2014
DOI: 10.1177/0170840614539313
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The Role of External Involvement in the Creation of Management Innovations

Abstract: Abstract:There has recently been renewed scholarly interest in management innovating, the creation of new organizational practices, structures, processes and techniques. We suggest that external involvement in the process of management innovating can transpire in three different ways: direct input from external change agents; prior external experience of internal change agents; and the use of external knowledge sources by internal change agents. We ask whether the type of innovation created (radical or not; sy… Show more

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Cited by 113 publications
(115 citation statements)
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References 83 publications
(149 reference statements)
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“…Prior research suggests that in dynamic, complex and fundamentally unpredictable environments, the effective introduction of managerial initiatives is dependent on having a flexible organization that can be adapted in response to competitive forces (Volberda, 1996). A few studies that thus far have empirically investigated the antecedents of organizational adaptability have confirmed the important enabling role of both internal agents such as transformational leaders (Vaccaro et al, 2012) and external agents such as consultants, gurus, and other organizations (Mol and Birkinshaw, 2014). There are theoretical discussions that highlight orientation towards customers as a key precursor of organizational flexibility and ability for introducing managerial initiatives.…”
Section: Managerial Initiatives As the Link Between Customer Co-creatmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Prior research suggests that in dynamic, complex and fundamentally unpredictable environments, the effective introduction of managerial initiatives is dependent on having a flexible organization that can be adapted in response to competitive forces (Volberda, 1996). A few studies that thus far have empirically investigated the antecedents of organizational adaptability have confirmed the important enabling role of both internal agents such as transformational leaders (Vaccaro et al, 2012) and external agents such as consultants, gurus, and other organizations (Mol and Birkinshaw, 2014). There are theoretical discussions that highlight orientation towards customers as a key precursor of organizational flexibility and ability for introducing managerial initiatives.…”
Section: Managerial Initiatives As the Link Between Customer Co-creatmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Introducing these managerial initiatives helps the organization to overcome the rigidities that hinder exploration by stimulating empowerment, flexibility, experimental processes and mentalities across organizational units (Birkinshaw et al, 2008;Damanpour, 1991;Jansen et al, 2006;McGrath and MacMillan, 2000;Veryzer, 1998). Nevertheless, organizations are not all equally capable of realizing such managerial initiatives (Fleming, 2002;Gebauer, 2011;Mol and Birkinshaw, 2014), and it is therefore reasonable to argue that: Hypothesis 3. The ability to introduce new managerial initiatives will be positively related to exploratory behavior in emerging technology fields.…”
Section: Managerial Initiatives and Exploratory Behavior In Emerging mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this case, adoption of the diffusing practices occurs generally when SMEs tend to obtain relevant experience from the established companies operating downstream to the SME in their value chain, or via some form of training. External experience, according to Mol and Birkinshaw, (2014: 1291-1292, 'could act both as a source of ideas, when internal change agents reapply practices they know from elsewhere'. For example, in the context of intellectual capital management practices in SMEs, this may include external experience on how to measure ICM, how to apply measurement models and which sets of measures to be used in order to improve the company's image more effectively for market entry or leverage.…”
Section: Channels Of Intellectual Capital Practice Diffusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In their model, each gradation contributes a special ratio to the entire value creation, while value seizing by contributors relies on participant's relative contracting authority. [5][6][7][8][9] Woodard et al define digital enterprise strategies as a planned competition by e-commerce enterprises through distributing digitally enabled products or services [10]. Bharadwaj et al recognize four key areas that influence our reasoning on digital enterprise strategies and that help create a structure to describe the next generation of perceptions [11].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%