This paper focuses on James March’s 1991 article on ‘Exploration and Exploitation in Organizational Learning’, which is now the seventh most highly cited paper in management and organisation studies. March’s paper is based on a computer program that simulates the collective and individual learning of a group of fifty individuals. The largely forgotten story that this paper re-calls is the real-life experiment that March, in large part, designed and conducted when he was the new ‘boy Dean’ of the School of Social Sciences in the University of California at Irvine between 1964 and 1969. Taken together, both stories illuminate important moments in the history of organisation studies. The comparison suggests that March’s model, which was probab...
17 USC 105 interim-entered record; under temporary embargo.Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to...
This issue of International Studies of Management & Organization draws from pre - sentations at ...
Many academics and consultants now look at others ’ organisational learning, but to what extent do t...
27th EGOS Colloquium : Reassembling Organizations, Gothenburg University, Sweden, 6-9 July, 2011This...
We revisit March’s seminal 1991 article, “Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning”, ...
This paper reviews a remarkable experiment in organisation. At the centre of the story is James G. (...
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”, ...
I am immensely indebted to James G. March for his comments and encouragement on this and earlier ver...
This special issue helps to shed new light on a large variety of methods, such as a method to learn ...
Experiments have long played a crucial role in various scientific disciplines and have been gaining ...
The study critically examines contemporary academic engagement with Stanley Milgram's classic ‘obedi...
This study examines how exploration and exploitation contribute to variability in organizational per...
This study investigates the effects of information technology on exploration and exploitation in org...
The Purpose of the paper is to develop a conceptual framework which suggests a relationship between ...
17 USC 105 interim-entered record; under temporary embargo.Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to...
This issue of International Studies of Management & Organization draws from pre - sentations at ...
Many academics and consultants now look at others ’ organisational learning, but to what extent do t...
27th EGOS Colloquium : Reassembling Organizations, Gothenburg University, Sweden, 6-9 July, 2011This...
We revisit March’s seminal 1991 article, “Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning”, ...
This paper reviews a remarkable experiment in organisation. At the centre of the story is James G. (...
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”, ...
I am immensely indebted to James G. March for his comments and encouragement on this and earlier ver...
This special issue helps to shed new light on a large variety of methods, such as a method to learn ...
Experiments have long played a crucial role in various scientific disciplines and have been gaining ...
The study critically examines contemporary academic engagement with Stanley Milgram's classic ‘obedi...
This study examines how exploration and exploitation contribute to variability in organizational per...
This study investigates the effects of information technology on exploration and exploitation in org...
The Purpose of the paper is to develop a conceptual framework which suggests a relationship between ...
17 USC 105 interim-entered record; under temporary embargo.Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to...
This issue of International Studies of Management & Organization draws from pre - sentations at ...
Many academics and consultants now look at others ’ organisational learning, but to what extent do t...