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Feature Topic: Research Design

Meta-Synthesis of Qualitative Case Studies: An Approach to Theory Building
Christina Hoon1
Abstract The purpose of this article is to provide the research design of a meta-synthesis of qualitative case studies. The meta-synthesis aims at building theory out of primary qualitative case studies that have not been planned as part of a unified multisite effect. By drawing on an understanding of research synthesis as the interpretation of qualitative evidence from a postpositivistic perspective, this article proposes eight steps of synthesizing existing qualitative case study findings to build theory. An illustration of the application of this method in the field of dynamic capabilities is provided. After enumerating the options available to meta-synthesis researchers, the potential challenges as well as the prospects of this research design are discussed.
Keywords synthesis of knowledge, research synthesis, qualitative case study research, theory building
Case study research enables the study of contemporary organizational phenomena in a real-life setting with an in-depth, holistic study of few or single cases (e.g., Flyvbjerg, 2011; Hammersley & Gomm, 2002; Stake, 2005; Yin, 2009). Given the study’s rich history and broad application, case study research has its strength in producing novel theoretical insight stemming from case-specific contextualized findings (Eisenhardt, 1989; Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007; Hammersley & Gomm, 2002; Sigglekow, 2007). In organizational and management research, an increasing number of rich, qualitative case studies generate substantive contributions to a variety of different research areas, such as dynamic capabilities (Ridder, Hoon, & McCandless, 2009), strategy as practice (Jarzabkowski & Spee, 2009), or international business (Piekkari, Welch, & Paavilainen, 2009); yet little accumulation of the understanding gathered from these primary case studies has been gained. This inattention may stem from the fact that most researchers design their studies to collect new primary data, thereby ‘‘overvaluating novelty to the detriment of accumulating convergent findings’’
1Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universita ¨t Hannover, Institute of Human Resource Management, Hannover, Germany
Corresponding Author: Christina Hoon, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universita ¨t Hannover, Faculty of Economics and Management, Institute of Human Resource Management, Koenigsworther Platz 1, 30167 Hannover, Germany. Email: hoon@pua.uni-hannover.de
Organizational Research Methods 16(4) 522-556 ª The Author(s) 2013 Reprints and permission: sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/1094428113484969 orm.sagepub.com
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(Rousseau, Manning, & Denyer, 2008, p. 476). Furthermore, procedures for the synthesis of qualitative studies are rare, with a few exceptions in the field of medical science or social policy that have benefited from an evidence-informed synthesis (e.g., Denyer & Tranfield, 2003; Noblit & Hare, 1988; Sandelowski & Barroso, 2007). Losing sight of a qualitative synthesis stands in sharp contrast to the increasing significance of the meta-analysis as the dominant approach to statistically aggregate quantitative evidence (Cooper, 2010; Glass, 1977; Hunter, Schmidt, & Jackson, 1982). Meta-analysis offers a set of valid methodological choices and procedures aiming to enhance the predictive potential and practical usefulness of organizational and management theory (e.g., Aytug, Rothstein, Zhou, & Kern, 2012; Carlson & Ji, 2011; Cortina, 2003; Kisamore & Brannick, 2008; Schmidt, 2008). The lack of effort to ‘‘put together’’ empirical insight of primary case studies has important implications for knowledge development in management research. First, the case studies’ rich findings reach disparate conclusions about the same phenomenon with interpretations becoming difficult. By calling for further research, in many instances, new studies may produce equally disparate findings (Carlson & Ji, 2011). Second, the pace of knowledge production is viewed as resulting in nonreconcilable islands of knowledge that do not contribute significantly to our full understanding of a phenomenon of interest (Rousseau et al., 2008; Sandelowski & Barroso, 2007). More critically, case studies tend to remain isolated, stand-alone works with their potential cumulative advantage for advancing knowledge in the field being neglected. By accumulating evidence on similar research interests, however, theory can be replicated in that a theory is grounded in a broader set of studies that focus on an identical phenomenon in similar settings. Substantive theories grounded in particular research contexts are moved to a more generic theory with a broader application, thereby enabling an analytical generalization (Yin, 2009). Yet the goal of a meta-synthesis is building theory by refining or extending existing theory or by generating theory. The motivation of this article is to develop the design of a meta-synthesis of qualitative case studies. A meta-synthesis is defined as an exploratory, inductive research design to synthesize primary qualitative case studies for the purpose of making contributions beyond those achieved in the original studies. A meta-synthesis constitutes an understanding of synthesis that is interpretive, aiming at synthesizing primary qualitative case studies that have not been intended as part of a unified multisite effect. By projecting and expanding recent works on meta-analysis, I propose eight steps for conducting a meta-synthesis. As such, the meta-synthesis is understood as a complete study itself that aims at extracting, analyzing, and synthesizing qualitative evidence to build theory. The contributions of this article to the organizational and management literature are twofold. Conceptually, this article offers a distinction among research synthesis as aggregation, interpretation, and translation of evidence. These perspectives represent different understandings of research synthesis that emerge from the basic paradigmatic positions inherent in organizational research. Then, by drawing on research synthesis as interpretation from a postpositivistic point of view, this article provides and illustrates the research process of building theory via meta-synthesizing case studies. Going beyond conventional or systematic literature reviews (e.g., Rousseau et al., 2008; Tranfield, Denyer, & Smart, 2003), a meta-synthesis seeks to synthesize the key variables and underlying relationships across a set of published qualitative case studies to arrive at a refined, extended, or even new theory. Given the above, this article may serve as a conceptual and methodological resource to scholars wishing to synthesize qualitative case studies in the field of organizational and management research. In the following, a brief description of the broader debate around the synthesis of knowledge within the different paradigmatic positions is offered. Afterward, the article presents the research design of a meta-synthesis of qualitative case studies and illustrates its application using the empirical material of seven primary case studies conducted in the field of dynamic capabilities. The article
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concludes with discussing the benefits and limitations that the meta-synthesis approach poses for organizational and management research.
Synthesis of Knowledge in Organizational and Management Research
The call for a synthesis of knowledge follows the assumption that the foundation of science is the accumulation of knowledge from the research evidence of many studies (Hunt, 1997; Hunter et al., 1982). More generally, meta-studies—the analysis of the analysis—are viewed as being grounded in an understanding of knowledge building as an evolutionary sequence (Glass, 1977). The evolutionary perspective of theorizing is based on an understanding of knowledge accumulation as fragmented processes of selection that involve trials in the form of conjectures and errors in the form of refutation (Campbell, 1974; Weick, 1989). From this point of view, knowledge not only stems from a revolutionary progress (Kuhn, 1962) but can also emerge from a backward-oriented integration of previous evidence (Campbell, 1974). Within the broader array of synthesis activities (Rousseau et al., 2008), three directions can be found that are either informed by a positivist and quantitative tradition or move beyond the properties of positivism to postpositivism or constructivism to especially highlight the interpretive or translative nature of research synthesis activities. Since these understandings of research synthesis as aggregation, interpretation, and translation are grounded in different assumptions, they produce distinct ways of approaching a synthesis of knowledge. Rather than focusing primarily on philosophical debates or on paradigm conflict in detail, this section presents the central features of research syntheses along with associated views of the paradigmatic approaches of positivism, postpositivism, and constructivism (see Table 1).
Aggregation Synthesis
Following an understanding of research synthesis as aggregation (Rousseau et al., 2008), metaanalysis has moved to a preferred way of establishing a predictive theory or testing theory (Aytug et al., 2012; Cooper, 2010; Hunt, 1997; Wanous, Sullivan, & Malinak, 1989). Aggregative synthesis is rooted in and informed by a positivist and quantitative tradition. Within this perspective, knowledge of the ‘‘way things are’’ is conventionally aggregated in the form of time- and context-free generalizations that can take the form of cause–effect laws (Gioia & Pitre, 1990; Guba & Lincoln, 1994; Lincoln & Guba, 1985). A meta-analysis treats study results as primary data and statistically synthesizes bodies of empirical findings that are dispersed across time and publications (e.g., Aguinis, Pierce, Bosco, Dalton, & Dalton, 2011; Aguinis, Sturman, & Pierce, 2008; Carlson & Ji, 2011; Dalton & Dalton, 2008; Glass, 1977; Schmidt, 2008). The meta-analysis yields an overall estimate of effect size with the detection and estimation of interaction effects being central to the interpretation of the meta-analytic results (Cortina, 2003). Interacting effects provide the boundary conditions of the effects that are hypothesized, thereby generating superior evidence of generalizability as compared with the primary studies (Carlson & Ji, 2011; Cooper, 2010; Hunt, 1997; Hunter et al., 1982). More specifically, the effect sizes constitute an important indicator of the predictive potential and the practical usefulness of a theory (Aguinis, Pierce, et al., 2011). As such, meta-analyses set the standard for what is considered the state of science, for what is known and where future research is needed in a field, and for which theory is considered valid and which one is not (Schmidt, 2008).
