Threatening Technologies,” Academy of Management Executive 6, no. 2 (1992): 55-70; and C. Gilbert and J.L. Bower,
“Disruptive Change: When Trying Harder Is Part of the Problem,” Harvard Business Review 80 (May 2002): 94-104.
5. Despite arguing that most companies that attempt to
compete with dual strategies will likely fail, Porter has
also proposed that “companies seeking growth through
broadening within their industry can best contain the risks
to strategy by creating stand-alone units, each with its
own brand name and tailored activities.” See Porter,
“What Is Strategy?,” 77.
6. For example, J.D. Day, P. Y. Mang, A. Richter and J. Roberts, “The Innovative Organization: Why New Ventures
Need More Than a Room of Their Own,” McKinsey Quarterly 2 (2001): 21 argue that: “the simple injunction to
cordon off new businesses is too narrow. Although ventures do need space to develop, strict separation can
prevent them from obtaining invaluable resources and rob
their parents of the vitality they can generate.” Similarly,
M. Iansiti, F. W. McFarlan and G. Westerman, “Leveraging
the Incumbent’s Advantage,” MIT Sloan Management Review 44, no. 4 (summer 2003): 58-64 reported that:
“spinoffs often enable faster action early on but they later
have difficulty achieving true staying power in the market.
Even worse, by launching a spinoff, a company often creates conditions that make future integration very difficult.”
7. A variant of the idea of creating separate units that are
linked by a variety of integrating mechanisms (spatial separation) is the idea of temporal separation. See J.A.
Nickerson and T.R. Zenger, “Being Efficiently Fickle: A Dynamic Theory of Organizational Choice,” Organization
Science 13, no. 5 (September-October 2002): 547-566; P.
Puranam, H. Singh and M. Zollo, “Organizing for Innovation: Managing the Coordination-Autonomy Dilemma in
Technology Acquisitions,” Academy of Management
Journal 49 (2006): 263-280; and N. Siggelkow and D.
Levinthal, “Temporarily Divide to Conquer: Centralized,
Decentralized and Reintegrated Organizational Approaches to Exploration and Adaptation,” Organization
Science 14, no. 6 (November-December 2003): 650-669.
The idea behind this proposal is that the same unit or
company can undertake two seemingly incompatible
activities (such as exploitation and exploration) but at
different times. For instance, Siggelkow and Levinthal
showed through simulations of adaptation on rugged
landscape that there are advantages to organizational
forms that are initially decentralized but eventually centralized. Similarly, Puranam, Singh and Zollo argued that a
company needs to synchronize the shift in organizational
emphasis (from exploitation to exploration) with stages of
technological development — for example, structural
forms that emphasize autonomy tend to outperform
structural forms that emphasize coordination during ex-ploration-intensive stages of development.
8. C.D. Charitou and C.C. Markides, “Responses to Disruptive Strategic Innovation,” MIT Sloan Management
Review 44, no. 2 (winter 2003): 55-63.
9. E. Kelly, “Edward Jones and Me,” Fortune, June 12,
2000, 145.
10. C. Markides, “To Diversify or Not to Diversify,” Harvard Business Review 75 (November-December 1997):
93-99.
11. Charitou and Markides, “Responses to Disruptive
Strategic Innovation.”
12. C. Markides and C. Charitou, “Competing with Dual
Business Models: A Contingency Approach,” Academy
of Management Executive 18, no. 3 (2004): 22-36.
13. C. Gilbert, “The Disruption Opportunity,” MIT Sloan
Management Review 44, no. 4 (summer 2003): 27-32.
14. Other factors that need to be considered in making this
decision are discussed in M. W. Johnson, C.M. Christensen
and H. Kagermann, “Reinventing Your Business Model,”
Harvard Business Review 86 (December 2008): 50-59.
15. Christensen, “Innovator’s Dilemma.”
16. D.B. Audretsch, “Innovation and Industry Evolution”
(Cambridge: MIT Press, 1995); P.A. Geroski, “Market Dynamics and Entry” (Oxford, United Kingdom: Basil Blackwell,
1991); P.A. Geroski, “What Do We Know about Entry?” International Journal of Industrial Organization13, no. 4 (1995):
421-440; and C. Markides, “Strategic Innovation,” Sloan
Management Review 38, no. 3 (spring 1997): 9-23.
17. The same point is made by P. Gulati and J. Garino,
“Get the Right Mix of Bricks and Clicks,” Harvard Business Review 78 (May-June 2000): 107-114. They argue:
“Instead of focusing on an either-or choice — Should we
develop our Internet channel in-house or launch a spin-off?
— executives should be asking, ‘What degree of integration makes sense for our company?’” (ibid., 108) The
same point is raised in C. Smith and A. Cooper, “Entry Into
Threatening Young Industries: Challenges and Pitfalls,”
chap. 14 in “Building the Strategically-Responsive Organization” (New York: Wiley, 1994).
18. Gilbert and Bower, “Disruptive Change”; S. Ghoshal
and L. Gratton, “Integrating the Enterprise,” MIT Sloan
Management Review 44, no. 1 (fall 2002): 31-38; C. Gibson and J. Birkinshaw, “The Antecedents, Consequences
and Mediating Role of Organizational Ambidexterity,”
Academy of Management Journal 47, no. 2 (2004): 209-
226; V. Govindarajan and C. Trimble, “Ten Rules for
Strategic Innovators: From Idea to Execution” (Boston:
Harvard Business Press, 2005); and M.L. Tushman and
C.A. O’Reilly III, “Ambidextrous Organizations: Managing
Evolutionary and Revolutionary Change,” California Management Review 38, no. 4 (1996): 8-29.
19. Markides and Charitou, “Competing with Dual Business Models.”
20. The notion that the underlying “structure” of the system creates the behaviors in that system has been the
subject of a huge literature in the systems dynamics field.
See for example, J. W. Forrester, “Principles of Systems,”
2nd ed. (Portland, Oregon: Productivity Press, 1968); and
A. Van Ackere, E. Larsen and J. Morecroft, “Systems
Thinking and Business Process Redesign,” European
Management Journal 11, no. 4 (1993): 412-423. For a
more managerial angle, see C.A. Bartlett and S. Ghoshal,
“Rebuilding Behavioral Context: Turn Process Reengineering into People Rejuvenation,” Sloan Management
Review 37, no. 1 (fall 1995): 11-23.
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