinting Yu, assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at The University of Texas at San Antonio, is one of two recipients of the 2025 Harold C. Urey Prize.
The national award from the American Astronomical Society’s Division for Planetary Sciences recognizes early-career scientists shaping the future of space research.
Yu was honored for her research in planetary and exoplanetary science — the study of planets in our solar system and beyond. Her work focuses on how planetary surfaces and atmospheres interact and evolve.
By combining ...