Interpretation Synthesis
By ascribing a more interpretive component to synthesis, other scholars engage in an inductive form of knowledge synthesis to make interpretations across extant qualitative studies. Going
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Table1.ThreePerspectivesonResearchSynthesis.
Perspectiveson Synthesis
Paradigmatic Assumptions
Ontology: Natureof Reality
Epistemology: Theory/Nature ofKnowledge
Methodology:How toSynthesizeKnowledge
Roleofthe Researcher
TypeofSynthesizing Knowledge IntoTheory
Researchsynthesisasaggregation Synthesizingentailsan aggregative, deductive, accumulativelogic; factsserveasa buildingblockthat addstothegrowing ofknowledge; averagingacross studiesleadingtoa bettertruth Positivist organization theory
Objectivetruthclaims, realityisindependent ofobservers’ perceptionand experience
Knowledgederivesfrom purereasonandcanbe expressedand analyzedintermsof formallogic; phenomenaarestable andfixed;studiescome toafinal,unarguable summary
Nomothetic:Seekto uncoveruniversal regularitiesandcausal lawsofarule-governed reality
Researcheras independentobserver orobjectivescientist toaggregate quantitativerawdata
Establishingpredictive theory:Aggregated findingsareapplicable tootherpopulations orsamples; generalizability
Researchsynthesisasinterpretation Synthesizingentailsan interpretivelogic; understanding generalpatternsof behaviorand perceptionasvalid partofbuilding theory PostpositivismRealityexists independentlyofwhat anyonethinks, believes,orknows aboutitandhow peopleperceiveit
Knowledgederivesfrom ‘‘depthontology’’in whichmanykindsof evidencearevalid;the observablerarely providesafull understandingor explanationof complexsocial phenomena
Uncovercausal linkagesor mechanismsthat operateinallsocial phenomena,butcause andeffectmaynotbe directed
Researchersstrivefor objectivity,butthe researchers’ interpretationof findingsisvalidaslong asitisjustified
Buildingtheory: aggregatingtoproduce holisticandcausal explanations;variables andrelationshipsas buildingblocksof theorybuilding; replicability
Researchsynthesisastranslation Synthesizingthrough theformationofever moreinformed constructions; interpretative, reciprocal translationsof studiesintoanother; constructing interpretations (Social) constructivism
Socialrealityis context-dependent, basedonperspective, values,andinterestsof theobserver;realityis notfixedbutmultiple andconstructed
Knowledgeis constructed;avariety ofconstructionsexist, aimingat reconstructingthe worldatthepointat whichitexists
Idiographic:Gain understandingwhy individualscreateand interprettheirworldin aparticularway; reflexivity;meaningis notinherentinraw databutreconstructed viahermeneutical/ dialecticalprocess
Researcherispartofthe setting; interpretationsare constructedbya singleresearcher/a team;multivoice; differentresearchers createdifferent interpretationsofthe phenomena
Interpretiveexplanation andunderstanding: synthesisthroughthe formationofmore informed constructionstoreveal somethingnewor presentinformation thatdisrupts conventionalthinking
Source:AdaptedfromGephart(2004)andGubaandLincoln(1994,2005).
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beyond the deductive logic of classical positivism, the postpositivist view embraces that an underlying common reality exists that can be discovered from research (Gephart, 2004). Knowledge is regarded as social facts that are embedded in social actions and evidence from which some lawful and reasonably stable relationships can be found (Miles & Huberman, 1994). From the subjective, individual, and collective interpretation of these facts, patterns and, later, constructs can be derived that underlie individual and social life (Gioia & Pitre, 1990; Guba & Lincoln, 1994). Researchers look for an individual or a social process, a mechanism, or a structure at the core of events that can be captured to offer a causal description of the forces at work (Miles & Huberman, 1994). Rather than quantitatively aggregating effect size estimates, here, synthesis refers to the accumulation of primary evidence with the purpose to generate interpretive explanation rather than prediction. The synthesis entails extracting and analyzing insights from primary studies to identify categories and patterns that emerge across the studies while attempting to preserve the original studies’ integrity. The goal is to make a theoretical contribution with contextualization being a central consideration in that the studies’ local contexts are taken into account (Yin, 2009).
Translation Synthesis
The understanding of research synthesis as translation is especially rooted and applied in medical science, social and political policy, or health care (Denyer & Tranfield, 2003; Tranfield et al., 2003). From a constructivist perspective, reality is assumed to exist in the form of multiple, intangible mental constructions that are dependent for their form and content of the actors holding these constructions (Gephart, 2004; Guba & Lincoln, 1994, 2005). Instead of interpreting knowledge as social facts, evidence constitutes any theme or mode of expression that social actors convey with researchers gearing toward an understanding of how individuals construct and reconstruct knowledge about a phenomenon. Data are viewed as ‘‘constructed entities,’’ and the goal is to construct ever more informed reconstructions to finally come to a consensus of how to interpret the substance of the evidence (Gioia & Pitre, 1990). Within this perspective, synthesis entails the informed and meaningful reconstruction of how the study’s participants constructed their own understandings. Knowledge is synthesized to better draw science-based recommendations from diverse and fragmented findings, for example, for policy makers and practitioners (Denyer & Tranfield, 2003; Sandelowski & Barroso, 2007; Tranfield et al., 2003). Conducting a synthesis embraces hermeneutic or dialectic processes to translate studies into one another with the aim of drawing cross-case conclusions (Noblit & Hare, 1988). In this article, an underlying perspective needs to be considered that does not violate but rather preserves the essentials of qualitative case study research while allowing for a synthesis. In this respect, I argue that a meta-synthesis is best accomplished by following the perspective of interpretation synthesis. First, as opposed to the larger constructivist sense of translation synthesis (Sandelowski & Barroso, 2007), in this perspective, data, analysis, and proceeded insight are treated as separate entities, with data constituting the empirical material on which scientific evidence is based or from which conclusions are drawn. In this respect, interpretation synthesis implies the belief that the case studies’ qualitative evidence can be extracted, analyzed, and subsequently synthesized to build theory. Furthermore, along with its postpositivistic perspective interpretation synthesis is apt for tapping into contextual considerations of patterns, variables, and relationships inherent in the primary studies (Miles & Huberman, 1994). It includes the epistemological position of many case studies conducted in organizational and management research (Piekkari et al., 2009), therefore remaining true to the underlying assumptions of the studies being synthesized (Noblit & Hare, 1988).
