Tushman and OReilly (1996) - Ambidextrous Organizations - Managing Evolutionary and Revolutionary Change
Tushman and OReilly (1996) - Ambidextrous Organizations - Managing Evolutionary and Revolutionary Change
Tushman and OReilly (1996) - Ambidextrous Organizations - Managing Evolutionary and Revolutionary Change
Ambidextrous Organizations:
Managing Evolutionary and
Revolutionary Change
M. Tushman
California Management Review
Changing Cult ure: T he Large Organizat ion’s Key t o Regaining Compet it ive Advant age
John Black
T he Role of Ambidext erit y in Market ing St rat egy Implement at ion: Resolving t he Explorat ion-Exploit at i…
Christ iane Prange
Ambidextrous
Organizations:
MANAGING EVOLUTIONARY
AND REVOLUTIONARY CHANGE
Michael L. Tushman
Charles A. O’Reilly III
Michael L. Tushman
Charles A. O’Reilly III
Some of the ideas contained in this article are elaborated upon in Michael L.Tushman and Charles A.
O’Reilly III, Winning Through Innovation: A Practical Guide to Leading Organizational Change and Renewal
(Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 1997).
Source: Adapted from R. Foster, Innovation:The Attacker’s Advantage (New York, NY: Summit Books, 1986).
technologies? Should the solid-state division report to the head of the electronics
group, a person steeped in vacuum tube expertise?
With its great wealth of marketing, financial, and technological resources,
RCA decided to enter the business. Historically, it is common for successful
firms to experiment with new technologies.1 Xerox, for example, developed
user-interface and software technologies, yet left it to Apple and Microsoft to
implement them. Western Union developed the technology for telephony and
allowed American Bell (AT&T) to capture the benefits. Almost all relatively
wealthy firms can afford to explore new technologies. Like many firms before
them, RCA management recognized the problems of trying to play two different
technological games but were ultimately unable to resolve them. In the absence
of a clear strategy and the cultural differences required to compete in both mar-
kets, RCA failed.
In his study of this industry, Richard Foster (then a Director at McKinsey
& Company) notes, “Of the 10 leaders in vacuum tubes in 1955 only two were
left in 1975. There were three variants of error in these case histories. First is the
decision not to invest in the new technology. The second is to invest but picking
the wrong technology. The third variant is cultural. Companies failed because
of their inability to play two games at once: To be both effective defenders of
what quickly became old technologies and effective attackers with new tech-
nologies.”2 Senior managers in these firms fell victim to their previous success
and their inability to play two games simultaneously. New firms, like Intel and
Motorola, were not saddled with this internal conflict and inertia. As they grew,
they were able to re-create themselves, while other firms remained trapped.
In contrast to RCA, consider Hattori-Seiko’s watch business. While Seiko
was the dominant Japanese watch producer in the 1960s, they were a small
player in global markets (see Figure 2). Bolstered by an aspiration to be a global
leader in the watch business, and informed by internal experimentation
between alternative oscillation technologies
(quartz, mechanical, and tuning fork), Seiko’s
FIGURE 2. Employment in senior management team made a bold bet. In the
the Swiss Watch mid-1960s, Seiko transformed itself from being
Industry, 1955-1985 merely a mechanical watch firm into being both
a quartz and mechanical watch company. This
No. of No. of move into low-cost, high-quality watches trig-
Year Firms Employees gered wholesale change within Seiko and, in
turn, within the world-wide watch industry.
1955 2300 70,000 As transistors replaced vacuum tubes (to RCA’s
1965 1900 84,000 chagrin), quartz movement watches replaced
1970 1600 89,000 mechanical watches. Even though the Swiss had
1975 1200 63,000 invented both the quartz and tuning fork move-
1980 900 47,000 ments, at this juncture in history they moved to
1985 600 32,000 reinvest in mechanical movements. As Seiko and
other Japanese firms prospered, the Swiss watch
industry drastically suffered. By 1980, SSIH, the largest Swiss watch firm, was
less than half the size of Seiko. Eventually, SSIH and Asuag , the two largest
Swiss firms, went bankrupt. It would not be until after these firms were taken
over by the Swiss banks and transformed by Nicholas Hayek that the Swiss
would move to recapture the watch market.
