TY - JOUR
T1 - Autonomy, conformity and organizational learning
AU - Hanaki, Nobuyuki
AU - Owan, Hideo
N1 - Funding Information:
We are grateful to Tommaso Ciarli and Luigi Marengo, as well as to seminar participants at Hitotsubashi University, participants in the 2009 annual conference of Strategic Management Society, WEHIA 2009, 2009 national conference of the Academic Association for Organizational Science, and the Contract Theory Workshop in Japan for comments and suggestions. This project is partly financed by JSPS-ANR bilateral research grant “BECOA” and JSPS Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) (No. 21330058).
Funding Information:
1.We are grateful to Tommaso Ciarli and Luigi Marengo, as well as to seminar participants at Hitotsubashi University, participants in the 2009 annual conference of Strategic Management Society, WEHIA 2009, 2009 national conference of the Academic Association for Organizational Science, and the Contract Theory Workshop in Japan for comments and suggestions. This project is partly financed by JSPS-ANR bilateral research grant “BECOA” and JSPS Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) (No. 21330058).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
PY - 2013/9
Y1 - 2013/9
N2 - There is often said to be a tension between the two types of organizational learning activities, exploration and exploitation. The argument goes that the two activities are substitutes, competing for scarce resources when firms need different capabilities and management policies. We present another explanation, attributing the tension to the dynamic interactions among search, knowledge sharing, evaluation and alignment within organizations. Our results show that successful organizations tend to bifurcate into two types: those that always promote individual initiatives and build organizational strengths on individual learning and those good at assimilating the individual knowledge base and exploiting shared knowledge. Straddling the two types often fails. The intuition is that an equal mixture of individual search and assimilation slows down individual learning, while at the same time making it difficult to update organizational knowledge because individuals’ knowledge base is not sufficiently homogenized. Straddling is especially inefficient when the operation is sufficiently complex or when the business environment is sufficiently turbulent.
AB - There is often said to be a tension between the two types of organizational learning activities, exploration and exploitation. The argument goes that the two activities are substitutes, competing for scarce resources when firms need different capabilities and management policies. We present another explanation, attributing the tension to the dynamic interactions among search, knowledge sharing, evaluation and alignment within organizations. Our results show that successful organizations tend to bifurcate into two types: those that always promote individual initiatives and build organizational strengths on individual learning and those good at assimilating the individual knowledge base and exploiting shared knowledge. Straddling the two types often fails. The intuition is that an equal mixture of individual search and assimilation slows down individual learning, while at the same time making it difficult to update organizational knowledge because individuals’ knowledge base is not sufficiently homogenized. Straddling is especially inefficient when the operation is sufficiently complex or when the business environment is sufficiently turbulent.
KW - Ambidexterity
KW - Complexity
KW - Exploitation
KW - Exploration
KW - NK landscape
KW - Organizational learning
KW - Turbulence
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U2 - 10.3390/admsci3030032
DO - 10.3390/admsci3030032
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85034248110
SN - 2076-3387
VL - 3
SP - 32
EP - 52
JO - Administrative Sciences
JF - Administrative Sciences
IS - 3
ER -