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Creative Self-Destruction Among Organizations: An Empirical Study of Technical Innovation and Organizational Failure in the American Automobile Industry, 18851981
aUniversity of California at Berkeley CA, USA
bNational University of Singapore
Abstract
A hotly debated question of organizational theoryespecially evolutionary theories of organizationasks how inert are organizational structures. Answering the question requires analysis of not only organizational change but also of the consequences of change for organizational survival. This study examines one such organizational changetechnical innovationand its effects on the failure rates of American automobile producers from 1885 to 1981. Technical innovations are shown to generate primarily beneficial effects for the firms spawning them and primarily detrimental effects for competitor firms. However, analysis of certain organizational contextslarge organizations in particularsuggests that the risks of innovation may on occasion outweigh benefits. The findings imply that some theories of strategic management need rethinking.
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