The real test of leadership, then, is to be able to compete successfully by
both increasing the alignment or fit among strategy, structure, culture, and proc-
esses, while simultaneously preparing for the inevitable revolutions required by
discontinuous environmental change. This requires organizational and manage-
ment skills to compete in a mature market (where cost, efficiency, and incre-
mental innovation are key) and to develop new products and services (where
radical innovation, speed, and flexibility are critical). A focus on either one of
these skill sets is conceptually easy. Unfortunately, focusing on only one guaran-
tees short-term success but long-term failure. Managers need to be able to do
both at the same time, that is, they need to be ambidextrous. Juggling provides
a metaphor. A juggler who is very good at manipulating a single ball is not inter-
esting. It is only when the juggler can handle multiple balls at one time that his
or her skill is respected.
These short examples are only two illustrations of the pattern by which
organizations evolve: periods of incremental change punctuated by discontinu-
ous or revolutionary change. Long-term success is marked by increasing align-
ment among strategy, structure, people, and culture through incremental or
evolutionary change punctuated by discontinuous or revolutionary change that
requires the simultaneous shift in strategy, structure, people, and culture. These
discontinuous changes are almost always driven either by organizational perfor-
mance problems or by major shifts in the organization’s environment, such as
technological or competitive shifts. Where those less successful firms (e.g., SSIH,
RCA) react to environmental jolts, those more successful firms proactively initi-
ate innovations that reshape their market (e.g., Seiko).3
What’s Happening?
Understanding Patterns of Organizational Evolution
These patterns in organization evolution are not unique. Almost all
successful organizations evolve through relatively long periods of incremental
change punctuated by environmental shifts and revolutionary change. These
discontinuities may be driven by technology, competitors, regulatory events, or
significant changes in economic and political conditions. For example, deregula-
tion in the financial services and airline industries led to waves of mergers and
failures as firms scrambled to reorient themselves to the new competitive envi-
ronment. Major political changes in Eastern Europe and South Africa have had
a similar impact. The combination of the European Union and the emergence of
global competition in the automobile and electronics industries has shifted the
environmental conditions. Those organizations and managers who are most able
to adapt to a given market or competitive environment will prosper. Over time,
the fittest survive—until there is a major discontinuity. At that point, managers
of firms are faced with the challenge of reconstituting their organizations to
adjust to the new environment. Managers who try to adapt to discontinuities
through incremental adjustment are unlikely to succeed. The processes of varia-
tion, selection, and retention that winnow the fittest of animal populations seem
to apply to organizations as well.
To understand how this dynamic affects organizations, we need to con-
sider two fundamental ideas; how organizations grow and evolve, and how dis-
continuities affect this process. Armed with this understanding, we can then
show how managers can cope with evolutionary and revolutionary change.
Over time, the fit among business unit strategy, structure, skills, and culture
evolve to reflect changing markets and technology.When these changes occur,
managers need to realign their units to reflect their new strategic challenges.
Strategy
Critical
Tasks
People Culture
Formal
Organization
focused strategy, the emphasis shifted to a market-wide emphasis. Not only was
Apple selling to personal computer users, but also to the educational and indus-
trial markets. This strategic shift required further adjustment to the structure,
people, culture, and critical tasks. What worked in a smaller, more focused firm
was no longer adequate for the larger, more differentiated Apple. Success at this
phase of evolution required management’s ability to realign the organization to
insure congruence with the strategy. The well-publicized ouster of Steve Jobs by
Apple’s board of directors reflected the board’s judgment that John Sculley had
the skills necessary to lead a larger, more diversified company. Jobs’s approach
was fine for a smaller, more focused firm but inappropriate for the challenges
Apple faced in the mid-1980s.
Over an even longer period of success, there are inevitably more
changes—sometimes driven by technology, sometimes by competition,
customers, or regulation, sometimes by new strategies and ways of competing.
