Robert A. Burgelman’s research while affiliated with Stanford University and other places

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Publications (73)


Fading corporate survival prospects: Impact of co‐selection bias in resource allocation on strategic intent
  • Article

August 2024

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17 Reads

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1 Citation

Strategic Management Journal

Robert A. Burgelman

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Research Summary Our field study of new business development in a German‐based global pharmaceutical company reveals that the emergence of co‐selection bias in project‐level state‐gate resource allocation engendered a corporate‐level innovation portfolio imbalance. We show how the corporate portfolio imbalance resulted from incoherent managerial activities in the multilevel resource allocation process (RAP) decision context and how this caused fizzling out of the proactively established incipient strategic context of the favored‐for‐growth business unit. Moreover, we identify strategic RAP exploitation challenges that explain why sequential exploitation capability and exploitation drive deficits caused an exploitation trap that limited strategic discretion and stymied top management strategic intent to maintain the company's independence. Our integrated frameworks augment strategic management theory of corporate RAP and offer guidance for future research. Managerial Summary We draw attention to the little‐noticed phenomenon of co‐selection bias emerging in the project‐level state‐gate resource allocation to new business development and maladaptive corporate‐level innovation portfolio outcomes that it may produce. We show how top management can use the Bower–Burgelman RAP model to analyze the multilevel RAP decision context and identify the forces that may engender out‐of‐context managerial agency, such as co‐selection bias. We highlight strategic RAP exploitation challenges that top management must meet by matching the RAP exploitation drive with a commensurate RAP exploitation capability to avoid an exploitation trap, thereby increasing the chances of company survival.




Strategy-Making and Organizational Evolution: A Managerial Agency Perspective
  • Book
  • Full-text available

March 2023

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974 Reads

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3 Citations

This Element presents several frameworks of strategy-making that serve to analyze organizational evolution processes within and beyond the firm. These frameworks form an integrated evolutionary ecological lens to examine the dynamics of strategy-making in organizational evolution. They highlight the role of the internal selection environment for analyzing processes and practices at various managerial levels (top, middle, and operational) within the organization. The Element also explains the role of the CEO in maintaining and updating the internal selection environment and contributing to organizational evolution, as well as making. fundamental decisions about organizational splits of the firm's business models as an ecosystem evolves.

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Panel B. HP Illustration of Intra-Business Model Complexity Analysis, PC Business Model in 2014. 27
Panel C. HP Illustration of Intra-Business Model Complexity Analysis, Enterprise Solutions Business Model in 2014.
Strategically Managing the Business Model Portfolio Trajectory

May 2022

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756 Reads

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11 Citations

California Management Review

We propose a strategic decision-making tool to assist corporate management in analyzing the trajectory of their business model portfolio. Our tool provides a robust means of assessing the trajectory of a business model portfolio through the evolution of inter-business model complementarity and intra-business model complexity. We illustrate the use of our tool through the example of the radical restructuring of HP's business model portfolio in 2015, which resulted in two smaller, more adaptive corporate entities with distinct business models that could pursue redefined growth opportunities.


Strategy Processes and Practices

August 2021

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3,381 Reads

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3 Citations

Strategy process research has yielded a richer understanding of the emergence of strategies from throughout the organization and over extended periods of time; strategy-as-practice research has helped us understand the range of actors involved in strategy and the tools they draw on in their strategy work. The purpose of this chapter is to encourage research that combines insights from these two traditions. First, the chapter offers brief overviews of process and practice research. Then, the chapter reviews the most recent work from 2018 onward. Most of the text, however, goes to discussing future research that combines process and practice perspectives and that focuses on four themes: temporality and spatiality, actors and agency, cognition and emotionality, and language and meaning. These themes are woven together by two “red threads”—strategy digitalization and strategy inclusion—that we expect will have significant impact on strategy formation.


Data Illustration for CEO Interpretation of Evolving Ecosystem and Diverging Business Models
Why Multi-Business Corporations Split: CEO Strategizing as the Ecosystem Evolves

July 2021

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1,765 Reads

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14 Citations

Journal of Management

We investigate why CEOs of multi-business corporations decide to engage in a corporate split that spawns multiple independent, smaller, but more adaptive, entities. Through an in-depth examination of the dynamic forces that led CEO Meg Whitman to split HP, we propose that the company’s evolving business ecosystem led to the divergence of the consumer-oriented and enterprise-oriented business models in the corporate portfolio. We document the interplay between inter-business model complementarity and intra-business model complexity, and how this vicious cycle, in combination with increasing capital market pressure, led to the CEO decision to split and her public justification for this momentous move. Our combined longitudinal interpretative and realist process tracing approach generates one of the first conceptual frameworks to integrate insights from the ecosystem and corporate divestiture literatures.




Citations (52)


... However, these insights typically reflect the strategic competitive advantages accumulated by construction firms over decades of operation. Such advantages are often difficult to imitate and measure [17]. The governance capability allocated by participants during construction is aimed at collaboratively addressing contingencies to achieve predetermined performance goals. ...

Reference:

Unlocking the Potential of Construction Governance: Developing Participants’ Capability Scale
Fading corporate survival prospects: Impact of co‐selection bias in resource allocation on strategic intent
  • Citing Article
  • August 2024

Strategic Management Journal

... We uncover a variety of blending actions that link the old and the new business models for the incumbent, such as online selling, all-inclusive loyalty programs, and self-publishing. These actions exemplify how incumbents can build bridges and increase complementarity between business models in their portfolio (Snihur, Thomas, & Burgelman, 2023). Blending actions allow this to happen progressively rather than all at once to enable business model transformation, typically difficult to achieve for existing firms facing digital disruptions (Markides, 2013;Snihur & Markman, 2023). ...

