Strategic factor markets: expectations, luck, and business strategy
Management Science
The decision-making paradigm of organizational design
Management Science
In the age of the smart machine: the future of work and power
In the age of the smart machine: the future of work and power
Asset stock accumulation and sustainability of competitive advantage
Management Science
Evaluation of strategic investments in information technology
Communications of the ACM
Power, politics, and MIS implementation
Communications of the ACM
Designing Complex Organizations
Designing Complex Organizations
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This paper is organized around two research questions and three issue areas in business reengineering. We address: (1) To what extent does environmental volatility affect the rate of accumulation or decay of critical firm assets? and (2) How can expertise and information related assets be operationalized in the context of process-based ("radical") organizational restructuring? With respect to business reengineering, we address: (1) How can differing needs for process reengineering projects be characterized? (2) To what extent does organizational resistance to reengineering projects differ by categories of need? and (3) To what extent are failure rates experienced by reengineering practitioners traceable to lack of alignment between project needs, planning agendas, and dominant modes of organizational resistance? We develop an explanatory framework based on two constructs, expertise half-life and information half-life, and apply these to help analyze current practices in business reengineering. We posit that under certain conditions high project failure rates are associated with weak coupling between reengineering project objectives and the firm's general business and information systems planning agendas. Under other conditions, this weak coupling is associated with successful projects. We conclude with recommendations for methodological approaches and suggested research extensions.