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Meta-Synthesis of Qualitative Case Studies
Most broadly, case studies range from inductive, interpretive case studies to more indicative, comparative case study research that is used to build theory in a postpositivist and synthetic fashion (Eisenhardt, 1989; Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007; Flyvbjerg, 2011; Sigglekow, 2007; Yin, 2009). Case study research is driven from the creation of complex designs to address the unique nature of organizational phenomena with different sets of methods (e.g., Miles & Huberman, 1994). The researcher who embarks on case study research is usually interested in a specific phenomenon and wishes to understand it completely. This understanding is not generated by controlling variables but rather by observing all of the variables, their interacting relationships, as well as the contextual conditions that are highly pertinent to the phenomenon under study (Eisenhardt, 1989; Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007; Flyvbjerg, 2011; Yin, 2009). Case study research has the ability to embrace a variety of data sources and a range of different methodologies leading to in-depth qualitative findings that are bound to their specific contexts (Miles & Huberman, 1994; Yin, 2009). According to the aforementioned features of case study research, the research design of a meta-synthesis, and in particular its methodological choices and procedures, needs to be broad enough to retain a sense of contextual diversity. At the same time, it requires synthesizing the case studies’ rich insights into theory without producing oversimplifications. Accordingly, a meta-synthesis needs to incorporate a broad yet still manageable set of studies in which sensitivity toward the analysis and synthesis of other researchers’ findings can be maintained. A meta-synthesis is defined as an exploratory, inductive research design to synthesize primary qualitative case studies for the purpose of making contributions beyond those achieved in the original studies. This is a meta-study because it involves the accumulation of previous case studies’ evidence, and more specifically its extraction, analysis, and synthesis. Consequently, a meta-synthesis does not refer to the reuse of firsthand data stemming from the case researchers’ own observations or interviews. Instead, a meta-synthesis occurs at the level at which the original researchers of the primary studies have constructed their insights in accordance with their own understanding and interpretation of the data. In contrast to research reviews seeking to provide a conceptual consolidation of a body of research (Sandelowski & Barroso, 2007; Tranfield et al., 2003), the benefits of a metasynthesis can be seen in empirically consolidating primary studies to build theory. As theory building can be differentiated most broadly into extending, refining, or generating theory (Ridder et al., 2009; Ridder, Hoon, & Baluch, 2012; Snow, 2004), first I consider a metasynthesis to provide the extension of an existing theoretical perspective to a broader range of contextual conditions (Snow, 2004). Here, the meta-synthesis constitutes a replication logic in terms of findings being considered more potent the more cases are shown to support the same theory (Yin, 2009). As such, existing theory is extended from particular research contexts to more generic contexts and is therefore key to the accumulation of knowledge (Colquitt & Zapata-Phelan, 2007; Edmondson & McManus, 2007). Second, the close inspection of the aggregated empirical evidence can serve to refine existing theory in terms of a modification, supplementation, or even negation (Burawoy, 1998; Snow, 2004). The variety inherent in the primary studies can lead to the identification of contradictions and deviating evidence that yield counterinstances of an existing theory (Burawoy, 1998; Sigglekow, 2007). Hence, the meta-synthesis can aim to refine existing theory by introducing meaningful factors such as new boundary conditions or situational constraints to an existing relationship or process (Colquitt & Zapata-Phelan, 2007). Finally, a meta-synthesis is suggested to generate theory. In fact, synthesizing primary case studies is not apt for detecting yet unexplored relationships and processes as the foundation for new theory. However, the metasynthesis can lead to the identification of a new construct or a relationship the existing theory does not account for or to the substantial reconceptualization of an existing construct (Eisenhardt, 1989; Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007). Regardless of the type of contribution, subsequent studies can build
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on a meta-synthesis by using a new construct, relationship, mechanism, or process-ordered pathway as an input that informs decisions about samples, contexts, or variables to include in a theory-testing framework. Hence, the meta-synthesis seeks to develop inductive theories that may form bridges from rich qualitative evidence to mainstream deductive research (Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007; Shah & Corley, 2006).
Research Design for Meta-Synthesizing Qualitative Case Studies
As has been shown so far, meta-synthesizing case studies demands attention to be paid to both analyzing evidence across studies to build theory as well as to ensuring sensitivity toward the contextual considerations of the primary studies. In the following, a research design of a meta-synthesis is proposed of how to build theory via synthesizing qualitative case studies. For developing a rigorous design, I suggest that extendingand projecting themethod ofa meta-analysis into thearea ofa qualitativesynthesis is beneficial. In fact, the meta-analysis relies on an additive model of evidence while downplaying contextual differences (Rousseau et al., 2008). However, it offers a general line of inquiry for exploring variance in relationships across existing studies with these differences being treated as possible intervening variables (Aguinis, Dalton, Bosco, Pierce, & Dalton, 2011; Cortina, 2003; Dalton & Dalton, 2008). Second, the activities and procedures inherent in meta-analysis provide a valuable template for how to cope with the requirements evolving from the analysis and synthesis of existing evidence (Hunter et al., 1982; Kisamore & Brannick, 2008; Wanous et al., 1989). Finally, meta-analyst scholars havegeneratedclear rules ofhow toreport ontheconduct ofmeta-analysis withthis replicabilitybeing viewed as enhancing the product of a synthesis (Aytug et al., 2012; Carlson & Ji, 2011; Dalton & Dalton, 2008). To acknowledge the specific requirements of case study data, Yin’s (2009) approach of the cross-case synthesis of independently conducted studies as well as Miles and Huberman’s (1994) techniques of a within-case and a cross-case analysis are considered. In the following section, I turn to a discussion of the steps involved in a meta-synthesis. Each of these steps is illustrated by an example from an ongoing meta-synthesis study that I conducted in the field of dynamic capabilities. A detailed report of the basic actions and procedures used as well as their purpose in the context of my study is summarized in Table 2. Although this protocol is specific to the interests, analytical path, and goal of my study, a meta-synthesis protocol more generally is apt for substantiating the certain path and logic of a meta-synthesis, thereby enhancing validity and reliability (Pratt, 2008). The research interests of my meta-synthesis study focus on dynamic capabilities. The dynamic capabilities approach aids in understanding how firms can shape, reshape, configure, and reconfigure their resource base to respond to changing environments (e.g., Eisenhardt & Martin, 2000; Helfat et al., 2007; Teece, Pisano, & Shuen, 1997). In this area, an increasing body of qualitative case studies explores the processes of dynamic capability development by focusing especially on managers and how they collectively reconfigure resources within changing environments. In recent reviews, scholars have started to map and assess this evolving field (e.g., Di Stefano, Peteraf, & Verona, 2010; Wang & Ahmed, 2007); however, until now, the rich body of knowledge on managers’ cognitive representations in dynamic capability development has not been accumulated. As an extensive stock of knowledge in a field increases the need to integrate findings in tandem (Aytug et al., 2012), the motivation for my work was to synthesize primary case studies to build theory on the link between managerial cognitive representations and the development of dynamic capabilities.
Step 1: Framing the Research Question
In the first step, I studied the existing literature on dynamic capabilities for the clear identification of a problem or a phenomenon. Whether a guiding theory, a set of competing models, or a point of view
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Table2.Meta-SynthesisProtocol.
Stepsin Meta-SynthesisAnalyticalGoal
Strategy/Analytical ProcedureUsed
OutcometoGenerateaTheoretical Contribution
Framingthe research question
Conceptuallyembeddingthemeta-synthesisinthefieldof dynamiccapabilityresearch,and,morespecifically,inthe areaofmanagerialcognition;identifyingaclearresearch questionaddressingtheroleofmanagerialcognitionin thedevelopmentofdynamiccapabilities
ApriorispecificationIdentificationofawell-specifiedresearch questionfacilitatesaccurately operationalizingvariablesand extractingappropriatedatafrom primarydynamiccapabilitiesstudies
Locatingrelevant research
Identifyingthebodyofdynamiccapabilityresearchthatis relevantfortheresearchquestionofinterest.Following anexhaustiveliteraturesearchhelpstopreventfrom exclusionofimportantinformation,thusstrengthening thefindingsbecausetheyaregeneratedfromabroader base
Determiningthekeywords;search string;formulatinganexhaustive searchstrategyentailingmainand complementarysearchsteps
Locatingasampleof87studiesondynamic capabilitiesandcognitionpublishedin37 journalsfromvariousareas;finalsampleof 23qualitativecasestudies;ensurereliability
InclusioncriteriaFivepreciseinclusionandexclusioncriteriaarespecified, applied,andpresentedtodeterminewhatstudiesto includeintermsofthemethod,theoreticalfoundations, researchfocus,initialresearchquestion,andquality
Developinganinclusion/exclusion criterialist;discussingclear exclusioncriteria
Limitingthe23qualitativecasestudiestoaset of7casestudiesfinallyincorporatedinthe meta-synthesis;providingclearexclusion criteria;ensurevalidity,reliability
Extractingand codingdata