As the product class matures, the basis of competition shifts. While in the early
Technology Cycles
Although organizational growth by itself can lead to a periodic need for
discontinuous change, there is another more fundamental process occurring that
results in punctuated change. This is a pervasive phenomenon that occurs across
industries and is not widely appreciated by managers. Yet it is critical to under-
standing when and why revolutionary change is necessary: This is the dynamic
Time
Adapted from J. Utterback, Mastering the Dynamics of Innovation (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 1994).
Fit Success
Inertia
Size and Age • Structural
• Cultural
rigid formal control systems. Yet, when confronted with discontinuous change,
the very culture that fostered success can quickly become a significant barrier to
change. When Lou Gerstner took over as CEO at IBM, he recognized that simply
crafting a new strategy was not the solution to IBM’s predicament. In his view,
“Fixing the culture is the most critical—and the most difficult—part of a corpo-
rate transformation.”9 Cultural inertia, because it is so ephemeral and difficult to
attack directly, is a key reason managers often fail to successfully introduce revo-
lutionary change—even when they know that it is needed.
organizations: “In the nineties the heroes, the winners, will be entire com-
panies that have developed cultures that instead of fearing the pace of change,
relish it.”11
While news articles about successes and failures are not proof of
anything, they offer an interesting window on the concerns of practicing man-
agers and savvy journalists. Whether the issue is can Nike successfully export
its “Just do it” culture to help drive global growth, or can Nokia, a Finnish maker
of mobile phones, shed its stodgy culture in time to compete in the fast-moving
telecommunications market, the managerial challenges are similar: How can
managers diagnose and actively shape organizational cultures to both execute
today’s strategies and create the capabilities to innovate for tomorrow’s compe-
titive demands? To help focus and frame the crucial issue of managing culture,
let’s reflect on a few examples in which organizational culture helped firms suc-
ceed or was a significant part of their problem in adapting to new circumstances.
managing a firm of IBM’s size. Certainly the answer must include aspects of
strategy, organizational design, technology, and people.
However, perhaps the most important part of the answer to this question,
and certainly a part of any solution, is in the culture of IBM; a culture character-
ized by an inward focus, extensive procedures for resolving issues through con-
sensus and “push back,” an arrogance bred by previous success, and a sense of
entitlement that guaranteed jobs without a reciprocal quid pro quo by some
employees. This culture—masquerading under the old IBM basic beliefs in
excellence, customer satisfaction, and respect for the individual—was manifest
in norms that led to a preoccupation with internal procedures rather than
understanding the reality of the changing market. In his letter to the share-
holders in the 1993 Annual Report, CEO Lou Gerstner states, “We have been
too bureaucratic and too preoccupied with our own view of the world.” He sees
as one of his toughest and most critical tasks to change this entrenched and
patriarchical culture into one characterized by a sense of urgency. Without this
shift, he believes IBM will continue to squander its talent and technology.
While occurring in a very different industrial context, a similar drama is
playing out at Sears, the great American retailer. Again, the picture is a compli-
cated one and it would be wrong to oversimplify it. The broad outlines of the
problem are, however, easily visible. Until 1991, Sears was the largest retailer
in the U.S. with over 800 stores and 500,000 employees, including over 6,000
at headquarters in the Sears Tower in Chicago. For decades it was the family
department store for America, a place where one could buy everything from
clothes to tools to kitchen appliances. However, by the mid-1980s, trouble had
begun to surface. Market share had fallen 15 percent from its high in the 70s,
the stock price had dropped by 40 percent since Edward Brennan had become
CEO in 1985, and chronic high costs hindered Sears from matching the prices of
competitors such as Wal-Mart, K-mart, Circuit City, the Home Depot, and other
low-cost specialty stores.15
Under Brennan’s leadership, Sears made a number of strategic changes in
attempts to halt the slide. Yet the execution of the strategy was dismal. Observ-
ers and analysts attributed the failure to Brennan’s inability to revamp the old
Sears culture that, as one respected analyst noted, was a “culture is rooted in a
long tradition of dominating the retailing industry . . . But this success bred in
Sears executives an arrogance and an internal focus that was almost xenopho-
bic.” Another observed that “the main problem with Sears is that its managers
and executives are ‘Sears-ized’—so indoctrinated in the lore of past glories and
so entrenched in an overwhelming bureaucracy that they cannot change
easily.”16 The old Sears culture, like the old IBM culture, was a product of their
success: proud, inward-looking, and resistant to change.
