To read this content please select one of the options below:

“Please use our ideas”: making parallel organizations work

Vetle Engesbak (Department of Industrial Economics and Technology Management, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway)
Jonas A. Ingvaldsen (Department of Industrial Economics and Technology Management, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway)

Team Performance Management

ISSN: 1352-7592

Article publication date: 7 March 2018

Issue publication date: 4 June 2020

331

Abstract

Purpose

Parallel organizations (POs) perform tasks that operating organizations (OOs) are not equipped or organized to perform well. However, POs rely on OOs’ goodwill for implementation of their ideas and recommendations. Little is known about how POs achieve impact in OOs; this paper aims to examine this important topic.

Design/methodology/approach

Through the analytical lens of boundary spanning, the paper analyzes the PO–OO relationship in a manufacturing organization. Data were collected through 31 semi-structured in-depth interviews with OO managers, PO team leaders and PO team members.

Findings

Primary PO–OO boundary dimensions were favoritism toward local practice in the OO, specialized knowledge across PO–OO contexts and power asymmetry favoring the OO. The main boundary-spanning activities were translating, which targets specialized knowledge, and anchoring, which targets favoritism towards local practice and power asymmetry.

Research limitations/implications

The findings on PO–OO collaboration, especially PO–OO power relations, complement conventional topics in PO literature, such as POs’ purpose, structural configuration and staffing.

Practical implications

POs should be staffed with team members, especially team leaders, who can translate effectively between the PO’s and the OO’s frames of reference, and facilitate complicated knowledge processes across these contexts. Additionally, senior managers should understand their role in anchoring the PO initiative and its results within the OO.

Originality/value

This is the first study to view the PO–OO relationship via boundary spanning, and thus to identify power asymmetry as a key challenge not previously described in PO literature, and describe how this asymmetry is overcome through anchoring.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to master students Anniken A. Borgen, Marlene Jåsund and Sigrid S. Børve for assisting them in data collection and initial data analysis and master student Mari Haraldsen for assisting in data analysis. The research is supported by The Research Council of Norway.

Citation

Engesbak, V. and Ingvaldsen, J.A. (2020), "“Please use our ideas”: making parallel organizations work", Team Performance Management, Vol. 26 No. 3/4, pp. 183-195. https://doi.org/10.1108/TPM-01-2018-0007

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles