37,483 research outputs found
Gendering dynamic capabilities in micro firms
Gender issues are well-researched in the general management literature, particular in studies on new
ventures. Unfortunately, gender issues have been largely ignored in the dynamic capabilities literature.
We address this gap by analyzing the effects of gender diversity on dynamic capabilities among
micro firms. We consider the gender of managers and personnel in 124 Ukrainian tourism micro firms.
We examine how a managerâs gender affects the firmâs sensing capacities and investigate how it
moderates team gender diversityâs impact on sensing capacities. We also investigate how personnel
composition impacts seizing and reconfiguration capacities. We find that female managers have
several shortcomings concerning a firmâs sensing capacity but that personnel gender diversity increases
this capacity. Team gender diversity has positive effects on a firmâs seizing and reconfiguration
abilities. Our study advances research on gender diversity and its impact on firm capabilities and
illustrates its relevance for staffing practices in micro firms
Dynamic capabilities, creative action and poetics
Research on dynamic capabilities explores how businesses change enables enterprises to remain competitive. However, theory on dynamic capabilities still struggles to capture novelty, the essence of change. This study argues that a full understanding of strategic change requires us to sharpen our focus on real people and experiences; in turn, we must incorporate other faculties, which almost always operate alongside our logical ones, into our theory. We must pay more attention to the "non-rational" sides of ourselves-including, but not limited to, our imaginations, intuitions, attractions, biographies, preferences, and aesthetic faculties and capabilities. We argue that all such faculties, on the one hand, are central to our abilities to comprehend and cope with complexity and, on the other hand, foster novel understandings, potential responses, and social creativity. This study introduces the possibility of an alternative form of inquiry that highlights the role of poetic faculties in strategic behavior and change
Role of Cognitive Style of a Manager in the Development of Tourism Companiesâ Dynamic Capabilities
Purpose â The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between cognitive styles of managers working in tourism companies and dynamic capabilities of these companies.
Design â The research relies on a quantitative questionnaire.
Methodology â To answer the research question, the bivariate (Pearson) correlation was applied. A number of 268 answers from people working in tourism were received.
Findings â We found a positive correlation between different dimensions of dynamic capabilities of tourism companies. These capabilities are influenced by managersâ cognitive characteristics.
The organizational culture plays a mediating role in the latter relationship.
Implications for theory â The paper offers an alternative understanding of dynamic capabilities in tourism and hospitality; the paper also opens new paths for academic research on the impact of cognitive characteristics of managers on the dynamic capabilities of tourism companies.
Implications for practitioners â Making accurate psychological portrait of the candidate can predict his/her behavior in certain situation, such as response towards environmental change using dynamic capabilities and when making the necessary changes to the organizational culture.
Originality â This study proposes model of influence of a managerâs cognitive style on dynamic capabilities, whereby organizational culture moderates this relationship
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Unbundling dynamic capabilities for inter-organizational collaboration
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to explore two distinct subsets of dynamic capabilities that need to be deployed when pursuing innovation through inter-organizational activities, respectively, in the contexts of broad networks and specific alliances. The authors draw distinctions and explore potential interdependencies between these two dynamic capability reservoirs, by integrating concepts from the theoretical perspectives they are derived from, but which have until now largely ignored each other â the social network perspective and the dynamic capabilities view.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors investigate nanotechnology-driven R&D activities in the 1995â2005 period for 76 publicly traded firms in the electronics and electrical equipment industry and in the chemicals and pharmaceuticals industry, that applied for 580 nanotechnology-related patents and engaged in 2,459 alliances during the observation period. The authors used zero-truncated Poisson regression as the estimation method.
Findings
The findings support conceptualizing dynamic capabilities as four distinct subsets, deployed for sensing or seizing purposes, and across the two different inter-organizational contexts. The findings also suggest potential synergies between these subsets of dynamic capabilities, with two subsets being more macro-oriented (i.e. sensing and seizing opportunities within networks) and the two other ones more micro-oriented (i.e. sensing and seizing opportunities within specific alliances).
Practical implications
The authors show that firms differ in their subsets of dynamic capabilities for pursuing different types of inter-organizational, boundary-spanning relationships (such as alliances vs broader network relationships), which ultimately affects their innovation performance.