Carefullyreadingthefulltextofeachstudy.Codingstudy characteristicsaswellastheproceededinsightsofthe primarystudiesaccordingtotheresearchquestionon managerialcognitionindynamiccapabilitydevelopment
Developingandpretestingacoding form;multiplecoders;checkfor intercoderratings
Order,code,andcategorizeevidencefrom eachofthestudies;sensitivityforcontextual considerations;validcodingform; intercoderratings
Analyzingona case-specific level
Identifyingasequencingofvariablesthathavebeenfoundin eachcasetobethemostinfluentialinaccountingforhow managerialcognitionaffectsthedevelopmentofdynamic capabilities
Case-specificcausalnetworksIdentifyingthemes,coreconcepts,patterns, orrelationshipsineachcase
Synthesizingonan across-study level
Mergingthecase-specificcausalnetworksintoameta-causal network.Accumulatingthesequencingofvariablesata cross-studyleveltoarriveatageneralpatternamong thesevariables
Meta-causalnetwork,variable ratings
Identificationofapattern;managerialcognitive processingsascentralvariable;ratingofthe variablestoensurevalidity
Buildingtheory frommetasynthesis
Identificationoftheconceptofcognitiveshiftsthatexplains interdependenciesbetweenmanagerialcognitive representations,theadjustmentofdynamiccapabilities, andarenewaloftheresourcebaseinenvironments characterizedbydisruptivechangesorfollow-on opportunities;demonstrateasignificantcontribution
Linkingtheresultsbacktothe literatureondynamiccapabilities andcognition
Identificationoftheconceptofcognitiveshifts; arguingforacontributiontothedynamic capabilitiesapproach
DiscussingDiscussionoftheresultsofthemeta-synthesisstudyand potentiallimitations
Discussingrigor,reliability,and validity
Legitimizingthevalidityandreliabilityofthe procedureandactivitiesused
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about a topic, a meta-synthesis starts with a conceptual framing of the topic. For organizing the meta-synthesis, I referred to the dynamic capabilities approach with my interest gravitating toward recent works seeking to advance our understanding of the development of dynamic capabilities by focusing on creative managerial and entrepreneurial acts (Augier & Teece, 2009; Eisenhardt & Martin, 2000; Helfat et al., 2007). Within this view managers are seen as playing a central role in identifying strategic opportunities, in orchestrating organizational assets, and in capturing business models and new organizational forms (Augier & Teece, 2009). By referring to dynamic capabilities from a managerial cognition approach (Gavetti, 2005), empirical studies have increasingly explored what managers interpret and act on and found that managerial perceptions affect the behavior toward the renewal of the firm’s resource base. To build on these studies, I formulated a first broad research topic on the role of cognition in the development of dynamic capabilities. Through a series of iterations that involved testing this topic against the current literature and existing empirical studies, a more nuanced research question emerged. Finally, I focused the meta-synthesis on this research question: ‘‘How and why do managerial cognitive representations shape the development of dynamic capabilities?’’ Addressing this research question aids in aggregating the current knowledge of managers interpreting and acting on dynamic capabilities, thereby providing theoretical insight into managerial cognitions affecting the development of dynamic capabilities in dynamic, highly contested environments. In contrast to the broader research interests of a conventional literature review or a systematic review (Denyer & Tranfield, 2003), a meta-synthesis takes advantage of a well-specified, theoretically informed research question. In my study, the well-specified research question informed the specification of the range of studies to synthesize and enabled me to extract appropriate evidence from the primary studies. Up to a point, it is proposed that the more fine-grained and narrow the research question, the greater the conceptual clarity and interpretability of the results (Yin, 2009). However, any advantage gained from the interpretability of empirical results is offset by considerations of the availability of evidence for the meta-synthesis. During the further conduct of my metasynthesis, the research question proved to be broad enough to open up a relevant set of high-quality case studies, while its narrowness enabled to identify a set of studies that corresponded to my topic of interest.
Step 2: Locating Relevant Research
In the next step, I started to identify the bodies of research that can be deemed to be relevant for my meta-synthesis interest. To locate the set of existing qualitative case studies, I based the search on the Social Science Citation Index (SSCI) database of Thomson-ISI Web of Science. As an initial search based on the search string ‘‘dynamic capabilities’’ OR ‘‘dynamic capability’’ AND ‘‘cogn*’’ AND ‘‘case stud*’’ yielded no valid results, I realized that this search string was too narrow. Consequently, I began more broadly by retrieving all articles that were published in the Business and Management categories of the ISI Web of Science database with topics containing the expressions ‘‘dynamic capability’’ or ‘‘dynamic capabilities.’’ This yielded a set of 1,604 contributions. I refined the search by reducing the set of contributions to the keyword ‘‘cognition’’ and the derivatives of the root ‘‘cogni’’ (cogni*: cognition, cognitions, cognitive, cognizance). A main search using the terms ‘‘dynamic capability’’ OR ‘‘dynamic capabilities’’ in combination with ‘‘cogni’’ generated valid results, revealing that no additional terms were needed. These keywords were used as a selection criterion in topic (title, keyword, abstract), resulting in an initial sample of 81 contributions published in journals or book chapters/conference proceedings. This basic search was complemented by cross-checking the resulting article list with the sample of articles found in reviews conducted in the field of dynamic capabilities. In addition, the journals having received the most hits during the database search were manually searched from 1997 to the present for the keywords of ‘‘dynamic
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capabilit*’’ AND ‘‘cogni*’’ AND ‘‘case stud*’’ at Wiley Online Library. As a result, six more articles were found that had not already been identified by the electronic database search. For the literature search strategy see Table 3. Overall, a sample of 87 studies was identified, published between January 1997 and August 2012. The year 1997 was chosen as the starting point of the search because this was the year in which Teece et al. (1997) laid the theoretical foundations for the development of this research field. The search incorporated 37 journals with different rankings and stemming from various business areas, thereby acknowledging the widespread use and publication of dynamic capability studies in areas such as strategic management, entrepreneurship, or product innovation. In addition, this broad set of journals contains venues that are viewed as especially open for publishing qualitative case study research, such as the British Journal of Management and Journal of Management Studies. After a first screening of the titles and the abstracts, 16 articles were identified as false positives and excluded due to irrelevant citations (n¼71). Most interesting, the yield of relevant studies was lower from articles categorized as conference proceedings than journal articles. Eight of the 12 articles published in conference proceedings were excluded, compared with 8 of the 75 being categorized as journal articles. While identifying the qualitative case studies within the subset of the 71 articles, it became obvious that the abstracts and keywords varied considerably in their content, with some failing to state the research method used. After obtaining the articles’ full text versions, I manually screened and categorized the articles’ introductory sections and/or methods sections and categorized them more broadly as conceptual works (16), review studies (2), quantitative studies (23), or qualitative research studies (30). Finally, each of the 30 qualitative research studies was identified as a grounded theorizing study (2), historical analysis (3), process research (2), or qualitative case study (23). Overall, the full-text search generated a list of 23 qualitative case studies referring to dynamic capabilities and managerial cognition. For a list of the initial sample of articles retrieved from the literature search as well as their categorization see Appendix A. Ideally, any synthesis should be exhaustive in its inclusion of studies by selecting the maximum number of eligible primary sources (Aytug et al., 2012; Kisamore & Brannick, 2008). By focusing my search strategy on published articles, conference proceedings, and book chapters, I discarded dissertations and unsubmitted or unpublished research studies. Relying on published literature is not without risk since only a comprehensive search is associated with limiting the potential of publication bias (Kepes, Banks, McDaniel, & Whetzel, 2012; McDaniel, Rothstein, & Whetzel, 2006). However, benefits of precluding unpublished articles entail the increased scientific rigor resulting from a peer-reviewed publication process as well as the availability of these works for evaluating the sources the meta-synthesis relies on. Similar to the file-drawer problem (Dalton, Aguinis, Dalton, Bosco, & Pierce, 2012), it can be proposed that the type of empirical research being conducted may also affect the likelihood of publication. More critically, qualitative studies are assumed to be less likely or even more difficult to get published, especially in top-tier journals. Searching within a broad range of journals enabled me to incorporate higher to lower ranked venues from the various disciplines the dynamic capabilities research is rooted in. Furthermore, the use of complementary electronic and manual search techniques ensured that material is not missing either through the inadequacies of indexing or through the selective coverage of databases. Taken together, a systematic, explicit, and transparent search process generates a rigorous meta-synthesis study, thereby acknowledging that ill-defined or biased searches are likely to result in an inadequate database and later, inaccurate results (Aytug et al., 2012; Cooper, 2010).
Step 3: Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
The next step in the conduct of the meta-synthesis is the appropriate inclusion of relevant qualitative case studies. Specifying and applying the inclusion/exclusion criteria is considered as being of
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Table 3. Literature Search Strategy.
