scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

Let Chaos Reign, Then Rein In Chaos--Repeatedly: Managing Strategic Dynamics For Corporate Longevity

TLDR
This article proposed that corporate longevity depends on matching cycles of autonomous and induced strategy processes to different forms of strategic dynamics, and that the role of alert strategic leadership is to appropriately balance the induced and autonomous processes throughout these cycles.
Abstract
Combining longitudinal field research and executive experience, we propose that corporate longevity depends on matching cycles of autonomous and induced strategy processes to different forms of strategic dynamics, and that the role of alert strategic leadership is to appropriately balance the induced and autonomous processes throughout these cycles. We also propose that such strategic leadership is the means through which leadership style exerts its influence on corporate longevity. Our findings can be related to organizational research on structural inertia, learning and adaptation, as well as to formal theories of complex adaptive systems. They also contribute to resolving the seeming contradiction between a study of corporations that attributes exceptional long-term success to leadership style, and the more common proposition that strategy is the determinant of long-term performance.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Unpacking Organizational Ambidexterity: Dimensions, Contingencies, and Synergistic Effects

TL;DR: It is found that over and above their independent effects, concurrent high levels of BD and CD yield synergistic benefits, and managers in resource-constrained contexts may benefit from a focus on managing trade-offs between exploration and exploitation demands, but for firms that have access to sufficient resources, the simultaneous pursuit of Exploration and exploitation is both possible and desirable.
Posted Content

The Critical Success Factors of Business Process Management

TL;DR: The paper proposes an underlying theoretical framework with the utilization of three theories: contingency, dynamic capabilities and task-technology fit that is used to identify critical success factors on a case study from the banking sector.
Journal ArticleDOI

CEO Hubris and Firm Risk Taking in China: The Moderating Role of Managerial Discretion

TL;DR: The authors linked CEO hubris to firm risk taking and examined the moderating role of managerial discretion in this relationship, drawing on upper echelons theory and behavioral decision theory, they examined the role of discretion in the relationship.
Journal ArticleDOI

Good to great.

TL;DR: This question, posed to Jim Collins over dinner one evening, inspired the book Good to Great, and what makes this book so interesting is not only what was discovered, but the rigor of the discovery process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational Linkages for Surviving Technological Change: Complementary Assets, Middle Management, and Ambidexterity

TL;DR: This paper develops a conceptual framework in which the ability to build and leverage organizational linkages involving the new technology and its complementary assets is essential for a successful technological transition and highlights the importance of middle management in creating and maintaining these linkages.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic capabilities and strategic management

TL;DR: The dynamic capabilities framework as mentioned in this paper analyzes the sources and methods of wealth creation and capture by private enterprise firms operating in environments of rapid technological change, and suggests that private wealth creation in regimes of rapid technology change depends in large measure on honing intemal technological, organizational, and managerial processes inside the firm.
Book

The Origins of Order: Self-Organization and Selection in Evolution

TL;DR: The structure of rugged fitness landscapes and the structure of adaptive landscapes underlying protein evolution, and the architecture of genetic regulatory circuits and its evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a dynamic theory of strategy

TL;DR: The cross-sectional problem is logically prior to a consideration of dynamics, and better understood, and three promising streams of research that address the longitudinal problem still fall short of exposing the true origins of competitive success.
Journal ArticleDOI

A dynamic model of process and product innovation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report results from empirical tests of relationships between the pattern of innovation within a firm and certain of the firm's characteristics: the stage of development of its production process and its chosen basis of competition.
Related Papers (5)