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The effect of the dynamic capabilities' microfoundations on innovation: insights from crossing levels

Majdi Ben Selma (Department of Strategy, Social and Environmental Responsibility, UQAM, Montreal, Canada)
Kamal Bouzinab (Department of Strategy, Social and Environmental Responsibility, UQAM, Montreal, Canada)
Andrew Papadopoulos (Department of Strategy, Social and Environmental Responsibility, UQAM, Montreal, Canada)
Hela Chebbi (Department of Strategy, Social and Environmental Responsibility, UQAM, Montreal, Canada)
Alexie Labouze-Nasica (Department of Strategy, Social and Environmental Responsibility, UQAM, Montreal, Canada)
Robert H. Desmarteau (Department of Strategy, Social and Environmental Responsibility, UQAM, Montreal, Canada)

EuroMed Journal of Business

ISSN: 1450-2194

Article publication date: 27 May 2024

141

Abstract

Purpose

Much of the existing research conducted on dynamic capabilities and the microfoundations of innovation has focused either on individual or organizational factors without considering mechanisms. This paper aims to address this “process” gap by developing an integrated conceptual framework based on individual, processual and structural microfoundations as well as the interaction between and among them with respect to innovation.

Design/methodology/approach

To understand the theoretical and empirical landscape in building our conceptual model, we conducted a content analysis of existing research microfoundations, dynamic capabilities and innovation. Using NVivo 12, we identified and examined the individual and organizational behavior microfoundations and their interplay to propose possible processual mechanisms. We framed these process mechanisms using the sensing, seizing and reconfiguring dynamic capabilities framework.

Findings

The study emphasizes certain microfoundations that facilitate innovation-dynamic capabilities at various organizational levels. It is posited that both formal and informal strategic intelligence processes, along with directed and undirected information research methods, constitute crucial microfoundations for identifying opportunities for innovation. For the internal capture and seizing of these opportunities, we assert that the diversity of individual internal networks and the mechanisms for social integration will prove to be critical. Furthermore, the paper suggests that reconfiguring microfoundations, specifically an organization’s flexible structure and the involvement of external directors with diverse experiences, are pivotal in spurring innovation.

Originality/value

We combine the microfoundations approach (individual, structural and processual) with the dynamic capabilities theory (sensing, seizing and reconfiguring) to offer an integrated conceptual framework underlying innovation’s dynamic capabilities. This sets us apart from existing research by both introducing processual aspects and their multilevel interactions.

Keywords

Citation

Ben Selma, M., Bouzinab, K., Papadopoulos, A., Chebbi, H., Labouze-Nasica, A. and Desmarteau, R.H. (2024), "The effect of the dynamic capabilities' microfoundations on innovation: insights from crossing levels", EuroMed Journal of Business, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/EMJB-10-2023-0269

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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