The lesson is a simple one: organizational culture is a key to both short-
term success and, unless managed correctly, long-term failure. Culture can pro-
vide competitive advantage, but as we have seen, it can also create obstacles to
the innovation and change necessary to be successful. In the face of significant
Ambidextrous Organizations:
Mastering Evolutionary and Revolutionary Change
The dilemma confronting managers and organizations is clear. In the
short run they must constantly increase the fit or alignment of strategy, struc-
ture, and culture. This is the world of evolutionary change. But this is not
enough for sustained success. In the long-run, managers may be required to
destroy the very alignment that has made their organizations successful. For
managers, this means operating part of the time in a world characterized by
periods of relatively stability and incremental innovation, and part of the time
in a world characterized by revolutionary change. These contrasting managerial
demands require that managers periodically destroy what has been created in
order to reconstruct a new organization better suited for the next wave of com-
petition or technology.17
Ambidextrous organizations are needed if the success paradox is to be
overcome. The ability to simultaneously pursue both incremental and discontin-
uous innovation and change results from hosting multiple contradictory struc-
tures, processes, and cultures within the same firm. There are good examples
of companies and managers who have succeeded in balancing these tensions.
To illustrate more concretely how firms can do this, consider three successful
ambidextrous organizations, Hewlett-Packard, Johnson & Johnson, and ABB
(Asea Brown Boveri). Each of these has been able to compete in mature market
segments through incremental innovation and in emerging markets and tech-
nologies through discontinuous innovation. Each has been successful at winning
by engaging in both evolutionary and revolutionary change.
At one level they are very different companies. HP competes in markets
like instruments, computers, and networks. J&J is in consumer products, phar-
maceuticals, and professional medical products ranging from sutures to endo-
scopic surgical equipment. ABB sells power plants, electrical transmission
equipment, transportation systems, and environmental controls. Yet each of
them has been able to be periodically renew itself and to produce streams of
innovation. HP has gone from an instrument company to a minicomputer firm
to a personal computer and network company. J&J has moved from consumer
Organizational Architectures
Although the combined size of these three companies represents over
350,000 employees, each has found a common way to remain small by empha-
sizing autonomous groups. For instance, J&J has over 165 separate operating
companies that scramble relentlessly for new products and markets. ABB relies
on over 5,000 profit centers with an average of 50 people in each. These centers
operate like small businesses. HP has over 50 separate divisions and a policy of
splitting divisions whenever a unit gets larger than a thousand or so people. The
logic in these organizations is to keep units small and autonomous so that
employees feel a sense of ownership and are responsible for their own results.
This encourages a culture of autonomy and risk taking that could not exist in a
large, centralized organization. In the words of Ralph Larsen, CEO of J&J, this
approach “provides a sense of ownership and responsibility for a business you
simply cannot get any other way.”18
But the reliance on small, autonomous units are not gained at the
expense of firm size or speed in execution. These companies also retain the
benefits of size, especially in marketing and manufacturing. ABB continually
reevaluates where it locates its worldwide manufacturing sites. J&J uses its
brand name and marketing might to leverage new products and technologies.
HP uses its relationships with retailers developed from its printer business to
market and distribute its new personal computer line. But these firms accom-
plish this without the top-heavy staffs found at other firms. Barnevik reduced
ABB’s hierarchy to four levels and a headquarters staff of 150 and purposely
keeps the structure fluid. At J&J headquarters, there are roughly a thousand
people, but no strategic planning is done by corporate. The role of the center
is to set the vision and review the performance of the 165 operating companies.
At HP, the former CEO, John Young, recognized in the early 1990s that the more
centralized structure that HP had adopted in the 1980s to coordinate their mini-
computer business had resulted in a suffocating bureaucracy that was no longer
appropriate. He wiped it out, flattening the hierarchy and dramatically reducing
the role of the center.