I. Main Search: Electronic Database Search: Web of Science: Search of the topic (title, abstract, keywords) in published articles in the field of economy and management (Search string: SSCI Web of Science: Topic ¼ (dynamic capability) OR Topic ¼ (dynamic capabilities); refined by Web of Science Categories ¼ (MANAGEMENT OR BUSINESS) AND Document Types ¼ (ARTICLE OR MEETING OR BOOK) AND Languages ¼ (English) AND Topic ¼ (cogni*))
Journal Coverage: Date Searched
Number of Relevant Articles (n ¼ 68) Academy of Management Journal January 1997-August 2012 (1) AOM Annals January 1997-August 2012 (1) AOM Review January 1997-August 2012 (1) British Journal of Management January 1997-August 2012 (3) Creativity and Innovation Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice January 1997-August 2012 (1) Group Decision and Negotiation January 1997-August 2012 (1) Human Resource Management Review January 1997-August 2012 (1) IEE Transactions of Engineering Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Industrial and Corporate Change January 1997-August 2012 (3) Industrial Marketing Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Industry and Innovation January 1997-August 2012 (2) International Journal of Service Industry Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) International Journal of Technology Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Business Research January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Business Venturing January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Evolutionary Economics January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Institutional Economics January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Management Information Systems January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Management and Organization January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Management Studies January 1997-August 2012 (6) Journal of Product Innovation Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Journal of Service Research January 1997-August 2012 (1) Management Decision January 1997-August 2012 (3) Management Learning January 1997-August 2012 (2) Organization Science January 1997-August 2012 (8) Organization Studies January 1997-August 2012 (3) Public Choice January 1997-August 2012 (1) R&D Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Research in Organizational Behavior January 1997-August 2012 (1) South African Journal of Business Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal January 1997-August 2012 (1) Strategic Management Journal January 1997-August 2012 (10) Strategic Organization January 1997-August 2012 (1) Technology Analysis and Strategic Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Technovation January 1997-August 2012 (1)
Conference Proceedings/Book Chapter Coverage: Date Searched
Number of Relevant Articles (n ¼ 13) Academy of Management Proceedings January 1997-August 2012 (1) Proceedings of the 12th European Conference on Knowledge Management, 2011, Germany, Vols. 1, 2 January 1997-August 2012 (2) PICMET 2010: Technology Management for Global Economic Growth, 2010, Portland, OR January 1997-August 2012 (1)
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Table 3. (continued)
Conference Proceedings/Book Chapter Coverage: Date Searched
Number of Relevant Articles (n ¼ 13)
Proceedings of the 5th European Conference on Innovation and Entrepreneurship, 2010, Greece
January 1997-August 2012 (2)
Eighth Wuhan International Conference on E-Business, 2009, China January 1997-August 2012 (1) Proceedings of the 10th European Conference on Knowledge Management, Vols. 1-2, 2009, Italy January 1997-August 2012 (1) Proceedings of the European Conference on Intellectual Capital, 2009, Netherlands January 1997-August 2012 (1) Proceedings of the Fifths International Symposium on Management of Technology, 2007, China January 1997-August 2012 (1) Proceedings of the International Conference on Management Science and Engineering, 2007, China January 1997-August 2012 (1) Proceedings of the International Conference on Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management January 1997-August 2012 (1) Proceedings of the International Conference on Intellectual Capital, Knowledge Management, and Organizational Learning January 1997-August 2012 (1)
II. Complementary Search 1. Manually screening the references in past reviews conducted in the field of dynamic capabilities for the keywords cognition AND case study
Review Articles Type of Review/Data Coverage Total Number of Articles
Number of Additional Relevant Articles (n ¼ 3)
Barreto (2010) Selected review of research on dynamic capabilities between 1997 and 2008
38 Pablo et al. (2007), Rosenbloom (2000), Salvato (2003)
Di Stefano, Peteraf, and Verona (2010)
Exhaustive review of dynamic capability articles between 1995 and 2008
40
Wang and Ahmed (2007) Review of key empirical studies pertinent to dynamic capabilities between 1995 and 2005
32
Zahra, Sapienza, and Davidsson (2006)
Representative review of studies on capability development between 1995 and 2005
16
2. Manual search in five key journals publishing dynamic capability research: Electronic database: Wiley Online Library: Search of ‘‘full text’’ in published works in the field of management (Search string: ‘dynamic capabilit*’ AND ‘cogni*’ AND ‘case stud*’ IN ‘full text’)
Journals Coverage: Date Searched
Number of Additional Relevant Articles (n ¼ 3)
British Journal of Management, Industrial and Corporate Change, Journal of Management Studies, Organization Science, Strategic Management Journal
January 1997-September 2012 Holbrook (2000), Martin (2011), Salvato (2009)
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central importance since the validity of a synthesis depends on the quality of the primary studies on which it is based (Dalton & Dalton, 2008). According to my research question, I defined clear inclusion/exclusion criteria, which are presented in Table 4. Following these predetermined criteria, I excluded case studies if they were quantitative in character or if they used cases as an illustrative example, thereby reducing the sample of 23 studies to 21 studies. In addition, I included only articles explicitly framing the study in the dynamic capabilities approach. Given the plurality of meaning embedded in the term ‘‘dynamic capabilities’’ and taking into consideration that dynamic capability scholars have used this term in a variety of different ways (e.g., core competency, adaptive capability, absorptive capability, innovative capability), I looked for empirical articles that follow the seminal definition by Teece et al. (1997, p. 515) and focus on dynamic capabilities as the processes that are directed toward a change in the firms’ resource base. Furthermore, the meta-synthesis was limited to studies that provide a substantive contribution to managerial cognitions in the processes of dynamic capability development. A final step entailed reducing to studies whose a priori research question or purpose refers to managerial cognition in the development of dynamic capabilities (n¼9). Applying this strict criterion enables maintaining that the evidence on managerial cognitive representations was not collected incidentally. More specifically, only studies were included in which the development of dynamic capabilities and its associated managerial cognitive representations are deliberately described by the studies’ participants rather than arbitrarily labeled by the researchers. According to this criterion, two more case studies were excluded. Overall, the final sample consisted of seven studies that were all checked in terms of their quality. I ensured that all studies provide a clear linkage between theory and empirical evidence and reflect the methodological standards that scholars such as Yin (2009) and Eisenhardt (1989; Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007) have induced to the field. No further studies were excluded. Overall, 30 articles (35% of the total number of hits of 87) were read in full text, and 7 of these met the study inclusion criteria and were ultimately incorporated in the meta-synthesis (see Appendix B). These seven studies were conducted between 2000 and 2010 in different countries and industries, involving firms that were concerned with the development of dynamic capabilities in dynamic, highly contested environments. The studies under synthesis aim at extending or building theory with the use of multiple data sources following a clear research question. They entail both single cases and multiple cases and use different case study designs, ranging from inductive theory building to the extended case method.All cases explicitlydescribe themethodsofanalysis,thereby applyingresearch strategiesconsistent with best practices as recommended by Eisenhardt (1989) or Yin (2009).
Step 4: Extracting and Coding Data
A further step is to extract, code, and categorize evidence from the studies under synthesis (Noblit & Hare, 1988). With regard to the empirical material a meta-synthesis is based on, it is important to note that the meta-synthesist operates at the level at which the original researchers have constructed insights according to their own understanding and interpretation of the data. Instead of the raw data of the primary studies, the proceeded insights that the researchers of these studies have generated constitute the ‘‘data’’ of a meta-synthesis. To obtain the data necessary for my meta-synthesis,first,a codingformwasdeveloped accordingto the question of interest (Duriau, Reger, & Pfarrer, 2007). After generating a set of a priori notions about what items to code, together with a coresearcher familiar with the field of dynamic capability research, we read through three randomly selected studies to identify further coding items that might be relevant, thereby constantly refining and modifying the coding form. We also included open-ended questions and blank spaces into the coding form to ensure that the proceeded insights could be recorded as they were portrayed by the original researcher, thereby conversing with as much of the original information as possible. The coding form with its 42 coding items is presented in Table 5.
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Table 4. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria.
Criteria Rationales Reasons for Exclusion
(1) Qualitative case study I used this criterion to narrow the metasynthesis to articles relying on qualitative case studies. The criterion ensures that there is no difference between the research method the primary researchers claim to have used and the approach actually used. Articles are excluded that use, for example, illustrative case examples to give an in-depth example of how a framework can be applied and that were not collected purposely to understand dynamic capabilities. In addition, case studies primary relying on quantitative data are excluded.
Illustrative case examples (Agarwal & Helfat, 2009; Taylor & Helfat, 2009)
(2) Articles initially framed in the dynamic capabilities approach and referring to the seminal notion of dynamic capabilities (Teece et al., 1997)
I based the choice on dynamic capabilities to focus specifically on articles in which the authors build on Teece et al. (1997) seminal notion of dynamic capabilities as ‘‘the firm’s ability to integrate, build, and reconfigure internal and external competences to address rapidly changing environments. Dynamic capabilities thus reflect an organization’s ability to achieve new and innovative forms of competitive advantage given path dependencies and market positions.’’ Articles are also included that are theoretically framed in the dynamic capabilities approach, thereby drawing on an understanding of dynamic capabilities as provided by Eisenhardt and Martin (2000).
