Abstract
Using system dynamics methods, we provide a feed-back interpretation of the ecological theory of organisational inertia and change, and explore the dynamic implications of the theory through computer simulation. The study offers three main analytical insights. Firstly, structural elements typically associated with the accumulation of organisational inertia need to be in place before organisations can exploit the advantages of cumulated experience. Secondly, inertia does not have the unique consequence of lowering organisational responsiveness to external stimuli, but also that of connecting pressure for change and change attempts within organisations. Thirdly, there seems to be an ideal level of organisational resistance to change, and hence of organisational inertia. Below this level organisations find change relatively easy to sustain, but are unable to stabilise change process and capitalise on their activities of exploration of new solutions. Above this level efforts aimed at improving the reproducibility of organisational structures are not compensated by a corresponding long-term increase in reliability.
Access provided by CONRICYT-eBooks. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Barnett WP and Carroll G (1995). Modeling internal organizational change. Ann Rev Sociol 21: 217–236.
Baron JN, Burton DM and Hannan MT (1996). The road taken: Origins and Evolution of employment systems in emerging companies. Indust and Corporate Change 51: 239–275.
Lomi A, Larsen ER and Ginsberg A (1997). Adaptive learning in organizations: A system dynamics-based exploration. J Mgmt 23: 561–582.
March JG and Olsen JP (1984). The new institutionalism: Organizational factors in political life. Am Polit Sci Rev 78: 734–749.
Carroll G and Harrison J (1994). On the historical efficiency of competition between organizational populations. Am J Sociol 100: 720–749.
Porter M (1994). Toward a dynamic theory of strategy. In R Rumelt, D Schendel and D Teece (Eds.) Fundamental Issues in Strategy. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business School Press, pp 423–461.
Chen MJ and Macmillan IC (1992). Non response and delayed response to competitive moves: The roles of competitor dependence and action irreversibility. Acad Mgmt J 35: 539–570.
Barnett WP and Hansen MT (1996). The red queen in organizational evolution. Strat Mgmt J 17: 139–158.
Selznick P (1949). TVA and the Grass Roots. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Hannan MT and Freeman J (1984). Structural inertia and organizational change. Am Sociol Rev 49: 149–164.
Amburgey T, Kelly D and Barnett WP (1993). Resetting the clock: The dynamics of organizational change and failure. Admin Sci Q 38: 51–73.
Senge PM and Sterman JD (1992). Systems thinking and organizational learning: acting locally and thinking globally in the organization of the future. Eur J Opl Res 59: 137–150.
Sterman JD (1989). Modeling managerial behaviour: Misperception of feedback in a dynamic decision making experiment. Mgmt Sci 25: 321–339.
Morecroft JDM, Larsen ER, Lomi A and Ginsberg A (1995). The dynamics of cooperation and competition for shared resources. Sys Dynam Rev 11: 151–177.
Mosekilde E, Larsen E and Sterman JD (1991). Coping with complexity: Deterministic chaos in human decision making behaviour. In: J Casti and A Karlqvist (eds.), Beyond Belief: Randomness, Prediction and Explanation in Modern Science. Boston, MA: CRC Press.
Gresov C, Haveman H and Oliva T (1993). Organizational design, inertia and the dynamics of competitive response. Organ Sci 4: 181–208.
March JG (1982). Footnotes to organizational change. Admin Sci Q 26: 563–597.
Hall R (1976). A system pathology of an organization: The rise and fall of the Saturday Evening Post. Admin Sci Q 21: 185–211.
Masuch M (1985). Vicious circles in organizations. Admin Sci Q 30: 14–33.
Morecroft JDM (1988). System dynamics and microworlds for policymakers. Eur J Opl Res 35: 301–320.
Morecroft JDM and Sterman JD (Eds) (1992). Modelling for learning. Eur J Opl Res 59: 1–230.
Hanneman RA, Collins R and Mordt G (1995). Discovering theory dynamics by computer: experiments on state legitimacy and imperialist capitalism. Sociol Methodol 25: 1–46.
Sterman JD (1985). The growth of knowledge: Testing a theory of scientific revolutions with a formal model, Technol Forecasting and Social Change 28: 93–122.
Sastry MA (1997). Problems and paradoxes in a model of punctuated organizational change. Admin Sci Q 42: 237–275.
Baum JAC and Singh JV (1994). Organization-environment coevolution. In: AC Baum and JV Singh (Eds.) Evolutionary Dynamics of Organizations. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, pp 379–402.
Brittain JW (1994). Density-independent selection and community evolution. In: AC Baum and JV Singh (eds.), Evolutionary Dynamics of Organizations. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, pp 355–402.
March JG (1991). Exploration and exploitation in organizational learning. Organ Sci 2: 71–87.
Kelly D and Amburgey T (1991). Organizational inertia and momentum: A dynamic model of strategic change. Acad Mgmt J 34: 591–612.
