Sub-theme 48: Legacy Firms and Digital Transformation beyond the Dynamic Capability Approach -> HYBRID!
Call for Papers
Digital transformation is “concerned with the changes digital technologies can bring about in a company’s business model,
… products or organizational structures” (Hess et al., 2016, p. 124) and represents the most important challenge for management
in recent and coming years (Nadkarni & Prügl, 2020).
Despite the importance of the topic, recent studies
have tended to focus more on the technological framework clarifying the usage of new digital technologies (Tabrizi et al.,
2019), neglecting to consider the organizational conditions allowing firms – and especially legacy firms – to respond to sudden
changes. Indeed, digital transformation has completely revolutionized the organizational paradigm of companies, since technology
represents a relevant tool for human resources to create something new and significantly different than in the past (Warner
& Wäger, 2019). Given its often disruptive function, digital transformation can also determine a technological discontinuity
and foster fundamental changes in organizational capabilities (Nambisan et al., 2019), operational routines (Chen et al.,
2014), and business processes (Henriette et al., 2015). Therefore, digital transformation is not about only technology, but
about it also involves deep changes in overall strategy and all organizational processes (Kane et al., 2015).
In this context operate the legacy firms, organizations typically set up before the digital era, often failing in positioning
their business in the digital ecosystem (Kopalle et al., 2020). Moreover, although these organizations face challenges in
fully understanding the new network of interdependencies that these technologies can create, there is still uncertainty about
how to employ digital to gain competitive advantage (Govindarajan & Immelt 2019; Subramaniam et al., 2019).
The objective of this sub-theme is to highlight the organizational implications generated by the digital transformation
in legacy firms. Some scholars have shown that technological change leads to organizational reconfigurations (e.g., Frankenberger
et al., 2021; Kopalle et al., 2020), which will determine the ability for the company to survive the change (Lavie, 2006).
Relevant studies have started to emerge on these topics but they have provided a limited view, highlighting the technical
aspects of technology, rather than the management of technology (Tabrizi et al., 2019), and representing micro-processes that
support the building and maintenance of dynamic capabilities with respect to technology (Argote & Ren, 2012).
Nevertheless, only adopting a dynamic capabilities perspective would not offer a comprehensive understanding of the digital
transformation processes and their implications at the organizational level (Warner & Wäger, 2019). Relying only on a
dynamic capabilities’ perspective can limit the analysis to the organizations’ capacity to modify existing capabilities and
the way organizations employ actual methods to implement such modifications (Lavie, 2006). The dynamic capability view may
also constrain our understanding about the mechanisms emerging during the technological transitions which lead legacy firms
to initially use the network and relationships to survive for then relying mainly on internal capabilities (Peng, 2001).
In this sub-theme we want to go beyond the discourse on dynamic capabilities in order to understand how legacy
companies manage digitalization. Therefore, we invite scholars across a range of communities with a shared interest in re-examining
traditional organizational and capabilities perspectives in the light of this information-rich, digitalized world. We seek
contributions that deepen our understanding of how technological advances impact on organizations, specifically how legacy
firms might be redesigned to take advantage acquire or transform resources, skills, and competencies and to foster communication
and collaboration, leveraging technology while countering its potential downsides. We also call for novel contributions paying
explicit attention to the temporal dimension, building on Newman’s (2000) analysis, through a temporal bracketing approach,
which may describe the passage of legacy firm from network capabilities to competitive internal resources and capabilities.
We welcome conceptual or empirical contributions, focusing the possible topics mentioned below and related issues.
Of course, the list below is not exhaustive. We are interested in research drawing on a variety of organizational theories
and using diverse research methods.
What are the organizational implications of digital transformation? How do legacy firms (at macro level) and workers (at micro level) react to sudden changes in the digital environment?
How should the organizational – also dynamic – capabilities be reconfigured in the light of the new digital scenario? Which strategy seems more appropriate between substitution, evolution, and transformation (Lavie, 2006) of capabilities?
How does digital transformation affect legacy firms by altering work content and processes? What are the main challenges for digitalization within these organizations?
How do emerging technologies alter the design of legacy firms, as well as tasks, functions, relationships, or domains of organizing? Which challenges does digital transformation produce and what potential issues does it create?
What are the new skills, competencies, resources that must be imagined for legacy firms dealing with digital?
What are the specific mechanisms and conditions leading legacy firms to move from network and relationship capabilities to competitive internal resources and capabilities?
References
- Argote, L. & Ren, Y. (2012): “Transactive memory systems: A microfoundation of dynamic capabilities.” Journal of Management Studies, 49 (8), 1375–1382.
- Chen, J.E., Pan, S.L., & Ouyang, T.H. (2014): “Routine reconfiguration in traditional companies’ e-commerce strategy implementation: A trajectory perspective.” Information & Management, 51 (2), 270–282.
- Frankenberger, K., Mayer, H., Reiter, A., & Schmidt, M. (2021): “Digital Transformer’s Dilemma: Innovate Twice to Survive.” In: O. Gassmann & F. Ferrandina (eds.): Connected Business. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 157–173.
- Govindarajan, V., & Immelt, J.R. (2019): “The only way manufacturers can survive.” MIT Sloan Management Review, 60 (3), 24–33.
- Henriette, E., Feki, M., & Boughzala, I. (2015): “The shape of digital transformation: a systematic literature review.” MCIS 2015 proceedings, 431–443.
- Hess, T., Matt, C., Benlian, A., & Wiesböck, F. (2016): “Options for formulating a digital transformation strategy.” MIS Quarterly Executive, 15 (2), 123–139.
- Kane, G.C., Palmer, D., Phillips, A.N., Kiron, D., & Buckley, N. (2015): “Strategy, not technology, drives digital transformation.” MIT Sloan Management Review and Deloitte, 14, 1–25.
- Kopalle, P.K., Kumar, V., & Subramaniam, M. (2020): “How legacy firms can embrace the digital ecosystem via digital customer orientation.” Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science, 48 (1), 114–131.
- Lavie, D. (2006): “Capability reconfiguration: An analysis of incumbent responses to technological change.” Academy of Management Review, 31 (1), 153–174.
- Nadkarni, S., & Prügl, R. (2021): “Digital transformation: a review, synthesis and opportunities for future research.” Management Review Quarterly, 71, 233–341.
- Nambisan, S., Wright, M., & Feldman, M. (2019): “The digital transformation of innovation and entrepreneurship: Progress, challenges and key themes.” Research Policy, 48 (8), https://doi.org/10.1016/j.respol.2019.03.018.
- Newman, K. (2000): “Organizational transformation during institutional upheaval.” Academy of Management Review, 25 (3), 602–619.
- Peng, M.W. (2001): “How entrepreneurs create wealth in transition economies.” Academy of Management Executive, 15 (1), 95–103.
- Subramaniam, M., Iyer, B., & Venkatraman, V. (2019): “Competing in digital ecosystems.” Business Horizons, 62 (1), 83–94.
- Tabrizi, B., Lam, E., Girard, K., & Irvin, V. (2019): “Digital transformation is not about technology.” Harvard Business Review, 13, 1–6.
- Warner, K.S., & Wäger, M. (2019): “Building dynamic capabilities for digital transformation: An ongoing process of strategic renewal.” Long Range Planning, 52 (3), 326–349.