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Business recipes, historical narratives and the discovery of networks

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Business recipes, historical narratives and the discovery of networks. / Gadde, Lars-Erik; Araujo, L M.
In: The IMP Journal, Vol. 1, No. 3, 2007, p. 2-25.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Gadde, L-E & Araujo, LM 2007, 'Business recipes, historical narratives and the discovery of networks', The IMP Journal, vol. 1, no. 3, pp. 2-25.

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Author

Gadde, Lars-Erik ; Araujo, L M. / Business recipes, historical narratives and the discovery of networks. In: The IMP Journal. 2007 ; Vol. 1, No. 3. pp. 2-25.

Bibtex

@article{2278840d60ea415892b7bdeb5bf2931e,
title = "Business recipes, historical narratives and the discovery of networks",
abstract = "Both research and practice in recent decades have emphasised the benefits associated with various types of network structures. Most of these advocates seem to assume that networks are a novelphenomenon that can be explained as a response to problems inherent in the large, integrated business enterprise. This perception is representative of a general view of industry dynamics as a succession of waves of organising, dictated by selection patterns, in which more efficient forms displace outdated ones.Our point of departure is that networks did not spring out of nowhere in the 1980s. They have always been there, but were more or less 'hidden' since prevailing frameworks for the analysis of thebusiness landscape were aligned with business recipes emphasising the characteristics and benefits of single companies, markets and hierarchies. The paper focuses on the mutual influence between business recipes and historical narratives of industrial development. We argue that dominant business recipes at a particular point in time are formed by interpretations of successful patterns of behaviour prevailing for current conditions. Business recipes tend to build their own momentum and continue to be exploited long after the conditions that gave rise to their emergence have disappeared. Eventually, new narratives emerge to explain epochal transformations, expose fissures in old recipes and inspire newpatterns of business behaviour.",
author = "Lars-Erik Gadde and Araujo, {L M}",
year = "2007",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "2--25",
journal = "The IMP Journal",
issn = "0809-7259",
publisher = "Emerald",
number = "3",
note = "1st Industrial Marketing and Purchasing Group Journal Conference (Oslo) - 2005 ; Conference date: 01-05-2005 Through 31-05-2005",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Business recipes, historical narratives and the discovery of networks

AU - Gadde, Lars-Erik

AU - Araujo, L M

PY - 2007

Y1 - 2007

N2 - Both research and practice in recent decades have emphasised the benefits associated with various types of network structures. Most of these advocates seem to assume that networks are a novelphenomenon that can be explained as a response to problems inherent in the large, integrated business enterprise. This perception is representative of a general view of industry dynamics as a succession of waves of organising, dictated by selection patterns, in which more efficient forms displace outdated ones.Our point of departure is that networks did not spring out of nowhere in the 1980s. They have always been there, but were more or less 'hidden' since prevailing frameworks for the analysis of thebusiness landscape were aligned with business recipes emphasising the characteristics and benefits of single companies, markets and hierarchies. The paper focuses on the mutual influence between business recipes and historical narratives of industrial development. We argue that dominant business recipes at a particular point in time are formed by interpretations of successful patterns of behaviour prevailing for current conditions. Business recipes tend to build their own momentum and continue to be exploited long after the conditions that gave rise to their emergence have disappeared. Eventually, new narratives emerge to explain epochal transformations, expose fissures in old recipes and inspire newpatterns of business behaviour.

AB - Both research and practice in recent decades have emphasised the benefits associated with various types of network structures. Most of these advocates seem to assume that networks are a novelphenomenon that can be explained as a response to problems inherent in the large, integrated business enterprise. This perception is representative of a general view of industry dynamics as a succession of waves of organising, dictated by selection patterns, in which more efficient forms displace outdated ones.Our point of departure is that networks did not spring out of nowhere in the 1980s. They have always been there, but were more or less 'hidden' since prevailing frameworks for the analysis of thebusiness landscape were aligned with business recipes emphasising the characteristics and benefits of single companies, markets and hierarchies. The paper focuses on the mutual influence between business recipes and historical narratives of industrial development. We argue that dominant business recipes at a particular point in time are formed by interpretations of successful patterns of behaviour prevailing for current conditions. Business recipes tend to build their own momentum and continue to be exploited long after the conditions that gave rise to their emergence have disappeared. Eventually, new narratives emerge to explain epochal transformations, expose fissures in old recipes and inspire newpatterns of business behaviour.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 1

SP - 2

EP - 25

JO - The IMP Journal

JF - The IMP Journal

SN - 0809-7259

IS - 3

T2 - 1st Industrial Marketing and Purchasing Group Journal Conference (Oslo) - 2005

Y2 - 1 May 2005 through 31 May 2005

ER -