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1.
The effects of organizational agility on organizational performance : the mediating role of ambidexterity
Farzad Sattari Ardabili, Georgiy Verbenko, Petra Cajnko, 2025, original scientific article

Abstract: Ever-increasing organizational needs for dynamism and progress in performance and product have highlighted the crucial role of innovation in organizations. However, this emphasis on innovation often leads managers to overlook efficiency aspects of organizations or place them at the periphery of attention. The importance of exploitation and exploration varies depending on organizational conditions. This paper aims to investigate organizational ambidexterity as a mediator in the influence of agility on firm performance. Whereas the literature appreciates a good volume of work in the areas of organizational performance and agility, there is still a lack of support for the debate surrounding the two sides of ambidexterity, especially in the area of balancing between exploitation and exploration. This study uses an online survey-based approach to collect data from 276 SME managers in Turkey to test the proposed research model. The collected data have been analyzed by conditional process analysis using the PROCESS macro for SPSS. In the end, the results of the models confirmed that organizational agility has meaningful effects on organizational performance, and both exploitation and exploration had meaningful effects on organizational performance. The mediating role of ambidexterity has also been confirmed in this study.
Keywords: agility, exploration, exploitation, ambidexterity, organizational performance
Published in DKUM: 03.07.2025; Views: 0; Downloads: 2
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2.
Organizational ambidexterity, exploration, exploitation and firms innovation performance
Mladenka Popadić, Matej Černe, Ines Milohnić, 2015, original scientific article

Abstract: Background and Purpose: The construct of organizational ambidexterity (OA) has attracted the growing attention in management research. Previous empirical research has investigated the effect of organisational ambidexterity on performance from various perspectives. This study aims to resolve the contradictory previous research findings on the relationship between organisational ambidexterity and innovation performance. We unpack this construct with combined dimension of ambidexterity, which relates to a combination of high levels of both exploration and exploitation (introduction of products or services that were new to the market and new to the firm). Methodology: We frame our ambidexterity hypothesis in terms of firm’s innovation orientation. The hypothesis is tested by using Community Innovation Survey (CIS) 2006 micro data at the organizational level in twelve countries. To operationalize an ambidexterity and firms innovation outcome, we used self-reported measures of innovativeness. Results: To test our hypothesis, we developed a set of models and tested them with multiple hierarchical linear regression analyses. The results indicate that exploration and exploitation are positively related to firm’s innovation performances which supports our assumption that both are complementary. Furthermore, we find that above and over their independent effects, through combining them into a single construct of organizational ambidexterity, this variable remains negatively and significantly related to innovation performance. Conclusion: These results provides the managers with an idea of when managing trade-offs between exploration and exploitation would be more favorable versus detrimental. For firms with lower organizational ambidexterity, the relationship between exploration-exploitation and the firm’s innovation performance is a more positive one.
Keywords: enterprises, entrepreneurs, entrepreneurship, organizational ambidexterity, exploration, exploitation, innovation performance
Published in DKUM: 10.01.2018; Views: 1211; Downloads: 442
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