In these companies, size is used to leverage economies of scale and scope,
not to become a checker and controller that slows the organization down. The
focus is on keeping decisions as close to the customer or the technology as possi-
ble. The role of headquarters is to facilitate operations and make them go faster
and better. Staff have only the expertise that the field wants and needs. Reward
systems are designed to be appropriate to the nature of the business unit and
emphasize results and risk taking. Barnevik characterizes this as his 7-3 formula;
better to make decisions quickly and be right seven out of ten times than waste
time trying to find a perfect solution. At J&J this is expressed as a tolerance for
certain types of failure; a tolerance that extends to congratulating managers who
take informed risks, even if they fail. There is a delicate balance among size,
autonomy, teamwork, and speed which these ambidextrous organizations are
able to engineer. An important part of the solution is massive decentralization of
decision making, but with consistency attained through individual accountabil-
ity, information sharing, and strong financial control. But why doesn’t this result
in fragmentation and a loss of synergy? The answer is found in the use of social
control.
Multiple Cultures
A second commonality across these firms is their reliance on strong social
controls.19 They are simultaneously tight and loose. They are tight in that the
corporate culture in each is broadly shared and emphasizes norms critical for
innovation such as openness, autonomy, initiative, and risk taking. The culture
is loose in that the manner in which these common values are expressed varies
according to the type of innovation required. At HP, managers value the open-
ness and consensus needed to develop new technologies. Yet, when implemen-
tation is critical, managers recognize that this consensus can be fatal. One senior
manager in charge of bringing out a new work station prominently posted a sign
saying, “This is not a democracy.” At J&J, the emphasis on autonomy allows
managers to routinely go against the wishes of senior management, sometimes
with big successes and sometimes with failures. Yet, in the changing hospital
supply sector of their business, managers recognized that the cherished J&J
autonomy was stopping these companies from coordinating the service
demanded by their hospital customers. So, in this part of J&J, a decision was
made to take away some of the autonomy and centralize services. CEO Larsen
refers to this as J&J companies having common standards but unique
personalities.
A common overall culture is the glue that holds these companies
together. The key in these firms is a reliance on a strong, widely shared corpo-
rate culture to promote integration across the company and to encourage identi-
fication and sharing of information and resources—something that would never
occur without shared values. The culture also provides consistency and pro-
motes trust and predictability. Whether it is the Credo at J&J, the HP Way, or
ABB’s Policy Bible, these norms and values provide the glue that keeps these
organizations together. Yet, at the same time, individual units entertain widely
varying subcultures appropriate to their particular businesses. For example,
although the HP Way is visible in all HP units worldwide, there are distinct dif-
ferences between the new video server unit and an old line instrument division.
What constitutes risk taking at a mature division is different than the risk taking
emphasized at a unit struggling with a brand new technology. At J&J, the
Credo’s emphasis on customers and employees can be seen as easily in the
Philippines as in corporate headquarters in New Brunswick, New Jersey. But
the operating culture in the Tylenol division is distinctly more conservative than
the culture in a new medical products company.
This tight-loose aspect of the culture is crucial for ambidextrous organiza-
tions. It is supported by a common vision and by supportive leaders who both
encourage the culture and know enough to allow appropriate variations to occur
across business units. These companies promote both local autonomy and risk
taking and ensure local responsibility and accountability through strong, consis-
tent financial control systems. Managers aren’t second-guessed by headquarters.
Strategy flows from the bottom up. Thus, at HP the $7 billion printer business
emerged not because of strategic foresight and planning at HP’s headquarters,
but rather due to the entrepreneurial flair of a small group of managers who
had the freedom to pursue what was believed to be a small market. The same
approach allows J&J and ABB to enter small niche markets or develop unproven
technologies without the burdens of a centralized bureaucratic control system.
On the other hand, in return for the autonomy they are granted, there are
strong expectations of performance. Managers who don’t deliver are replaced.
Ambidextrous Managers
Managing units that pursue widely different strategies and that have
varied structures and cultures is a juggling act not all managers are comfortable
with. At ABB, this role is described as “preaching and persuading.” At HP, man-
agers are low-key, modest, team players who have learned how to manage this
tension over their long tenures with the company. At HP, they also lead by per-
suasion. “As CEO my job is to encourage people to work together, to experi-
ment, to try things, but I can’t order them to do it,” says Lew Platt.20 Larsen at
J&J echoes this theme, emphasizing the need for lower level managers to come
up with solutions and encouraging reasonable failures. Larsen claims that the
role is one of a symphony conductor rather than a general.
