Team ambidexterity: Resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox

Purpose: Teams are inherently dealing with a tension to be adaptive and agile (i.e., explorative) but also coordinated and efficient (i.e., exploitative). While the tension between exploratory versus exploitative activities has been desribed in practice and in the literature, we lack a clear unders...

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Main Authors: Klonek, Florian, Rico, Ramon, Parker, Sharon
Format: Conference Paper
Published: 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75976
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author Klonek, Florian
Rico, Ramon
Parker, Sharon
author_facet Klonek, Florian
Rico, Ramon
Parker, Sharon
author_sort Klonek, Florian
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Purpose: Teams are inherently dealing with a tension to be adaptive and agile (i.e., explorative) but also coordinated and efficient (i.e., exploitative). While the tension between exploratory versus exploitative activities has been desribed in practice and in the literature, we lack a clear understanding of how this tension of team ambidexterity emerges as a process within teams and how it can be effectively resolved. Approach: Building on the concept of contextual ambidexterity, the current paper describes a process model of team ambidexterity. Furthermore, we are building on the literature about organisational and individual ambidexterity to develop an integrated multi-level framework. Results: First, our review of the literature shows that despite strong evidence for the ambidexterity-performance link on the organisational and individual level, research on the consequences of team ambidexterity is still nascent and does not unambigously provide evidence for increased team performance. Second, we argue that team ambidexterity can be realised in different forms (i.e., shared or configural) and that exploration and exploitation can theoretically interact across multiple level of analyses. Third, we are developing a dual process model including multiple transition and performance episodes and propose how work and team design factors theoretically impact on team ambidexterity as a process. Implications: Based on the proposed process model on team ambidexterity, we discuss avenues for future research and practical implications for managers and organisations in helping teams resolving the paradoxical tension between exploratory and exploitative activities.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-759762019-07-08T07:06:37Z Team ambidexterity: Resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox Klonek, Florian Rico, Ramon Parker, Sharon Purpose: Teams are inherently dealing with a tension to be adaptive and agile (i.e., explorative) but also coordinated and efficient (i.e., exploitative). While the tension between exploratory versus exploitative activities has been desribed in practice and in the literature, we lack a clear understanding of how this tension of team ambidexterity emerges as a process within teams and how it can be effectively resolved. Approach: Building on the concept of contextual ambidexterity, the current paper describes a process model of team ambidexterity. Furthermore, we are building on the literature about organisational and individual ambidexterity to develop an integrated multi-level framework. Results: First, our review of the literature shows that despite strong evidence for the ambidexterity-performance link on the organisational and individual level, research on the consequences of team ambidexterity is still nascent and does not unambigously provide evidence for increased team performance. Second, we argue that team ambidexterity can be realised in different forms (i.e., shared or configural) and that exploration and exploitation can theoretically interact across multiple level of analyses. Third, we are developing a dual process model including multiple transition and performance episodes and propose how work and team design factors theoretically impact on team ambidexterity as a process. Implications: Based on the proposed process model on team ambidexterity, we discuss avenues for future research and practical implications for managers and organisations in helping teams resolving the paradoxical tension between exploratory and exploitative activities. 2018 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75976 restricted
spellingShingle Klonek, Florian
Rico, Ramon
Parker, Sharon
Team ambidexterity: Resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox
title Team ambidexterity: Resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox
title_full Team ambidexterity: Resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox
title_fullStr Team ambidexterity: Resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox
title_full_unstemmed Team ambidexterity: Resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox
title_short Team ambidexterity: Resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox
title_sort team ambidexterity: resolving the exploration-exploitation paradox
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/75976