Relying on a broader understanding of dynamic capabilities, e.g., path dependency, innovation capability, heuristics, learning, knowledge (Bingham & Eisenhardt, 2011; Demartini, 2007; Dixit et al., 2007; Lanzara & Patriotta, 2007); referring to dynamic capabilities approach only in the discussion/ contributions part (Aspara et al., 2011; Gilbert, 2006; Salvato, 2003; van Riel & Lievens, 2004)
(3) Refer to the processes of dynamic capability development and provide strong focus on cognition
I used this criterion to identify the case studies on the development of dynamic capabilities that have a strong emphasis on managerial cognitive representations. This entails the inclusion of articles that provide a substantive contribution to the role of managerial cognition in the processes of dynamic capability development.
No focus on the development of dynamic capabilities (Autio et al., 2011; Boerjesson & Elmquist, 2011; Holbrook, 2000; McDermott & Coates, 2007)
(4) Focus on managerial cognition in the study’s a priori goals, research question, research interests
This criterion enables including dynamic capability studies whose a priori research question(s) or goal(s) are closely connected to managerial cognition. Therefore, case studies are included that provide a primary focus on the cognitive approach to explain changes in the development of dynamic capabilities.
Managerial cognition perspective not included in the initial research question (Martin, 2011; Pablo et al., 2007)
(5) Check quality I checked all studies with regard to quality. According to recent standards and guidelines (Eisenhardt, 1989; Yin, 2009) I checked the studies in terms of rigorous reporting style, clear linkage between theory and empirical evidence, clear contextualization of the case, multiple data sources, clarity concerning the theoretical purpose.
No further studies were excluded due to quality assessment
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Table5.CodingForm.
CaseStudyID
Coder1 (name,date ofcoding)
Coder2 (name,date ofcoding)
Agreement/ Differences incodings
Item No.Generaldetailsofthestudy
Coded as
Pageno./ Quote
Coded as
Pageno./ Quote(yes/no)
Reconciled codes
1Author(s) 2Title 3Journal 4Date 5Typeofstudy Whataretheauthorstryingtoachieve? 6Broaderaim(s)ofthestudy 7Researchquestion(s) 8Intendedcontribution Theoreticalframing 9Howisthestudyinformedby/linkedtodynamiccapabilitiesresearch? 10Howisthestudyinformedby/linkedtocognitionresearch? 11Concept/understandingofdynamiccapabilitiesused 12Concept/understandingofcognitionused Setting/contextinwhichstudywasconducted 13Country 14Industry,sector 15Researchcontext(e.g.,discontinuousenvironmentalshifts,disruptivechange) 16Researchsiteselected(typeoforganization) 17Researchsetting(e.g.,sixretailorganizations) Methodology/methods 18Researchdesign(e.g.,historicalcasestudy;inductive,theorybuildingcasestudy) 19Approach(e.g.,theorybuilding,theoryelaboration) 20Unitofanalysis;focalprocess 21Numberofcasesincluded 22Samplingstrategy(e.g.,purposive,theoretical) Datacollectiontechniquesandsources 23Timingandsequencingofdatacollection(e.g.,retrospective,realtime) 24Datacollectiontechniquesusedbytheoriginalresearcher(e.g.,semi-structuredinterviews,focus groups,on-sitemeetings)
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Table5.(continued)
CaseStudyID
Coder1 (name,date ofcoding)
Coder2 (name,date ofcoding)
Agreement/ Differences incodings
Item No.Generaldetailsofthestudy
Coded as
Pageno./ Quote
Coded as
Pageno./ Quote(yes/no)
Reconciled codes
25Datasources(transcripts,fieldnotes,archivaldata) 26Amountofdataconducted/validity(numberofinterviews,amountofdocuments) 27Datamanagementtechniques(e.g.,casehistory) Dataanalysisapproach 28Methodsofdataanalysis(e.g.,codingscheme,constantcomparison,patternmatching) 29Analysistechniques(e.g.,datamatrix,visualdisplay) Whataretheproceededinsights? 30Keyfindingsassummarizedbytheoriginalresearcher(s)inabstract/introduction/conclusionsection (verbatimparaphrased) 31Events,factors,orpatternsinmanagerialcognitiveprocessingsasportrayedbytheoriginalauthor(s) (verbatimparaphrased) 32Effectsofmanagerialcognitiononadjustingthedynamiccapabilityand/oralteringorrenewalofthe resourcebaseasportrayedbytheoriginalauthor(s)(verbatimparaphrased) 33Environmentalconditions 34Visualizationofconceptualmodelorframeworkasprovidedbytheoriginalauthor(s) Discussion 35Discussionofkeyfindings Contribution(s)asstatedbytheoriginalresearcher(s) 36Contributiontothefieldofdynamiccapabilities 37Contributiontootherfields(e.g.,psychologicalfoundationofstrategy,learningtheory,strategy) Limitationsasdiscussedbytheauthors 38Limitations(e.g.,methodological) Overallassessments 39Howrelevantisthisstudytotheunderlyingquestion? 40Howreliable/convincingisthestudy? 41Missinginformation,logicalinconsistencies? 42Furthercomments
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Together with the coresearcher, we coded each primary study for the descriptive characteristics such as type of case study design, setting, number of cases, or data sources. We carefully read each of these studies and then independently coded them according to the coding form. After completing the individual extractions we merged the individual coding forms into a combined database. Coding a broad range of different study characteristics was beneficial as it not only informed us about the specific nature of the body of studies under synthesis but also sensitized us for potentially relevant contextual factors. To record the relevant evidence from each of the studies included in the meta-synthesis, we especially focused on the findings section and the discussion/contribution section. Concepts similar to dynamic capabilities (e.g., capabilities, organizational capabilities) were coded only if the specific understanding of the construct overlapped significantly with the primary definition used in this study. At the same time, we coded evidence on the concept of cognition as well as similar notions such as ‘‘mental models,’’ ‘‘attention allocation,’’ ‘‘resource cognition,’’ and ‘‘cognizance.’’ Following the aforementioned understanding of dynamic capability development and managerial cognition, we listed the events, factors, and patterns that occurred around the ‘‘managerial cognitive processings’’ as well as how they influenced, facilitated, or hindered the ‘‘adjustment of a dynamic capability’’ and turned these elements into variables. This also included listing information on any potential contextual variables in which these managerial cognitive processings appeared such as situational aspects, social systems, or environmental conditions. Asacriticaldecisioninresearchsynthesisentailswhatfeaturestocode(Aytugetal.,2012;Kisamore & Brannick, 2008), the process of extracting and coding data was guided by a reliable and valid coding form.Toensureinter-reviewerconsistencyduringthecourseofcoding,anydiscrepanciesthatemerged werecarefullydocumentedinthecodingformandresolvedbydiscussionsandfurtherrereadingsofthe originalstudies.Theemergentcodesweresubsequentlyfedintothecodingform.Overall,workingwith two synthesizers—both as readers and coders—is beneficial for reducing mistakes in data recording as well as for avoiding the omission of relevant material (Miles & Huberman, 1994).
Step 5: Analyzing on a Case-Specific Level
For analyzing the studies under synthesis, first, a technique has to be applied that not only allows for an analysis on a case-specific level but also is apt for addressing the meta-synthesis research question and aims. As I was interested in the intersection between managerial cognitive representations and the processes of dynamic capabilities development, a causal network technique was chosen (Miles & Huberman, 1994). We explored each case study in terms of the variables which logically influence others, which variables are likely to appear together and which not, and which variables have to happen first for others to happen later (Miles & Huberman, 1994). Carefully mapping each case in a case-specific causal network alerted me to the variables that go together and contrast with other variables, thereby inviting a closer look at what might be an underlying theme or pattern. As a result, seven case-specific causal networks emerged that connect the particular variables and relationships found in each case into a coherent picture. One of these causal networks, for example, displays that the variable of ‘‘preexisting managerial cognitive representations’’ affects the way in which a dynamic capability is created. If these mental models become inaccurate, for example, due to disruptive environmental changes, they foster the development of a ‘‘dysfunctional dynamic capability,’’ thereby hindering a ‘‘change in the firm’s resource base’’ (Danneels, 2010). To ensure the validity of the causal networks, together with my coresearcher, we independently developed each of these displays. Divergent judgments on variables and/or a potential relationship were assessed, recorded, and resolved to capture the substantive issues relevant to the interpretation. Overall, the causal networks proved to be beneficial in my study as they enabled both reflection on the cases’ salient properties of the context as well as the combination of particular
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instances around dynamic capability development into a more general pattern. However, further techniques for analyzing primary qualitative evidence such as chronological displays, causal maps, or a processual matrix may be viable depending on a meta-synthesis’s specific research question, interest, and goal.