Originality/value
The authors contribute to the growing body of work on dynamic capabilities and firm-specific advantages by unbundling the dynamic capability subsets, and investigating their complex interdependencies for managing different types of inter-organizational linkages. The main new insight is that the âlinear modelâ of generating more innovations through higher inter-firm collaboration in an emerging field paints an erroneous picture of how high innovation performance is actually achieved
Dynamic Capabilities; exploring media industry level capabilities
The competitive dynamics of many industries have changed considerably over the past decade, and perhaps, none more so than in the Media Industry. Industries have long been examined by researchers from a strategic perspective with various themes of inquiry relating to; industry structure and positioning, industry evolution and development, industry lifecycle, industry change and industry consolidation. Fundamentally, this body of knowledge emphases the importance of an organisationâs strategic fit with their competitive environment. This paper extends our knowledge of industry analysis into the domain of dynamic capabilities. As such, it examines the notion of dynamic capabilities existing at industry level and in doing so it presents the findings from a survey of UK media executives into the existence dynamic capabilities in the UK Media Industry
Building dynamic capabilities in product development: the role of knowledge management
This paper contributes to the clarification of the connections between knowledge management and dynamic capabilities in the context of product development to see how they explain product development competences. Building on the knowledge management and dynamic capabilities literatures, the paper argues that the social side of knowledge management has a role to play as enabler of dynamic capabilities in the context of product development. Further, dynamic capabilities shape product development competences. Empirical evidence is provided by performing survey research with data collected from 80 product development projects developed in Spain.Capabilities , Knowledge management, Organizational knowledge
Organization, Evolution, Cognition and Dynamic Capabilities
Using insights from âembodied cognitionâ and a resulting âcognitive theory of the firmâ, I aim to contribute to the further development of evolutionary theory of organizations, in the specification of organizations as âinteractorsâ that carry organizational competencies as âreplicatorsâ, within industries as âpopulationsâ. Especially, I analyze how, if at all, âdynamic capabilitiesâ can be fitted into evolutionary theory. I propose that the prime purpose of an organization is to serve as a cognitive âfocusing deviceâ. Here, cognition has a wide meaning, including perception, interpretation, sense making, and value judgements. I analyse how this yields organizations as cohesive wholes, and differences within and between industries. I propose the following sources of variation: replication in communication, novel combinations of existing knowledge, and a path of discovery by which exploitation leads to exploration. These yield a proposal for dynamic capabilities. I discuss in what sense, and to what extent these sources of variation are âblindâ, as postulated in evolutionary theory.evolutionary economics;organization;cognition;dynamic capabilities
Organization, Evolution, Cognition and Dynamic Capabilities
Using insights from 'embodied cognition' and a resulting 'cognitive theory of the firm', I aim to contribute to the further development of evolutionary theory of organizations, in the specification of organizations as 'interactors' that carry organizational competencies as 'replicators', within industries as 'populations'.Especially, I analyze how, if at all, 'dynamic capabilities' can be fitted into evolutionary theory.I propose that the prime purpose of an organization is to serve as a cognitive 'focusing device'.Here, cognition has a wide meaning, including perception, interpretation, sense making, and value judgements.I analyse how this yields organizations as cohesive wholes, and differences within and between industries.I propose the following sources of variation: replication in communication, novel combinations of existing knowledge, and a path of discovery by which exploitation leads to exploration. These yield a proposal for dynamic capabilities.I discuss in what sense, and to what extent these sources of variation are 'blind' , as postulated in evolutionary theory.organization;evolution;cognition;dynamic capabilities;learning;invention
Dynamic Capabilities and their Indirect Impact on Firm Performance
This paper investigates the relationship between dynamic capabilities and firm performance. In particular it addresses the question of whether dynamic capabilities impact directly or indirectly on performance. Using data from manufacturing firms, the paper articulates and measures dynamic capabilities as a multi-dimensional construct with three underlying factors: coordination, learning and strategic competitive response. Then, structural equation modelling is employed to explore the relationships among dynamic capabilities, functional competences and firm performance. Empirical findings suggest that dynamic capabilities are antecedents to functional competences which in turn have a significant effect on performance. Direct effects on performance are found to be insignificant. Furthermore, similar effects seem to hold for both higher and lower levels of environmental dynamism. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.Dynamic capabilities; functional competences; firm performance; indirect impact
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