TY - JOUR
T1 - The architecture of collaboration
AU - Fjelstad, Oystein
AU - Snow, Charles
AU - Miles, Raymond
AU - Lettl, Christopher
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Firms increasingly face competitive pressures related to rapid and continuous adaptation to a complex, dynamic, and highly interconnected global environment. Pressing challenges include keeping pace with shorter product life cycles, incorporating multiple technologies into the design of new products, cocreating products and services with customers and partners, and leveraging the growth of scientific and technical knowledge in many sectors. In response, we observe experimentation with new organization designs that are fundamentally different from existing forms of organizing. We propose that these new designs are based on an actor‐oriented architectural scheme composed of three main elements: (1) actors who have the capabilities and values to self‐organize; (2) commons where the actors accumulate and share resources; and (3) protocols, processes, and infrastructures that enable multi‐actor collaboration. We demonstrate the usefulness of the actor‐oriented scheme by applying it to organizations drawn from four different sectors: global professional services, open source software development, computer equipment, and national defense. We discuss the implications of the actor‐oriented architectural scheme for future research on organizational forms as well as for managers who are involved in designing organizations.
AB - Firms increasingly face competitive pressures related to rapid and continuous adaptation to a complex, dynamic, and highly interconnected global environment. Pressing challenges include keeping pace with shorter product life cycles, incorporating multiple technologies into the design of new products, cocreating products and services with customers and partners, and leveraging the growth of scientific and technical knowledge in many sectors. In response, we observe experimentation with new organization designs that are fundamentally different from existing forms of organizing. We propose that these new designs are based on an actor‐oriented architectural scheme composed of three main elements: (1) actors who have the capabilities and values to self‐organize; (2) commons where the actors accumulate and share resources; and (3) protocols, processes, and infrastructures that enable multi‐actor collaboration. We demonstrate the usefulness of the actor‐oriented scheme by applying it to organizations drawn from four different sectors: global professional services, open source software development, computer equipment, and national defense. We discuss the implications of the actor‐oriented architectural scheme for future research on organizational forms as well as for managers who are involved in designing organizations.
U2 - 10.1002/smj.1968
DO - 10.1002/smj.1968
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0143-2095
VL - 33:
SP - 734
EP - 750
JO - Strategic Management Journal
JF - Strategic Management Journal
ER -