Nelson RR and Winter SG (1982). An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.
Hannan MT and Freeman J (1989). Organizational Ecology. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Stinchcombe AL (1965). Social structure and organizations. In: JG March (Ed.) Handbook of Organizations. Chicago, IL: Rand McNally.
Haveman H (1992). Between a rock and a hard place. Admin Sci Q 37: 48–75.
Freeman J, Carroll GR and Hannan MT (1983). The liability of newness: Age dependence in organizational death rates. Am Sociol Rev 48: 692–710.
Delacroix J and Swaminathan A (1991). Cosmetic, speculative and adaptive organizational change in the wine industry: A longitudinal study. Admin Sci Q 36: 631–661.
Carley K (1992). Organizational learning and personnel turnover. Organ Sci 3: 20–46.
Krackhardt D and Stern R (1988). Informal networks and organizational crises: An experimental simulation. Social Psychol Q 51: 123–140.
Thompson J (1967). Organizations in Action. New York: McGraw Hill.
Tushman M and Anderson P (1986). Technological discontinuities and organizational environments. Admin Sci Q 31: 439–465.
Tuma N and Hannan MT (1984). Social Dynamics. New York: Academic Press.
Sutton RI and Straw BM (1995). What theory is not. Admin Sci Q 40: 371–384.
Masuch M (1995). Computer models. In: N Nicholson (Ed.) Encyclopedic Dictionary of Organizational Behaviour. London: Blackwell, pp 91–92.
DiMaggio PJ (1995). Comments on “what theory is not”. Admin Sci Q 40: 391–397.
Mollona E and Lomi A (1997). Three Experiments on the Organizational Dynamics of Resource Accumulation. Working Paper. London Business School.
Weick KE (1995). What theory is not, theorizing is. Admin Sci Q 40: 385–390.
Levinthal D (1992). Competitive Forces and Population Dynamics. Unpublished manuscript, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Mezias S and Lant T (1994). Mimetic learning and the evolution of organizational populations. In: J Baum and J Singh (Eds.) Evolutionary Dynamics of Organizations. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, pp 179–198.
Levinthal D (1990). Organizational adaptation: Environmental selection and random walks. In: J Singh (Ed.) Organizational Evolution: New Directions. Newbury Park: Sage, pp 201–233.
Hannan MT and Ranger-Moore J (1990). The ecology of organizational size distributions: A micro-simulation approach. J Math Sociol 15: 67–90.
Hannan MT and Carroll G (1992). Dynamics of Organizational Populations. New York: Oxford University Press.
Levinthal D (1991). Random walks and organizational mortality. Admin Sci Q 36: 397–420.
Petersen T and Koput K (1991). Density dependence in organizational mortality: Legitimacy or unobserved heterogeneity? Am Sociol Rev 56: 399–409.
Bruderer E and Singh JV (1996). Organizational evolution, learning and selection: A genetic-algorithm-based model. Acad Mgmt J 39: 1322–1349.
Lomi A and Larsen ER (1996). Interacting locally and evolving globally: A computational approach to the dynamics of organizational populations. Acad Mgmt J 39: 1287–1321.
Peli G, Bruggerman J, Masuch M and O’Nualláin B (1994). A logical approach to organizational ecology. Am Sociol Rev 59: 571–593.
Carroll G and Hannan MT (1995). Organizations in Industry. New York: Oxford University Press.
Barron J, West E and Hannan MT (1994). A time to grow and a time to die: Growth and mortality of credit unions in New York City, 1914–1990. Am J Sociol 100: 381–421.
Wittenberg J (1992). On the very idea of a system dynamics model of Kuhnian science. Sys Dynam Rev 8: 21–33.
Barlas Y (1992). Comments on “On the very idea of a system dynamics model of Kuhnian Science”. Sys Dynam Rev 8: 43–47.
Sterman JD (1992). Response to “On the very idea of a system dynamics model of Kuhnian science”. Sys Dynam Rev 8: 35–42.
Radziki MJ (1992). Reflections on “On the very idea of a system dynamics model of Kuhnian Science”. Sys Dynam Rev 8: 49–53.
Forrester JW and Senge PM (1980). Tests for building confidence in system dynamics models. In: AA Legasto, JW Forrester and JM Lyneis (Eds.) System Dynamics. Amsterdam: North-Holland, pp 209–228.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Copyright information
© 2018 The Author(s)
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Larsen, E.R., Lomi, A. (2018). Resetting the Clock: A Feedback Approach to the Dynamics of Organisational Inertia, Survival and Change. In: Kunc, M. (eds) System Dynamics. OR Essentials. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95257-1_2
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-349-95257-1_2
Published:
Publisher Name: Palgrave Macmillan, London
Print ISBN: 978-1-349-95256-4
Online ISBN: 978-1-349-95257-1
eBook Packages: Business and ManagementBusiness and Management (R0)