Step 6: Synthesis on a Cross-Study Level
To move from a case-specific level to a cross-study level analysis, the next step was to merge the sequences of variables identified in each of the case-specific causal networks into a meta-causal network. The case-specific causal networks provide the foundation to further explore how the studies under synthesis are related or dissonant through a compare and contrast exercise at a cross-case study level (Miles & Huberman, 1994). As such, a meta-causal network goes beyond the individual studies to let mechanisms, causalities, or causal conditions and their outcomes emerge from the analysis across a set of studies (Miles & Huberman, 1994). We matched each case-specific causal network to see how specific variables performed across the complete set of cases. As a result, a metacausal network emerged incorporating a pattern of a sequencing of variables that were found to be meaningful across all cases, namely ‘‘managerial cognitive representations,’’ ‘‘dynamic capability development,’’ ‘‘environmental conditions,’’ ‘‘managerial cognitive processing,’’ ‘‘adjustment of dynamic capabilities,’’ and ‘‘altering the resource base’’ (see Figure 1). In particular, the variable of managerial cognitive processing turned out to be central for explaining this pattern, with a low scope of cognitive processing inhibiting the adjustment of a dynamic capability. For instance, the exercise of less appropriate dynamic capabilities was affected by low managerial cognitive processing through which managers were constrained in coping with changing environments. In turn, no alteration of the resource base was achieved. In contrast, a high scope of cognitive processing was associated with an adjustment of the dynamic capability, thereby leading to a renewal of the resource base. To test and refine this emerging pattern (Miles & Huberman, 1994), I assessed the variance in environmental change, managerial cognitive processing, adjustment of dynamic capabilities, and renewal of the resource base in each of the studies, thereby enhancing the validity of the emerging pattern (Miles & Huberman, 1994). Inthisrespect,the variable rating list inTable 6 indicates that indisruptive changes or turbulent environments, extensive managerial cognitive processings are associated with a change in managerial cognition that leads to an adjustment of a dynamic capability, and, in turn, to a
Figure 1. Meta-causal network.
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Table6.VariablesandTheirRatings.
Cases
Managerial Cognitive Representations
Development ofDynamic capability
Environmental Change
Managerial Cognitive Processing
Adjusting Dynamic Capabilities
Alteringthe Resource Base
1.Danneels(2010)Manager’smentalmodelsCapabilitytoalterthe firm’sresourcebase
High:Environmental turbulence
Low:Inaccurate mentalmodels
No:Continuetodevelop thedysfunctional dynamiccapability
No
2.Tripsasand Gavetti(2000)
StrongmanagerialbeliefsEvolutionofcapabilityof directingsearch processesinanew learningenvironment
High:Radical technologicalchange
Low:Cognitive dissonance
No:Continuetodevelop thedysfunctional dynamiccapability
No
3a.Laamanenand Wallin(2009), Case1:Phi
Manager’sattention allocationemphasis towardpartners
Capabilitytointegrate externaltechnological resources
High:Discontinuous industrychange; collapseofthe internet-driven business
Extensive:a Management’soverall thinkingevolvedin fourstages
Changeinthecapability emphasistobuildnew capabilities
Yes(þþþ)a
3b.Laamanenand Wallin(2009), Case2:Rho
Manager’sattention allocationemphasis onlargecorporate customers
Capabilitiestoselllarge customizedsystems integrationprojects
High:Discontinuous industrychange; collapseofthe Internet-driven business
Extensive:a Management’soverall thinkingevolvedin fourstages
Changeinthecapability emphasistobuild newcapabilities
Yes(þ)a
3c.Laamanenand Wallin(2009), Case3:Sigma
Manager’sattention allocationemphasis
Softwaredevelopment abilities
High:Discontinuous industrychange; collapseofthe Internet-driven business
Extensive:a Management’soverall thinkingevolvedin fourstages
Changeinthecapability emphasistobuildnew capabilities
Yes(þþ)a
4.Salvato(2009)Mindfulactivitiesof managers;managerial attention
Productdevelopment process
Highlycompetitive productmarket
N/A,encodingof ambiguousoutcomes; manager’s interpretationof experiments
Adaptationofproduct developmentroutines
Yes
5a.Narayananetal. (2009),Case1
Managerialcognitive orientation
Fastcycleproduct development
Highlydynamic environment; follow-on opportunities
ModerateaDiscontinuetodevelop dysfunctionaldynamic capability
Yes
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Table6.(continued)
Cases
Managerial Cognitive Representations
Development ofDynamic capability
Environmental Change
Managerial Cognitive Processing
Adjusting Dynamic Capabilities
Alteringthe Resource Base
5b.Narayananetal. (2009),Case2
Managerialcognitive orientation
ChemicalbiologyR&D platform
Highlydynamic environment; follow-on opportunities
HighaDevelopingthe dynamiccapability
Yes
6.Pandza(2011)Group-levelcognitive framesabouta particularcapability
CapabilitydevelopmentHigh:Rapid developmentof innovativenew medicines
Group’sperceptions ofthevalueof organizational capabilities;creative andsocialframing practices
Engageinautonomous activitiestodevelop dynamiccapabilities
Yes
7.Keiletal.(2008)Cognizanceformation; awareness
Buildingthecapabilityto accessandmakesense ofcorporateventure capitalprogram activities
High:Disruptive change;high decision-making uncertainty
Mechanismsthat underliecognizance formation;cognitive filters;creationof awarenessor cognizance
CapabilityinternalizationN/A
aAsmeasuredintheprimarycasestudies.
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change in the resource base. However, the exercise of dysfunctional dynamic capabilities is associated with low managerial cognitive processing resulting in inaccurate mental models (see Table 6). Overall, a pattern of changing managerial cognitions emerged that was associated with differences in the development of dynamic capabilities. These ‘‘cognitive shifts’’ constitute a change in how managers understand, frame, and predominantly view the nature of dynamic capabilities in place. In this respect, the meta-synthesis illustrates managers as having preexisting cognitive representations that direct the way in which a dynamic capability is created. In dynamic environments that offer new follow-on opportunities, cognitive shifts enable managers to reinterpret the internal progress of dynamic capability development, its appropriateness, and consequently to orchestrate the activities necessary for an adjustment.
Step 7: Building Theory From Meta-Synthesis
As a result, this meta-synthesis reveals that in dynamic environments that offer new follow-on opportunitiesacognitiveshiftenablesmanagersrenderinganexerciseddynamiccapabilitymoreappropriate. Bysynthesizingevidencearoundavarietyofdifferentcognitiveaspectsindynamiccapabilitydevelopment from diverse settings, the concept of cognitive shifts is offered. The concept of cognitive shifts linksbacktoaprocessualperspectiveonthedevelopmentofdynamiccapabilitiesindisruptiveenvironmentalchanges.Scholarshaveacknowledgedthatmanagerialcognitioncanmakeadifferenceindirectingthedevelopmentofdynamiccapabilities(Gavetti,2005).Managerscreatecognitiverepresentations to perceive environmental changes and to facilitate information processing (Helfat et al., 2007). This meta-synthesisshowsthatmanagerialcognitiverepresentationsarenottobeunderstoodasrigidmental models.However,theconceptofcognitiveshiftsunderscoresthatmanagersneedtoundergoachangein their thinking, thereby being capable of uncoupling from past experience and dissociating from current business assumptions and, thus, to generate a more complete picture of the relevance and appropriatenessofextantcapabilities.Thisdoesnotmeanthatashiftincognitionnecessarilyleadstodiscontinuing the exercise of dysfunctional dynamic capabilities. However, if managers reinterpret or rethink the natureandappropriatenessofdynamiccapabilitiesinplace,theymayorchestratethemultilevelroutines necessarytoactualizeadynamiccapability.Overall,theconceptofcognitiveshiftsmakesacontribution asitbreaksdown thehard-to-defineareaofcognitiveprocessesinto thediscreteeventofashiftinmanagerial cognitive representations that can be isolated and analyzed and is a broad enough construct to map the full territory of dynamic capabilities development. Therefore, subsequent studies can build onthismeta-synthesisbyusingtheconceptofcognitiveshiftsasinputformakingdecisionsaboutsamples, contexts, or variables to include in the theory-testing framework.
