Bachelorarbeit, 2022
45 Seiten, Note: 1,8
1. Introduction
2. Environmental Change and Organizational Survival
3. Organizational Agility
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Different Perspectives on Agility
3.3 Definition
3.4 Conceptualizing Organizational Agility
3.4.1 Agility Drivers
3.4.2 Agility Capabilities
3.4.3 Agility Enablers
3.4.4 Agility Dimensions
3.5 Concept Overview
3.6 Organizational Agility and Performance
3.7 Critique
4. Dynamic Capabilities
4.1 Introduction
4.2 Theoretical Background
4.3 Definition of Dynamic Capabilities
4.4 Microfoundations of Dynamic Capabilities
4.4.1 Introduction
4.4.2 Sensing
4.4.3 Seizing
4.4.4 Transforming
4.5 Dynamic Capabilities and Firm Performance
4.6 Critique
5. Relationship between Organizational Agility and Dynamic Capabilities
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Commonalities between Organizational Agility and Dynamic Capabilities
5.3 Organizational Agility as Dynamic Capability
5.4 Critique
5.5 Realizing Organizational Agility through Sensing, Seizing and Transforming
5.5.1 Introduction
5.5.2 Effectuating Agility through Sensing
5.5.3 Effectuating Agility through Seizing
5.5.4 Effectuating Agility through Transforming
5.5.5 Teece’s Principles for Entrepreneurial Managers
6. Conclusion
7. Limitations and Future Research
8. Bibliography
The primary objective of this thesis is to examine how organizational agility can be conceptualized and operationalized within the dynamic capabilities framework. Driven by the need for companies to navigate increasingly volatile, uncertain, and turbulent business environments, the work investigates the commonalities between these two concepts and explores how dynamic capabilities—specifically the sensing, seizing, and transforming microfoundations—can serve as a theoretical and practical basis for establishing organizational agility.
4.4.2 Sensing
Sensing dynamic capabilities are all, like the name suggests, about the detection of new opportunities that a changing business environment provides them. It’s a scanning, creation, learning, and interpretive activity (Teece, 2007).
Already established firms or incumbents as Teece often calls them are at a disadvantage here. Firms like General Motors, IBM, and Digital Equipment Corporation experienced difficulties because their pre-embedded routines, culture, and views acted like an information filter since they already had a made-up worldview and assumptions (Teece, 2007). To tackle this disadvantage, firms must constantly scan markets close and distant to their core business, thus having a wide search and scanning horizon. Furthermore, they must invest in research, understand customers’ needs, and the evolution of industries.
When the opportunity has been detected, depending on the type of opportunity, managers and entrepreneurs then, must decide how to interpret these new events, decide which technologies to use or which market segments to target. Depending on how they decide, also putting into consideration competition, their actions can then consequently also shape the opportunity itself (Teece, 2007).
On the individual and process level, opportunities can be detected either through cognitive and creative capacities of individuals or in processes designed to detect opportunities, like research and development activities (Teece, 2007).
1. Introduction: Outlines the necessity of organizational agility in volatile environments and introduces the research question regarding its integration with the dynamic capabilities framework.
2. Environmental Change and Organizational Survival: Discusses the tumultuous business environment characterized by rapid change and the factors that enable successful long-term organizational survival.
3. Organizational Agility: Provides a comprehensive overview of agility, including its diverse definitions, research clusters, and conceptual models used to categorize agility drivers, capabilities, and enablers.
4. Dynamic Capabilities: Details the theoretical foundations of dynamic capabilities and their microfoundations (sensing, seizing, transforming) as critical drivers of competitive advantage.
5. Relationship between Organizational Agility and Dynamic Capabilities: Explores the conceptual overlaps and validates the integration of organizational agility as a specific form of dynamic capability.
6. Conclusion: Summarizes the key insights, confirming that viewing agility as a dynamic capability helps operationalize the concept for management.
7. Limitations and Future Research: Reflects on the current conceptual challenges in the field and provides avenues for further empirical investigation.
Organizational Agility, Dynamic Capabilities, Agile Transformation, Environmental Dynamism, Sensing, Seizing, Transforming, Competitive Advantage, Microfoundations, Business Performance, Strategy, Innovation, Organizational Flexibility, Adaptation, Management.
The research focuses on defining organizational agility and exploring how it can be understood and applied within the broader framework of dynamic capabilities, particularly to help firms succeed in unpredictable business environments.
The central themes include environmental dynamism, the conceptual ambiguity of "agility," the development of organizational capabilities, the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities as defined by Teece, and the role of leadership in fostering agile structures.
The primary goal is to answer how organizational agility can be explained within the dynamic capabilities framework, thereby providing a clearer conceptual base for firms to operationalize agility.
The work employs a comprehensive literature review and conceptual synthesis, drawing on existing theoretical frameworks in strategic management and organizational science to reconcile fragmented research streams.
The main body examines the definitions and categories of organizational agility, the theoretical background of dynamic capabilities, a comparative analysis of both frameworks, and the practical application of sensing, seizing, and transforming to build agility.
The key concepts include Organizational Agility, Dynamic Capabilities, Sensing, Seizing, Transforming, Business Environment, and Strategizing.
Drivers are the environmental pressures (such as technological change or market volatility) that necessitate agility, whereas enablers are the specific methods, tools, and practices (like cross-functional teams or digital frameworks) used to facilitate agile capabilities.
The hierarchy of capabilities is used to show how specialized, lower-order knowledge and skills are integrated into broader, higher-order capabilities, helping managers understand where to focus their operational and strategic efforts.
The author highlights that while often used synonymously, they differ: flexibility aims to buffer against uncertainty, while organizational agility aims to proactively exploit environmental change as a competitive advantage.
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