HRM operational models and practices to enable strategic agility in PBOs: Managing paradoxical tensions
Ambisisi Ambituuni,
Farzaneh Azizsafaei and
Anne Keegan
Journal of Business Research, 2021, vol. 133, issue C, 170-182
Abstract:
When project-based organizations (PBOs) pursue strategic agility, they develop increased adaptation capabilities such as improvisation, fluidity and flexibility. However, these capabilities also introduce paradoxical tensions between practices for enabling freedom vs. controlling, practices for combining work desegregation vs segregation, and practices for enabling peripheral vision vs enabling focal vision. In this paper, we set out to identify the HRM operational models and practices developed as responses to paradoxical tensions associated with striving for strategic agility in PBOs. Our paper contributes to literature by showing how HRM is implicated in the management of paradoxical tensions, and also in the dynamic nature of movements of paradoxical tensions arising from the improvisational tendencies of PBOs. We also argue that the role of HRM in sensing the emergence of paradoxical tensions within PBOs, and in managing responses to these tensions under time pressure, is becoming increasingly important for those PBOs aspiring to strategic agility.
Keywords: Project-based organizations (PBOs); HRM; Organizational agility; Paradoxical tensions; Improvisation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eee:jbrese:v:133:y:2021:i:c:p:170-182
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbusres.2021.04.048
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