Abstract
The dynamic capabilities framework identifies three components as critical for successful
organizational adaptation: sensing, seizing and transforming. By contrasting two distinct
business cases, a long-term biofuel investment by DuPont and Novartis’s rapid deployment
of digital technologies in marketing, this article assesses the managerial implications of each
of these components. It develops an embryonic contingency model that illustrates why the
relative importance of dynamic capabilities varies across firms. The article also highlights the critical role played by strategic leaders, who must selectively adapt and refine dynamic capabilities and also serve as a last line of defense in times of rapid change.