LEADING COMPLEX COLLABORATION IN NETWORK ORGANIZATIONS: A MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACH

Executives of network organizations seek to combine core competencies and talents of individual firms, along the various links of the value chain for a given project. These firms are brought together in alignment for the purpose of providing organizations a competitive advantage. Using multiple examples as well as results from an extensive research project, this chapter introduces a multidisciplinary model for leading network organizations. The model is informed by theoretical and empirical research and by executive practice. It includes consideration of an organization’s internal interactions as well as its interactions with the environment and with the external organizations within its network. The chapter provides leaders a set of four imperatives for achieving effective collaboration within networks.

[1]  George A. Cassola The Trust Factor , 1993 .

[2]  John Arquilla,et al.  Networks And Netwars , 2000 .

[3]  Stephen L. Fink,et al.  High Commitment Workplaces , 1992 .

[4]  Henry Mintzberg,et al.  The Structuring of Organizations , 1979 .

[5]  T. Friedman The Lexus and the Olive Tree , 1999 .

[6]  H. P. Sims,et al.  Vertical versus shared leadership as predictors of the effectiveness of change management teams: An examination of aversive, directive, transactional, transformational, and empowering leader behaviors. , 2002 .

[7]  Sharon Tucker,et al.  The Leadership Factor , 1988 .

[8]  P. Senge The fifth discipline : the art and practice of the learning organization/ Peter M. Senge , 1991 .

[9]  Christina L. Ahmadjian,et al.  Organizational Learning and Purchase-Supply Relations in Japan: Hitachi, Matsushita, and Toyota Compared , 1998 .

[10]  T. Burrow The human equation. , 1941 .

[11]  Jay Wright Forrester,et al.  Urban Dynamics , 1969 .

[12]  Adrian J. Slywotzky,et al.  Adaptive Enterprise: Creating and Leading Sense-And-Respond Organizations , 1999 .

[13]  C. Argyris Double Loop Learning in Organizations , 1996 .

[14]  W. Richard Scott,et al.  Formal Organizations: A Comparative Approach , 1962 .

[15]  J. Meindl,et al.  A NETWORK EFFECTS MODEL OF CHARISMA ATTRIBUTIONS , 2002 .

[16]  W. Ashby,et al.  An Introduction to Cybernetics , 1957 .

[17]  James E. Rosenzweig,et al.  Organization and management : a systems and contingency approach , 1979 .

[18]  E. Trist,et al.  The Causal Texture of Organizational Environments , 1965 .

[19]  Jay R. Galbraith Organization Design: An Information Processing View , 1974 .

[20]  P. Drucker Management: Tasks, Responsibilities, Practices , 1974 .

[21]  James D. Thompson Organizations in Action , 1967 .

[22]  P. Lawrence,et al.  Organization and environment , 1967 .

[23]  David S Alberts,et al.  Network Centric Warfare , 2000 .

[24]  Tom R. Burns,et al.  The Management of Innovation. , 1963 .

[25]  O. Williamson The Economics of Organization: The Transaction Cost Approach , 1981, American Journal of Sociology.

[26]  Gene W. Dalton,et al.  Motivation and control in organizations , 1971 .

[27]  C. Barnard The Functions of the Executive , 1939 .