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Participation Research and Open Strategy

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posted on 2025-09-17, 15:00 authored by Eero Vaara, Anniina Rantakari, Jeannie HolsteinJeannie Holstein
<p dir="ltr">Recent studies have raised participation as one of the key issues of Open Strategy (Luedicke et al., 2017; Mack & Szulanski, 2017). However, participation has a longer tradition in strategy research (Laine & Vaara, 2015; Mantere & Vaara, 2008) from which Open Strategy could learn from and contribute to. In this chapter, we review research on participation in strategy and discuss its implications for Open Strategy and vice versa. Participation is a dynamic and multifaceted phenomenon, the nature and effects of which are not easy to pin down in strategy making. Participation can generate engagement and create commitment to strategy and similarly improve the quality of decision making (Floyd & Wooldridge, 2000). In contrast, limiting participation through secrecy and exclusion may result in ineffective implementation (Mintzberg, 1994), and from a critical perspective, exacerbate organizational inequality (Knights & Morgan, 1991; McCabe, 2010). However, participation can also slow down decision making and constrain the strategy process (Collier et al., 2004; Anderson, 2004). Moreover, widespread participation can create expectations that are then not satisfied, particularly where the decision might be contrary to the advice given by participants (Kornberger & Clegg, 2011).</p>

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  • Loughborough Business School

Published in

Cambridge Handbook of Open Strategy

Pages

27 - 40

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Rights holder

© Cambridge University Press

Publisher statement

This material has been published in revised form in Cambridge Handbook of Open Strategy, edited by David Seidl, Georg von Krogh and Richard Whittington: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108347921. This version is free to view and download for private research and study only. Not for re-distribution or re-use. © Cambridge University Press

Publication date

2019-07-13

ISBN

9781108347921; 9781108424868

Language

  • en

Editor(s)

David Seidl; Georg von Krogh; Richard Whittington

Depositor

Dr Jeannie Holstein. Deposit date: 17 January 2025

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