Pursuit of change versus organizational inertia: a study on strategic renewal in the Finnish broadcasting company
Maijanen-Kyläheiko, Päivi (2014-12-05)
Väitöskirja
Maijanen-Kyläheiko, Päivi
05.12.2014
Lappeenranta University of Technology
Acta Universitatis Lappeenrantaensis
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-265-707-7
https://urn.fi/URN:ISBN:978-952-265-707-7
Tiivistelmä
This doctoral dissertation explores the intra-organizational dynamics of a strategic renewal
process. The main research question is how the pursuit of change and organizational inertia
co-exist, intertwine, and collide in organizational cognition and capabilities during the
strategic renewal. It is a comprehensive study on how organizational capabilities,
organizational cognition, and structure enhance and inhibit change. Theoretically, the study is
positioned in the modern tradition of strategy research, using the dynamic capability view and
the organizational and managerial cognition research tradition as the main theoretical frames.
Empirically, the study is a longitudinal case study of the Finnish Broadcasting Company
(Yle), following the organizational changes during the years of 2011-1014. The analysis is
based on both quantitative and qualitative data, which was collected during the research
process using surveys, interviews, and archives.
The main theoretical contribution is the application of the two theoretical approaches in one
study. Empirically, the study contributes to operationalization of the concepts related to the
dynamic capability view and organizational cognition, in a media context that is going
through drastic changes due to digitalization. Furthermore, the case of a public broadcasting
company extends the application of the theoretical concepts to the context of public
management.
The results suggest that renewal is a complex process, in which an organization’s perceptions
intertwine with the strategic actions and decision-making. The change evolves pathdependently:
the past experiences, routines, and organizational structures tend to dictate the
future visions, desires, and actions. The study also reveals how the public nature of an
organization adds to the tensions between change and organizational inertia, and hampers the
decision-making.
The doctoral dissertation consists of six research papers, each of which explores the
phenomenon under study from a different perspective.
process. The main research question is how the pursuit of change and organizational inertia
co-exist, intertwine, and collide in organizational cognition and capabilities during the
strategic renewal. It is a comprehensive study on how organizational capabilities,
organizational cognition, and structure enhance and inhibit change. Theoretically, the study is
positioned in the modern tradition of strategy research, using the dynamic capability view and
the organizational and managerial cognition research tradition as the main theoretical frames.
Empirically, the study is a longitudinal case study of the Finnish Broadcasting Company
(Yle), following the organizational changes during the years of 2011-1014. The analysis is
based on both quantitative and qualitative data, which was collected during the research
process using surveys, interviews, and archives.
The main theoretical contribution is the application of the two theoretical approaches in one
study. Empirically, the study contributes to operationalization of the concepts related to the
dynamic capability view and organizational cognition, in a media context that is going
through drastic changes due to digitalization. Furthermore, the case of a public broadcasting
company extends the application of the theoretical concepts to the context of public
management.
The results suggest that renewal is a complex process, in which an organization’s perceptions
intertwine with the strategic actions and decision-making. The change evolves pathdependently:
the past experiences, routines, and organizational structures tend to dictate the
future visions, desires, and actions. The study also reveals how the public nature of an
organization adds to the tensions between change and organizational inertia, and hampers the
decision-making.
The doctoral dissertation consists of six research papers, each of which explores the
phenomenon under study from a different perspective.
Kokoelmat
- Väitöskirjat [1099]