Article

Towards an understanding of the link between environment, discontinuity and volitional strategic change

Details

Citation

Burt G (2006) Towards an understanding of the link between environment, discontinuity and volitional strategic change. International Journal of Business Environment, 1 (3), pp. 320-335. http://inderscience.metapress.com/content/3g0alclyn1we2hgp/

Abstract
Whilst organisations have been confronted with uncertainty in the environment and the need to change, resulting in incremental or radical change, we know very little about volitional strategic change. Volitional strategic change arises when management engage in changing before the need to change is imposed on their organisation. We know very little about how organisations perceive early warning signals of impending change and using the insights from these perceptions to bring about volitional strategic change, with the resulting impact on the operations of the organisation. This paper explores the link between environment, discontinuity and volitional strategic change, using recent empirical evidence, to identity the bases of change - psychological and operational. This paper identifies the role of a 'transitional object' as being the key that links the old (existing) world of management to the new (proposed) world of management and therefore facilitating volitional strategic change. The transitional object enables a re-conceptualisation of the organisation's basis of success to incorporate and integrate wider change proposals.

Keywords
business environment; discontinuity; volitional strategic change; environment; scenario planning; transitional objects; strategic management; volitional change

Journal
International Journal of Business Environment: Volume 1, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2006
PublisherInderscience Publishers
Publisher URLhttp://inderscience.metapress.com/content/3g0alclyn1we2hgp/
ISSN1740-0589
eISSN1740-0597

People (1)

Professor George Burt

Professor George Burt

Emeritus Professor, Management, Work and Organisation