Reprint Series


Organizational Ambidexterity: IBM and Emerging Business Opportunities
O’Reilly, Charles A., J. Bruce Harreld, and Michael L. Tushman
51/4  (Summer 2009): 75-99

The empirical evidence is that only a tiny fraction of organizations live to age 40. Why this should be is a puzzle, since when firms are doing well they have all the resources (financial, physical, and intellectual) to continue to be successful. Yet the evidence is that most organizations fail. Drawing on recent advances in evolutionary theory, this article illustrates how multi-level selection processes help organizations adapt in the face of technological and market changes. This process, along with the concepts of organizational ambidexterity and dynamic capabilities, may help organizations survive over long time periods. One deliberate and repeatable version of this process enabled IBM to generate more than $15 billion in growth between 2000 and 2005.
View or Purchase all articles in Vol. 51, No. 4 (Summer 2009)
 
(Electronic copies e-mailed by next business day)
 


Current Issue

California Management Review
Vol. 52 No. 1 Fall 2009

Subscribe Today

Recent Single Issues:


Help us Improve

If you have any comments or questions about the California Management Review, please let us know.


Editor's Corner

Want to submit an article?
CMR publishes articles that are both research-based and address issues of current concern to managers.
Learn more >>