Strategically Managing the Business Model Portfolio Trajectory

California Management Review

... They are engaged in multiple differentiated relationships and have the prospect to take up different roles (Kandiah, and Gossain, 1998). Dynamic capabilities literature recognizes that the external environment affects learning (Burgelman et al., 2021). At network level, DLT ecosystem dynamics influence learning. ...

Strategy Processes and Practices

... Adopting CVC as an innovative capability has many features that make it potentially effective for combining internal sources of innovation with external innovation: (1) it helps to keep pace with the innovation happening externally without trying to internalize everything; (2) it helps in exploring far-out bets with lower capital requirements than outright acquisition; and (3) it eases the strain on operational resources by leveraging start-ups' resources to multiply corporate innovation and R&D efforts. Based on several months of research into JetBlue Technology Ventures (JTV), the CVC arm of JetBlue Airways, including interviews with top executives and public archival material (Burgelman & Sridharan, 2021), we constructed a B-B process model of JTV's strategy-making. The construction of the CVC process model involved an iterative approach of qualitative pattern-matching, moving back and forth between the B-B process model and the JTV CVC data. ...

A Process Model of Corporate Venture Capital as External Innovation Capability: The Case of JetBlue Technology Ventures
  • Citing Article
  • January 2021

SSRN Electronic Journal

... Some prominent examples of DS in entrepreneurship include the research on design principles for effectuation (Sarasvathy et al., 2008), business model development (e.g., Osterwalder, 2004;Osterwalder & Pigneur, 2010), and the development of university spinoff programs (Van Burg et al., 2008). In addition, while not always explicitly labeled as DS, various entrepreneurship scholars have sought to design and evaluate (new) practices and design principles in many other areas such as entrepreneurial team formations (Boss, Dahlander, Ihl, & Jayaraman, 2021;Lazar et al., 2020;Lazar et al., 2021), government venture capital programs (Alperovych, Groh, & Quas, 2020;Jääskeläinen, Maula, & Murray, 2007), corporate venture capital programs (Burgelman, Sridharan, & Savini, 2021;Hill, Maula, Birkinshaw, & Murray, 2009), accelerator programs (Cohen, Fehder, Hochberg, & Murray, 2019;Cohen, Bingham, & Hallen, 2019), and entrepreneurial ecosystems (O'Shea, Farny, & Hakala, 2021;Talmar, Walrave, Podoynitsyna, Holmström, & Romme, 2020;Wurth, Stam, & Spigel, 2021). ...

Designs for Corporate Venture Capital: Emergence of a Hybrid Structural Orientation
  • Citing Article
  • January 2021

SSRN Electronic Journal

... Ce travail s'inscrit dans cette seconde approche. En effet, l'un de nos objectifs est de renforcer le lien entre les deux concepts comme l'ont suggéré Burgelman et al. (2022), Snihur et Bocken (2022) ou Carrasco-Farré et al. (2022). Après un retour sur le concept de BM, nous proposerons un concept permettant de les intégrer : le business model écosystémique (BME). ...

Why Multi-Business Corporations Split: CEO Strategizing as the Ecosystem Evolves

Journal of Management

... They proposed recommendations for effectively leading management innovation and attracting innovative leaders by arguing that many organisations are constrained by their prevailing management model, which is characterised by bureaucratic procedures, hierarchical decision-making, centralised power, and a lack of receptiveness to dissenting perspectives (Allio, 2008). Companies can take years to achieve disruptive innovation as a strategic imperative for, but once established, competitors face a high threshold to replicate it (Chen et al., 2020). ...

Leading for constructive innovation: Preliminary evidence from China

Journal of Engineering and Technology Management

... In particular, the studies within the sample demonstrate how engaging in partnerships with startups can be a strategy to navigate the challenges posed by digitalization (Matzler et al. 2018). By engaging startups, incumbent can foster CE by accessing to new technologies but also, they can gain access to the broader entrepreneurial ecosystems (Cosenz et al. 2023) and look for investment opportunities through for instance their corporate venture funds, and/or by syndicating investments with other independent venture capital funds or angels (Basu et al. 2020;Bouncken and Kraus 2022). Steiber and Alänge (2020) found that collaboration with startups positively affects the firms' business transformation and exploitation of digital technologies. ...

To a New Era of Corporate Venturing?
  • Citing Conference Paper
  • August 2020

Academy of Management Proceedings

... Therefore, we ask: How can humanitarian organizations integrate fragmented and potentially conflicting temporal demands in their strategy processes? Exploring how humanitarian organizations cope with temporal complexity could contribute to enhancing our limited understanding of entrainment in temporally complex environments (Reinecke and Ansari 2015, Bansal et al. 2022, Blagoev and Schreyögg 2025, as well as the temporal dynamics of strategy processes (Burgelman et al. 2018(Burgelman et al. , 2021. ...

Strategy processes and practices : Dialogues and intersections
  • Citing Article
  • March 2018

... In summary, we offer three important contributions to the development of strategic management research. On the theoretical level this paper puts further the current scarce efforts aimed in fighting the ambiguity in RM research by following the logic of theory simplification, bridging and completion (Burgelman, 2020;Strużyna, 2015). Therefore, instead of classifying RM research as irrevocably highly contextsensitive we refine our understanding of RM business model. ...

Bridging History and Reductionism: A Key Role for Longitudinal Qualitative Research
  • Citing Chapter
  • January 2020