Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword by Douglas K. Smith
- Introduction
- Part I Perspectives on a changing world
- Part II Adaptive approaches to organizational design
- 7 Innovative cultures and adaptive organizations
- 8 A relational view of learning: how who you know affects what you know
- 9 Improved performance: that's our diploma
- 10 The real and appropriate role of technology to create a learning culture
- 11 The agility factor
- 12 Tools and methods to support learning networks
- Part III Expanding individual responsibility
- Index
7 - Innovative cultures and adaptive organizations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword by Douglas K. Smith
- Introduction
- Part I Perspectives on a changing world
- Part II Adaptive approaches to organizational design
- 7 Innovative cultures and adaptive organizations
- 8 A relational view of learning: how who you know affects what you know
- 9 Improved performance: that's our diploma
- 10 The real and appropriate role of technology to create a learning culture
- 11 The agility factor
- 12 Tools and methods to support learning networks
- Part III Expanding individual responsibility
- Index
Summary
Managers and students of organizations are increasingly concerned about the capacity of organizations to adapt to rapidly changing environments. The rate of technological, economic, political, and sociocultural change is increasing, and organizations are, therefore, finding it more and more important to figure out how to adapt.
Adaptation in turbulent environments involves more than minor adjustments. It often requires genuinely innovative thrusts: new missions, new goals, new products and services, new ways of getting things done, and even new values and assumptions. Most important, adaptation involves managing perpetual change. Organizations will have to learn how to learn and to become self-designing.
The difficulty is that organizations are by nature, and often by design, oriented toward stabilizing and routinizing work. They develop cultures expressed in structures and processes that permit large numbers of people to coordinate their efforts and that permit new generations of members to continue to perform effectively without having to reinvent the organization each time. How then, can one conceptualize an organization that can function effectively yet be capable of learning so that it can adapt and innovate in response to changing environmental circumstances? How can one conceive of an organization that can surmount its own central dynamic, that can manage the paradox of institutionalizing and stabilizing the process of change and innovation?
In this chapter, I want to address some aspects of these questions and to present a point of view based on my research into the dynamics of organizational culture.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Creating a Learning CultureStrategy, Technology, and Practice, pp. 123 - 151Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004
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