Organizations struggle to balance simultaneous imperatives to exploit and explore, yet theorists differ as to whether exploitation undermines or enhances exploration. The debate reflects a gap: the missing theoretical mechanism by which organizations break free of old routines and discover new ones. We propose that the missing link is perturbation: novel stimuli that disrupt the execution of specialized routines. Perturbation creates opportunities for organizations to invoke exploratory, general-purpose problem-solving routines. In mature organizations, exogenous perturbations become increasingly scarce to the point that exploration is stifled and inertia sets in. We theorize that mature organizations can sustain exploration by deliberately...
Abstract Could organizational ambidexterity prevent the proverbial red tape from poising organizatio...
Based on the seminal paper of March (1991), numerous scholars (e.g. Ahuja & Lampert, 2001; Elfring &...
This paper aims to contribute to this literature by disentangling the specific set of organizational...
The challenge of organizational adaptation is often presented in terms of the tension between the ex...
Organization and strategy research has stressed the need for organizations to simultaneously exploit...
Exploration activities are weaker than exploitation in the competition of scarce organizational reso...
International audienceAbernathy (1978) and March (1991) inspired a continuous stream of research on ...
We revisit March’s seminal 1991 article, “Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning”, ...
We revisit March’s seminal 1991 article, “Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning”, ...
Exploiting existing resources or exploring new ones is an old dilemma. As exploitation consists in “...
International audienceSince the seminal work of J. March (1991), balancing exploration and exploitat...
textabstractResearch on exploration and exploitation is burgeoning, yet our understanding of the ant...
This article reports on a case study of a decade-long organizing forms response to the need for grou...
A common justification for organizational change is that the circumstances in which the organization...
Many scholars have stressed the need for balancing exploitation with sufficient levels of exploratio...
Abstract Could organizational ambidexterity prevent the proverbial red tape from poising organizatio...
Based on the seminal paper of March (1991), numerous scholars (e.g. Ahuja & Lampert, 2001; Elfring &...
This paper aims to contribute to this literature by disentangling the specific set of organizational...
The challenge of organizational adaptation is often presented in terms of the tension between the ex...
Organization and strategy research has stressed the need for organizations to simultaneously exploit...
Exploration activities are weaker than exploitation in the competition of scarce organizational reso...
International audienceAbernathy (1978) and March (1991) inspired a continuous stream of research on ...
We revisit March’s seminal 1991 article, “Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning”, ...
We revisit March’s seminal 1991 article, “Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning”, ...
Exploiting existing resources or exploring new ones is an old dilemma. As exploitation consists in “...
International audienceSince the seminal work of J. March (1991), balancing exploration and exploitat...
textabstractResearch on exploration and exploitation is burgeoning, yet our understanding of the ant...
This article reports on a case study of a decade-long organizing forms response to the need for grou...
A common justification for organizational change is that the circumstances in which the organization...
Many scholars have stressed the need for balancing exploitation with sufficient levels of exploratio...
Abstract Could organizational ambidexterity prevent the proverbial red tape from poising organizatio...
Based on the seminal paper of March (1991), numerous scholars (e.g. Ahuja & Lampert, 2001; Elfring &...
This paper aims to contribute to this literature by disentangling the specific set of organizational...