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Dynamic capabilities: A morphological analysis framework and agenda for future research

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors synthesize the diverse scholarly literature about dynamic capabilities (DCs) and develop a more integrated understanding to minimize the reported apparent vagueness, and apply morphological analysis (MA) to develop a multi-dimensional conceptual framework comprising five dimensions and 26 variants that enable a structured representation of the conceptual foundations of DCs.
Abstract
The growth, diversity and applications of research into dynamic capabilities (DCs) have resulted in the whole literature on DCs becoming a complex and disconnected body of knowledge. This has led to criticisms of the subject of DCs as being vague, tautological and without practical value. Hence, the purpose of this paper is to synthesize the diverse scholarly literature about DCs and develop a more integrated understanding to minimize the reported apparent vagueness.,In this paper, the authors review various relevant themes on DCs using a selection of 133 articles published in 22 recognized, top-tier management journals during the period between 1990 and 2016, with an aim to build a structured and integrated theory. For this, morphological analysis (MA), a systems-thinking technique, is applied.,MA is applied to develop a multi-dimensional conceptual framework comprising five dimensions and 26 variants that enable a structured representation of the conceptual foundations of DCs. Further, the authors identify 81 individual DCs noted by various scholars; elucidate assumptions and antecedents relevant to the DCs approach; structure the key characteristics; and expound the input factors, impacting factors, desired outcomes and assessment yardsticks.,This would be a useful resource for researchers working in the area of DCs to explore opportunities for future research.,The MA framework helps managers to look at DCs more holistically, and hence would help them in developing, managing and retaining DCs in organizations.,This study is the original work contributed by the authors and has no specific organizational reference. This research implies new directions to look beyond individual DCs in firms toward a more integrated theory building.

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From resource base to dynamic capabilities : an investigation of new firms

TL;DR: In this article, the authors empirically measure four dynamic capabilities and find that the nature and effect of resources employed in the development of these capabilities vary greatly, with positive effects stemming from access to particular resources and unexpected negative effects also appearing.
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Manifestations of Higher-Order Routines: The Underlying Mechanisms of Deliberate Learning in the Context of Postacquisition Integration

TL;DR: It is argued that experience codification gives rise to inertial forces that hamper the customization of routines to any given acquisition, and that successful acquirers develop higher-order routines that prevent the generalization of inapplicable ('zero-order') codified routines.
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The Path of Most Persistence: An Evolutionary Perspective on Path Dependence and Dynamic Capabilities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors extend the dynamic capability view and research on organizational path dependence by arguing that path dependence can be a property of capabilities when a contingently-triggered capability path is subject to self-reinforcement (i.e., a set of positive and negative mechanisms that increases the attractiveness of a path relative to others).
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The elephant in the room of dynamic capabilities: Bringing two diverging conversations together

TL;DR: In this article, the authors of the two seminal papers represent not only different but contradictory understandings of the construct's core elements, and they explore the reasons for this, using author cocitation analysis to inform their analysis.
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Enhancing the FIRM’S green performance through green HRM: The moderating role of green innovation culture

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper examined the effects of green human resource practices and green innovation culture on firm green performance and found that green innovation which includes green product innovation culture and green process innovation culture enhances the firm's green performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Trying to become a different type of company: dynamic capability at Smith Corona

TL;DR: The Smith Corona case provides rich insights into the resource alteration processes by which dynamic capability operates, and highlights resource cognition as a missing element in dynamic capability theory.
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Competitive attack, retaliation and performance: An expectancy-valence framework

TL;DR: In this paper, an expectancy-valence model is developed that views retaliation as a function of the subtlety of an attack: that is, its visibility, the difficulty rivals might have in responding to it in kind, and the importance or "centrality" to rivals of the market under siege.
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Psychological foundations of dynamic capabilities: reflexion and reflection in strategic management

TL;DR: In this article, a series of countervailing insights and new prescriptions for the development of dynamic capabilities are presented, using Teece's influential framework to organize and illustrate their arguments, demonstrating how the fundamental capabilities of sensing, seizing, and transforming each require firms to harness the cognitive and emotional capacities of individuals and groups.
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The Dynamic Capability View in Strategic Management: A Bibliometric Review

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the literature published between 1994 and 2011, using bibliometric methods, to explore the scope of the dynamic capability view and detect current research priorities.
Journal ArticleDOI

The organizational tension between static and dynamic efficiency

TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyze the organizational trade-off between static and dynamic efficiency and show that there is a tendency towards extremes, and that the irreversibility of efficiency orientations tends to tip the balance to be struck between static efficiency toward the latter.
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