articleAcademy of Management PerspectivesOct 5, 2013Closed access

Organizational Ambidexterity: Past, Present, and Future

Stanford University · Harvard University Press · +1 more institution

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Abstract

Organizational ambidexterity refers to the ability of an organization to both explore and exploit—to compete in mature technologies and markets where efficiency, control, and incremental improvement are prized and to also compete in new technologies and markets where flexibility, autonomy, and experimentation are needed. In the past 15 years there has been an explosion of interest and research on this topic. We briefly review the current state of the research, highlighting what we know and don't know about the topic. We close with a point of view on promising areas for ongoing research.

Citation impact

2,347
total citations
FWCI
168.61
Percentile
100%
References
135
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Ambidexterity
  • Exploit
  • Flexibility (engineering)
  • Autonomy
  • Knowledge management
  • Business
  • Point (geometry)
  • Industrial organization
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Industry, innovation and infrastructure
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