One of the explanations for this special ability is the relatively long tenure
managers have in these organizations and the continual reinforcement of the
social control system. Often, these leaders are low-keyed but embody the culture
and act as visible symbols of it. As a group the senior team continually reinforces
the core values of autonomy, teamwork, initiative, accountability, and innova-
tion. They ensure that the organization avoids becoming arrogant and remains
willing to learn from its competitors. Observers of all three of these companies
have commented on their modesty or humility in constantly striving to renew
themselves. Rather than becoming complacent, these organizations are guided
by leaders who venerate the past but are willing to change continuously to meet
the future.
The bottom-line is that ambidextrous organizations learn by the same
mechanism that sometimes kills successful firms: variation, selection, and re-
tention. They promote variation through strong efforts to decentralize, to elimi-
nate bureaucracy, to encourage individual autonomy and accountability, and
to experiment and take risks. This promotes wide variations in products,
Summary
Managers must be prepared to cannibalize their own business at times
of industry transitions. While this is easy in concept, these organizational transi-
tions are quite difficult in practice. Success brings with it inertia and dynamic
conservatism. Four hundred years ago, Niccolo Machiavelli noted, “There is no
more delicate matter to take in hand, nor more dangerous to conduct, nor more
doubtful in its success, than to be a leader in the introduction of changes. For he
who innovates will have for enemies all those who are well off under the old
order of things, and only lukewarm supporters in those who might be better
off under the new.”21
While there are clear benefits to proactive change, only a small minority
of farsighted firms initiate discontinuous change before a performance decline.
Part of this stems from the risks of proactive change. One reason for RCA’s fail-
ure to compete in the solid-state market or for SSIH’s inability to compete in
quartz movements came from the divisive internal disputes over the risks of
sacrificing a certain revenue stream from vacuum tubes and mechanical watches
for the uncertain profits from transistors and quartz watches. However, great
managers are willing to take this step. Andy Grove of Intel puts it succinctly,
“There is at least one point in the history of any company when you have to
change dramatically to rise to the next performance level. Miss the moment
and you start to decline.”22
Notes
1. A. Cooper and C. Smith, “How Established Firms Respond to Threatening Tech-
nologies,” Academy of Management Executive, 16/2 (1992): 92-120.
2. R. Foster, Innovation: The Attacker’s Advantage (New York, NY: Summit Books,
1986), p. 134.
3. B. Virany, M. Tushman, and E. Romanelli, “Executive Succession and Organiza-
tion Outcomes in Turbulent Environments,” Organization Science, 3 (1992): 72-92;
E. Romanelli and M. Tushman, “Organization Transformation as Punctuated Equi-
librium,” Academy of Management Journal, 37 (1994): 1141-1166; M. Tushman and
L. Rosenkopf, “On the Organizational Determinants of Technological Change:
Towards a Sociology of Technological Evolution,” in B. Staw and L. Cummings,
eds., Research in Organization Behavior, Vol. 14 (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1992);
D. Miller, “The Architecture of Simplicity,” Academy of Management Review, 18
(1993): 116-138; A. Meyer, G. Brooks, and J. Goes, “Environmental Jolts and
Industry Revolutions,” Strategic Management Journal, 6 (1990): 48-76.
4. There is an extensive literature studying organizations using models from popula-
tion ecology. A number of excellent reviews of this approach are available in M.
Hannan and G. Carroll, Dynamics of Organizational Populations (New York, NY:
Oxford University Press, 1992); G. Carroll and M. Hannan, eds., Organizations in
Industry: Strategy, Structure & Selection (New York, NY: Oxford University Press,
1995); and J. Baum and J. Singh, eds., Evolutionary Dynamics of Organizations (New
York, NY: Oxford University Press, 1994).
