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Change and Complementarities in the New Competitive Landscape: A European Panel Study, 1992–1996

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Published

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Change and Complementarities in the New Competitive Landscape: A European Panel Study, 1992–1996. / Whittington, R; Pettigrew, A; Peck, S et al.
In: Organization Science, Vol. 10, No. 5, 09.1999, p. 583-600.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Whittington, R, Pettigrew, A, Peck, S, Fenton, E & Conyon, M 1999, 'Change and Complementarities in the New Competitive Landscape: A European Panel Study, 1992–1996', Organization Science, vol. 10, no. 5, pp. 583-600. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.10.5.583

APA

Whittington, R., Pettigrew, A., Peck, S., Fenton, E., & Conyon, M. (1999). Change and Complementarities in the New Competitive Landscape: A European Panel Study, 1992–1996. Organization Science, 10(5), 583-600. https://doi.org/10.1287/orsc.10.5.583

Vancouver

Whittington R, Pettigrew A, Peck S, Fenton E, Conyon M. Change and Complementarities in the New Competitive Landscape: A European Panel Study, 1992–1996. Organization Science. 1999 Sept;10(5):583-600. doi: 10.1287/orsc.10.5.583

Author

Whittington, R ; Pettigrew, A ; Peck, S et al. / Change and Complementarities in the New Competitive Landscape: A European Panel Study, 1992–1996. In: Organization Science. 1999 ; Vol. 10, No. 5. pp. 583-600.

Bibtex

@article{8f654d1af0ec4c239eef25d0a53a999d,
title = "Change and Complementarities in the New Competitive Landscape: A European Panel Study, 1992–1996",
abstract = "This paper addresses three weaknesses in the literature on new organizational forms: the limited mapping of the extent of contemporary organizational change; confusion about how contemporary changes link together; and the lack of systematic testing of the performance consequences of this kind of change. Drawing on a large-scale survey of organizational innovation in European firms, the paper finds widespread but not revolutionary change in terms of organization structure, processes, and boundaries. Using the economics notion of complementarities, the paper develops contingency and configurational approaches to suggest that organizational innovations will tend to cluster in particular ways and that the performance benefits of these innovations depend on their clustering. Complementarities in performance are explored from both inductive and deductive perspectives. Consistent with the expectations of complementarity theory, high-performing firms appeared to be innovating more and differently than low-performing firms. Again consistent with complementarities, piecemeal changes—with the exception of IT—were found to deliver little performance benefit, while exploitation of the full set of innovations was associated with high performance. Though few European firms were found to exploit the complementarities of new organizational practices, those that did enjoyed high-performance premia. ",
keywords = "Complementarities , Organization Structure , Organizational Configurations , New Organizational Forms",
author = "R Whittington and A Pettigrew and S Peck and E Fenton and Martin Conyon",
year = "1999",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1287/orsc.10.5.583",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "583--600",
journal = "Organization Science",
issn = "1526-5455",
publisher = "INFORMS Inst.for Operations Res.and the Management Sciences",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Change and Complementarities in the New Competitive Landscape: A European Panel Study, 1992–1996

AU - Whittington, R

AU - Pettigrew, A

AU - Peck, S

AU - Fenton, E

AU - Conyon, Martin

PY - 1999/9

Y1 - 1999/9

N2 - This paper addresses three weaknesses in the literature on new organizational forms: the limited mapping of the extent of contemporary organizational change; confusion about how contemporary changes link together; and the lack of systematic testing of the performance consequences of this kind of change. Drawing on a large-scale survey of organizational innovation in European firms, the paper finds widespread but not revolutionary change in terms of organization structure, processes, and boundaries. Using the economics notion of complementarities, the paper develops contingency and configurational approaches to suggest that organizational innovations will tend to cluster in particular ways and that the performance benefits of these innovations depend on their clustering. Complementarities in performance are explored from both inductive and deductive perspectives. Consistent with the expectations of complementarity theory, high-performing firms appeared to be innovating more and differently than low-performing firms. Again consistent with complementarities, piecemeal changes—with the exception of IT—were found to deliver little performance benefit, while exploitation of the full set of innovations was associated with high performance. Though few European firms were found to exploit the complementarities of new organizational practices, those that did enjoyed high-performance premia.

AB - This paper addresses three weaknesses in the literature on new organizational forms: the limited mapping of the extent of contemporary organizational change; confusion about how contemporary changes link together; and the lack of systematic testing of the performance consequences of this kind of change. Drawing on a large-scale survey of organizational innovation in European firms, the paper finds widespread but not revolutionary change in terms of organization structure, processes, and boundaries. Using the economics notion of complementarities, the paper develops contingency and configurational approaches to suggest that organizational innovations will tend to cluster in particular ways and that the performance benefits of these innovations depend on their clustering. Complementarities in performance are explored from both inductive and deductive perspectives. Consistent with the expectations of complementarity theory, high-performing firms appeared to be innovating more and differently than low-performing firms. Again consistent with complementarities, piecemeal changes—with the exception of IT—were found to deliver little performance benefit, while exploitation of the full set of innovations was associated with high performance. Though few European firms were found to exploit the complementarities of new organizational practices, those that did enjoyed high-performance premia.

KW - Complementarities

KW - Organization Structure

KW - Organizational Configurations

KW - New Organizational Forms

U2 - 10.1287/orsc.10.5.583

DO - 10.1287/orsc.10.5.583

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

SP - 583

EP - 600

JO - Organization Science

JF - Organization Science

SN - 1526-5455

IS - 5

ER -