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Temporal Work in Strategy Making

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors developed a model of temporal work in strategy making that articulates how actors resolved differences and linked their interpretations of the past, present, and future so as to construct a strategic account that enabled concrete strategic choice and action.
Abstract
This paper reports on a field study of strategy making in one organization facing an industry crisis. In a comparison of five strategy projects, we observed that organizational participants struggled with competing interpretations of what might emerge in the future, what was currently at stake, and even what had happened in the past. We develop a model of temporal work in strategy making that articulates how actors resolved differences and linked their interpretations of the past, present, and future so as to construct a strategic account that enabled concrete strategic choice and action. We found that settling on a particular account required it to be coherent, plausible, and acceptable; otherwise, breakdowns resulted. Such breakdowns could impede progress, but they could also be generative in provoking a search for new interpretations and possibilities for action. The more intensely actors engaged in temporal work, the more likely the strategies departed from the status quo. Our model suggests that strategy cannot be understood as the product of more or less accurate forecasting without considering the multiple interpretations of present concerns and historical trajectories that help to constitute those forecasts. Projections of the future are always entangled with views of the past and present, and temporal work is the means by which actors construct and reconstruct the connections among them. These insights into the mechanisms of strategy making help explain the practices and conditions that produce organizational inertia and change.

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Citations
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Strategy tools-in-use: A framework for understanding “technologies of rationality” in practice

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Making sense of the sensemaking perspective: Its constituents, limitations, and opportunities for further development

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore and articulate what constitutes the sensemaking perspective in organization studies, as well as its range of applications and limitations, and critically discuss the criticism that the sense-making perspective has received so far and selectively expand on it.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

The Core Competence of the Corporation

TL;DR: The most powerful way to prevail in global competition is still invisible to many companies as discussed by the authors, which is why the concept of the corporation itself has not yet been recognized as a powerful competitive advantage.
Book

Sensemaking in organizations

Karl E. Weick
TL;DR: The Nature of Sensemaking Seven properties of sensemaking Sensemaking in Organizations Occasions for Sensemaking The Substance of Sense-making Belief-Driven Processes of Sense Making Action-driven Processes on Sensemaking.
Book

The ethnographic interview

TL;DR: In this article, the developmental research sequence method is used to find an Informant and make an Ethnographic Record, making a taxonomic analysis, and making a componential analysis.