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Breaking out of strategy vectors: reintroducing culture

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Breaking out of strategy vectors: reintroducing culture. / Balogun, J; Floyd, S.
In: Research in Organizational Change and Development, Vol. 18, 2010, p. 51.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Balogun, J & Floyd, S 2010, 'Breaking out of strategy vectors: reintroducing culture', Research in Organizational Change and Development, vol. 18, pp. 51. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0897-3016(2010)0000018006

APA

Balogun, J., & Floyd, S. (2010). Breaking out of strategy vectors: reintroducing culture. Research in Organizational Change and Development, 18, 51. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0897-3016(2010)0000018006

Vancouver

Balogun J, Floyd S. Breaking out of strategy vectors: reintroducing culture. Research in Organizational Change and Development. 2010;18:51. doi: 10.1108/S0897-3016(2010)0000018006

Author

Balogun, J ; Floyd, S. / Breaking out of strategy vectors: reintroducing culture. In: Research in Organizational Change and Development. 2010 ; Vol. 18. pp. 51.

Bibtex

@article{d6e51b61da5949d98cd76066271758ef,
title = "Breaking out of strategy vectors: reintroducing culture",
abstract = "There is considerable evidence that long periods of success in organisations can lead to ossification of strategy and strategic inertia. Burgelman (2002) shows how co-evolutionary lock-in occurs through the creation of a strategy vector. He demonstrates that the internal selection environment can become configured to create sources of inertia that dampen the autonomous strategy process, driving out unrelated exploration and creating a dominance of the induced, top-down strategy process. While this study shows how lock-in occurs, it does not address how a company breaks out of co-evolutionary lock-in. This is the focus of this paper. We argue that to understand how an organisation breaks out of a strategy vector a more complete conceptualisation of the structural context, and in particular the under specified cultural mechanisms, is required. It also requires an understanding of the linkages between the structural context and the new core capabilities required for breakout. Thus we first expand on what is known about strategy vectors and review research from the strategy process tradition that explores the linkages between strategy, culture and strategic change, to build a more comprehensive picture of the structural context. Our model demonstrates the extent of interconnectedness between the {\textquoteleft}hard{\textquoteright} (e.g., control systems and organisation structure) and {\textquoteleft}soft{\textquoteright} (e.g. beliefs, symbols and stories) components, and that development of new required capabilities is dependent on a holistic shift in all these aspects of the structural context, including, therefore, change in the organisation's culture. We then illustrate the link between lock-in, capability development and culture change through the case of the famous Formula One team, Ferrari. We finish with a discussion of the implications of our findings for strategic change.",
author = "J Balogun and S Floyd",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1108/S0897-3016(2010)0000018006",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "51",
journal = "Research in Organizational Change and Development",
publisher = "JAI Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Breaking out of strategy vectors: reintroducing culture

AU - Balogun, J

AU - Floyd, S

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - There is considerable evidence that long periods of success in organisations can lead to ossification of strategy and strategic inertia. Burgelman (2002) shows how co-evolutionary lock-in occurs through the creation of a strategy vector. He demonstrates that the internal selection environment can become configured to create sources of inertia that dampen the autonomous strategy process, driving out unrelated exploration and creating a dominance of the induced, top-down strategy process. While this study shows how lock-in occurs, it does not address how a company breaks out of co-evolutionary lock-in. This is the focus of this paper. We argue that to understand how an organisation breaks out of a strategy vector a more complete conceptualisation of the structural context, and in particular the under specified cultural mechanisms, is required. It also requires an understanding of the linkages between the structural context and the new core capabilities required for breakout. Thus we first expand on what is known about strategy vectors and review research from the strategy process tradition that explores the linkages between strategy, culture and strategic change, to build a more comprehensive picture of the structural context. Our model demonstrates the extent of interconnectedness between the ‘hard’ (e.g., control systems and organisation structure) and ‘soft’ (e.g. beliefs, symbols and stories) components, and that development of new required capabilities is dependent on a holistic shift in all these aspects of the structural context, including, therefore, change in the organisation's culture. We then illustrate the link between lock-in, capability development and culture change through the case of the famous Formula One team, Ferrari. We finish with a discussion of the implications of our findings for strategic change.

AB - There is considerable evidence that long periods of success in organisations can lead to ossification of strategy and strategic inertia. Burgelman (2002) shows how co-evolutionary lock-in occurs through the creation of a strategy vector. He demonstrates that the internal selection environment can become configured to create sources of inertia that dampen the autonomous strategy process, driving out unrelated exploration and creating a dominance of the induced, top-down strategy process. While this study shows how lock-in occurs, it does not address how a company breaks out of co-evolutionary lock-in. This is the focus of this paper. We argue that to understand how an organisation breaks out of a strategy vector a more complete conceptualisation of the structural context, and in particular the under specified cultural mechanisms, is required. It also requires an understanding of the linkages between the structural context and the new core capabilities required for breakout. Thus we first expand on what is known about strategy vectors and review research from the strategy process tradition that explores the linkages between strategy, culture and strategic change, to build a more comprehensive picture of the structural context. Our model demonstrates the extent of interconnectedness between the ‘hard’ (e.g., control systems and organisation structure) and ‘soft’ (e.g. beliefs, symbols and stories) components, and that development of new required capabilities is dependent on a holistic shift in all these aspects of the structural context, including, therefore, change in the organisation's culture. We then illustrate the link between lock-in, capability development and culture change through the case of the famous Formula One team, Ferrari. We finish with a discussion of the implications of our findings for strategic change.

U2 - 10.1108/S0897-3016(2010)0000018006

DO - 10.1108/S0897-3016(2010)0000018006

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

SP - 51

JO - Research in Organizational Change and Development

JF - Research in Organizational Change and Development

ER -