Managing Potential and Realized Absorptive Capacity: How do Organizational Antecedents Matter?
December 2005
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Exploring how organizational antecedents affect potential and realized absorptive capacity, this study identifies differing effects for both components of absorptive capacity. Results indicate that organizational mechanisms associated with coordination capabilities (cross-functional interfaces, participation in decision making, and job rotation) primarily enhance a unit's potential absorptive capacity. Organizational mechanisms associated with socialization capabilities (connectedness and socialization tactics) primarily increase a unit's realized absorptive capacity. Our findings reveal why units may have difficulty managing levels of potential and realized absorptive capacity and vary in their ability to create value from their absorptive capacity.
- management
- decision making
- absorptive capacity
- human capital
- combinative capabilities
- external knowledge
- organizational antecedents
- M : Business Administration and Business Economics; Marketing; Accounting
- L20 : Firm Objectives, Organization, and Behavior: General
- D21 : Firm Behavior