5. M. Tushman and L. Rosenkopf, “On the Organizational Determinants of Techno-
logical Change: Towards a Sociology of Technological Evolution,” in B. Staw and
L. Cummings, Research in Organization Behavior, Vol. 14 (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press,
1992); M. Tushman and P. Anderson, “Technological Discontinuities and Organi-
zation Environments,” Administrative Science Quarterly, 31 (1986): 439-465; W.
Abernathy and K. Clark, “Innovation: Maping the Winds of Creative Destruction,”
Research Policy, 1985, pp. 3-22;J. Wade, “Dynamics of Organizational Communities
and Technological Bandwagons,” Strategic Management Journal, 16 (1995): 111-
133; J. Baum and H. Korn, “Dominant Designs and Population Dynamics in
Telecommunications Services,” Social Science Research, 24 (1995): 97-135.
6. For a more complete treatment of this subject, see J. Utterback, Mastering the
Dynamics of Innovation (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 1994). See
also R. Burgelman & A. Grove, “Strategic Dissonance,” California Management
Review, 38/2 (Winter 1996): 8-28.
7. D. Nadler and M. Tushman, Competing by Design (New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, in press); D. Nadler and M. Tushman, “Beyond Charismatic Leaders: Lead-
ership and Organization Change,” California Management Review, (Winter 1990):
77-90.
8. See M. Tushman, W. Newman, and E. Romanelli, “Convergence and Upheaval:
Managing the Unsteady Pace of Organizational Evolution,” California Management
Review, 29/1 (Fall 1986): 29-44.
9. L. Hays, “Gerstner Is Struggling as He Tries to Change Ingrained IBM Culture,”
Wall Street Journal, May 13, 1994.
10. J. Kotter & N. Rothbard, “Cultural Change at Nissan Motors,” Harvard Business
School Case, #9-491-079, July 28, 1993.
11. “Today’s Leaders Look to Tomorrow,” Fortune, March 26, 1990, p. 31.
12. J. Leahey, “Changing the Culture at British Airways,” Harvard Business School Case,
#9-491-009, 1990.
13. L. Bruce, “British Airways Jolts Staff with a Cultural Revolution,” International
Management, March 7, 1987, pp. 36-38.
14. Ibid.
15. See, for example, D. Katz, The Big Store: Inside the Crisis and Revolution at Sears (New
York, NY: Viking, 1987); S. Caminiti, “Sears’ Need: More Speed,” Fortune, July 15,
1991, pp. 88-90.
16. S. Strom, “Further Prescriptions for the Convalescent Sears,” New York Times,
October 10, 1992.
17. D. Hurst, Crisis and Renewal (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press, 1995);
R. Burgelman, “Intraorganizational Ecology of Strategy Making and Organiza-
tional Adaptation,” Organizational Science, 2/3 (1991): 239-262; K. Eisenhardt and
B. Tabrizi, “Acceleration Adaptive Processes,” Administrative Science Quarterly, 40/1
(1995): 84-110; J. Morone, Winning in High Tech Markets (Boston, MA: Harvard
Business School Press, 1993); M. Iansiti and K. Clark, “Integration and Dynamic
Capability,” Industry and Corporation Change, 3/3 (1994): 557-606; D. Leonard-
Barton, Wellsprings of Knowledge (Boston, MA: Harvard Business School Press,
1995).
18. J. Weber, “A Big Company that Works,” Business Week, May 4, 1992, p. 125.
19. See C. O’Reilly, “Corporations, Culture, and Commitment: Motivation and Social
Control in Organizations,” California Management Review, 31/4 (Summer 1989):
9-25; or C. O’Reilly and J. Chatman, “Culture as Social Control: Corporations,
Cults, and Commitment,” in B. Staw and L. Cummings, eds., Research in Organ-
izational Behavior, Vol. 18 (Greenwich, CT: JAI Press, 1996).
20. A. Deutschman, “How H-P Continues to Grow and Grow,” Fortune, May 2, 1994,
p. 100.
21. N. Machiavelli, The Prince, translated by L.P.S. de Alvarez (Dallas, TX: University
of Dallas Press, 1974).
22. S. Sherman, “Andy Grove: How Intel Makes Spending Pay Off,” Fortune, February
22, 1993, p. 58.