Exploring influencers of strategic change processes: evidence from five government businesses in the Omani context

2021 ◽  
Vol 51 (4) ◽  
pp. 374-397
Author(s):  
Misida Al Jahwari ◽  
Pawan Budhwar
2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (7/8) ◽  
pp. 610-618 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alain Guiette ◽  
Paul Matthyssens ◽  
Koen Vandenbempt

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is organizing mindfully for relevant process research on strategic change. This essay arises from an increasing concern that our understanding of strategic change is not delivering meaningful, relevant and true process wisdom that allows researchers to enrich their academic discourse and practitioners to effectively realize strategic change imposed by hostile business markets. Our goal is to challenge fundamental assumptions of our field’s dominant discourse in performing research and generating theories for strategic change under real contexts, and redirect attention to a mindful organizing perspective to understand process elements of strategic change that really matter. Design/methodology/approach – This paper is an essay based on theoretical reasoning. We address the relevance gap in the strategic business marketing field by focusing on one specific gap: the study and understanding of strategic change. To illustrate the relevance of a mindful organizing perspective for closing this relevance gap, we focus on the processes of mindful organizing identified by Weick and Sutcliffe (2007) and argue how these organizational processes contribute to a better understanding of strategic change while implicitly assuming a complexity-based perspective on organizing. These five processes, moreover, address the identified limitations of present approaches, i.e. formative causality, pre-interpretation and independent linearity. Findings – We suggest a “provocative change research avenue” elaborating on the role of mindful organizing to bridge the relevance gap in this area. This advances a richer and more relevant framing to elevate theorizing in the area of strategic marketing and management beyond existing avenues, which not necessarily reflects organizational life’s equivocality, interdependencies and intricacies. We, thus, call for the field of strategic marketing and management to adopt a discourse grounded in complexity-based assumptions. Research limitations/implications – Overall, this essay highlights that closing relevance gaps in our field cannot be done with quick fix recipes. The endeavor implies a fundamental re-framing of the way we look at firms and managers. It also implies different theoretical underpinnings and more interpretive research approaches to tap the richness in real-life business settings. By focusing on one area, we have shown how such an effort might proceed. Practical implications – Although the paper is mainly written for researchers of change processes and innovation in industrial companies, practitioners will get inspiration as several viewpoints for mindful organizing will help them in building a more realistic and viable change approach. Originality/value – Our intended contribution is to advocate a deeper and richer process understanding of strategic change by advancing mindful organizing as an epistemological and praxeological perspective on strategic change, thereby bridging the relevance gap (Hodgkinson and Rousseau, 2009; Weick, 2001) and enriching our field’s strategic change theories. Epistemologically, mindful organizing offers a useful perspective by stressing the change process’ complexity, interdependence and emergence. Praxeologically, mindful organizing represents an adaptive organizational capability that allows organizations to develop higher awareness of their strategic change processes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 370-382
Author(s):  
Anil Sachdev ◽  
Arjya Chakravarty

This article intends to introduce and explore the process and execution of change in complex dynamic organisation systems. Transformations are purposeful system-wide journey of organisational change. The emphasis is on the interaction between system elements more than on the analysis of each component. ‘Whole System transformation’ is involved in creating renewed organisations from within itself by enabling or allowing the system to transform itself. Real-time strategic change is presented as a framework in this context of evolutionary open systems. This article explores organisational change in a richer and more insightful way. The large-scale interaction process (LSIP) is illustrated and explained and its relationship to transformation and change in organisations is explored in a procedural view of this change paradigm. The authors outline the theoretical aspects of organisational change processes in Kathie Dannemiller’s whole systems thinking intellectual heritage. The article draws from experiences in many organisations that have benefited from this approach over the last 25 years with capability built among hundreds of facilitators to carry this approach forward.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Agnes Meinhard ◽  
Louise Moher ◽  
Mary Foster ◽  
Susan Fizrandolph

This paper investigates the change processes involved in establishing commercial ventures as revenue generating alternatives in eleven nonprofit organizations, and reports on factors contributing to their success. The eleven cases studied illustrate that the establishment of commercial ventures in nonprofit organizations may result from either deliberate planning or following emergent opportunities. Regardless of whether change was emergent or deliberate, successful organizations were ones that did not try to radically change their paradigms. Their ventures were either merely an extension of existing physical or human resources, or entwined with their mission very early in their life cycle. The unsuccessful and struggling ventures, however, were the result of intended, deliberately planned change strategies that failed because the ventures failed to mesh with the organization’s paradigm. Keywords: CVSS, Centre for Voluntary Sector Studies, Working Paper Series,TRSM, Ted Rogers School of Management Keywords: nonprofit, commercial ventures, change Citation:


2012 ◽  
pp. 206-231 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raghu Garud ◽  
Andrew H. Van De Ven

2005 ◽  
Vol 17 (4) ◽  
pp. 297-308 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tilo Pfeifer ◽  
Robert Schmitt ◽  
Thorsten Voigt

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