Step 8: Discussion
In a final step, general limitations about heterogeneity in the primary studies or the way the metasynthesis was conducted need to be discussed. This meta-synthesis entails a consistent set of qualitativecase studies that allrefer toa similar understandingof the concept of managerial cognition andof dynamic capabilities and use rigorous and sound methodologies. A limitation results from restricting the meta-synthesis study to 7 qualitative case studies as compared to a set of 30 studies initially identified in the field. Being very inclusive with regard to the studies incorporated entails the risks of reducing the range of interpretations of a phenomenon. Nevertheless, I maintain these results constitute a valuable contribution tomanagerial cognition in the development of dynamic capabilities. In this respect, this meta-synthesis goes beyond recent reviews conducted in the field of dynamic capabilityresearch.Whilethesereviewsmostlyrelyonarepresentativesampleofpublishedstudiestogenerate a conceptual consolidation, this meta-synthesis offers an empirical consolidation based on an exhaustive search strategy. As such, all of the dynamic capabilities’ research published from 1997
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to 2012 was located, thereby including business areas such as innovation (e.g., Journal of Product Innovation) or entrepreneurship (e.g., Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice, Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal).
Discussion
Inthisarticle,Iofferadistinctionamongresearchsynthesesasaggregation,interpretation,andtranslation thatemergesfromthebasicparadigmaticpositionsinherentinorganizationalresearch.Byfollowinginterpretationsynthesisfromapostpositivisticpointofview,thisarticlemakesacontributionbyprovidingthe research design of a meta-synthesis. The goal of a meta-synthesis is to analyze constructs, key variables, and underlying relationships across a set of primary qualitative case studies to arrive at a refined, an extended or even new theory. In the following, I discuss the potential prospects as well as the challenges of the meta-synthesis and provide evidence that establishes its merits for accumulating knowledge. First, a meta-synthesis ofqualitativecasestudies isproposedtohavemajor potential insynthesizing qualitative evidence on a particular topic to build theory. As opposed to reviewing an existing intellectual territory to formulate new research questions or future research directions (Tranfield et al., 2003), the aim of a meta-synthesis is to build theory, thereby moving from substantive theories that are groundedinparticularresearchcontextstoamoregenerictheorywithabroaderapplication.Inthisarticle, I argue that a meta-synthesis has the potential to support research to progress by offering a window for conducting a more deductive theory testing design on the foundations that the meta-synthesis provided.Forexample,in the field ofdynamic capabilities, there are a seriesofqualitative studies offering a fragmented, isolated picture of a variety of different aspects around managerial cognitive processing. Thedesignofameta-synthesisallowsresearcherstoaccumulaterich,primaryevidenceandtogenerate theorythatsubsequentstudiescanbuild on.Accordingly,ameta-synthesisaidsindevelopinginductive theories that can form bridges from rich qualitative evidence to more deductive research, thereby moving to higher levels of abstraction (Eisenhardt & Graebner, 2007; Shah & Corley, 2006). Second, building theory out of published case studies holds great potential especially if a reliable synthesis process is augmented through the application of the rigorous procedures described here. Throughout the meta-synthesis process, the researchers face the challenge of evaluating various available options to make informed methodological choices that are best suited for the synthesis purpose. However, I advocate that it is not standardization or uniformity that is desirable; rather it is the transparent, systematic, and explicit reporting of these choices that ensures reliability in this type of research synthesis. This codification allows the readers to retrace the certain paths of the meta-synthesis process as well as to critically evaluate the process and its associated product. For example, by providing a meta-synthesis protocol, transparently reporting the literature search and the inclusion/exclusion criteria as well as indicating the procedures for coding and analysis, not only the validity of the results, but also the reliability of the meta-synthesis study itself can be ensured; an aspect that is generally considered as one of the key advantages of research synthesis over literature reviews (Aguinis, Pierce, et al., 2011; Aytug et al., 2012; Dalton & Dalton, 2008). Third, the greatest challenge that a qualitative synthesis faces is viewed in the heterogeneity inherent in the primary studies’ underlying paradigmatic perspectives, methods, and quality (Noblit & Hare, 1988; Rousseau et al., 2008). The meta-synthesis design provided here adopts a more narrow approach in that it is restricted to studies following a case study approach as opposed to including qualitative studies of any type. Although the inclusion of a broad range of studies may contribute to the interpretation of a phenomenon (Sandelowski & Barroso, 2007), I propose that embracing papers with the same method is beneficial as methodological underpinnings are respected and meaning can be preserved while new meanings could also emerge. However, heterogeneity always pertains to variety in the studies’ context. Consequently, a major challenge in meta-synthesis stems from empirical evidence being framed within the contextual settings in which the primary data were
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conducted, analyzed, and interpreted. Acknowledging the contextual conditions is of central importance as these conditions provide the potential to account for larger moderating effects (Cortina, 2003). To address contextual considerations, the meta-synthesist needs to engage in the preservation of meaning from the original texts as far as possible. This requirement of contextual sensitivity is one that the meta-synthesist has to carefully reflect on in each decision point that he/she faces during the synthesis process. To ensure sensitivity toward the contextual considerations of any empirical material, ideally, a meta-synthesis should only be conducted by a team of trained researchers. Especially the contribution of experts in qualitative research who are also trained in conducting a metasynthesis would be beneficial for ensuring a rigorous synthesis process. Finally, the view taken here is that the meta-synthesis is most beneficial in intermediate or mature fields of research that are characterized by unique phenomena and a lack of adequate quantitative measures (Edmondson & McManus, 2007). More specifically, a conventional literature review or a systematic review can be seen as especially appropriate to conceptually assess and map the state of the art of a nascent field. Within a field that is progressing, more empirical research is evolving and a meta-synthesis can be helpful in converging this growing body of knowledge into new insight. For example, more intermediate fields such as the dynamic capabilities approach are particularly promising for a meta-synthesis where a continuously increasing body of empirical studies explores new constructs and/or provisional theoretical relationships. Indeed, a meta-synthesis cannot be performed without data. However, I suggest that it is not only the number of studies conducted that justifies a meta-synthesis; rather, I follow Cooper’s (2010) notion that it is the fresh insights a synthesis can bring to a field that legitimates its course of action.
Conclusion
In organizational and management research, there is a need to assemble a field’s full weight of scientific knowledge into a full understanding of a phenomenon (Hunter et al., 1982; Rousseau et al., 2008). In this article, I develop the meta-synthesis design as a rigorous and systematic way of synthesizing qualitative case studies to build theory. Rather than meta-analyzing quantitative findings in an additive logic, the meta-synthesis seeks to move a body of knowledge forward by interpreting primary qualitative evidence across different contexts to come to a higher replicability of theory. Nevertheless, this meta-synthesis design has raised a number of issues that require further discussion and consideration. First, the research design of a meta-synthesis proposed in this article has arrived at stages of analysis that seek to satisfy the criteria of validity and reliability. Thus, I advocate that stating and applying criteria for rigorous work is to be viewed as a critical part of conducting a meta-synthesis. In particular, it is key to the validity and reliability of a synthesis to acknowledge the potential bias that may stem from an incomplete literature research or from data being incorrectly extracted from primary studies (Aytug et al., 2012; Cooper, 2010). Future researchers should engage in minimizing bias and improving rigor at every stage of the synthesis, thereby ensuring that the conduct of a meta-synthesis meets the same standards as the primary studies under synthesis. Second, in this article, a set of techniques and procedures is provided that are beneficial for analyzing primary qualitative evidence at a within-case level or an across-case level. More generally, I propose that the procedures of coding and analysis developed for primary qualitative research seem to be applicable to the meta-synthesis as they allow for iterative comparisons across qualitative data sources (Miles & Huberman, 1994). However, future research should identify and explore further qualitative as well as quantitative methods that may bear potential in these analysis issues and provide additional ways of synthesizing qualitative evidence. Taken together, in this article I advocate that advancing management theory does not only evolve from scholars engaging in field research—studying real people, real problems,and realorganizations(Edmondson& McManus, 2007)—but alsobyresearchers entangling in the accumulation of knowledge already existing in a field.
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AppendixA.InitialArticlesRetrievedFromtheLiteratureSearch.
ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
Obtainedfrommainsearch 1Vogel,2012OrganizationStudies,33(8), 1015-1043
Irrelevant citation
2Kemmerer,Walter, Kellermanns,and Narayanan,2012
JournalofBusinessResearch, 65(8),1102-1108
Quantitative
3NagandGioia,2012AcademyofManagement Journal,55(2),421-457
Groundedtheorizing—
4Gavetti,Greve,Levinthal, andOcasio,2012
AcademyofManagement Annals,6,1-40
Conceptual
5Newey,Verreynne, andGriffiths,2012
JournalofManagementand Organization,18(1), 123-140
Processresearch—
6Gavetti,2012OrganizationScience,23(1), 267-285
Conceptual
7Binghamand Eisenhardt,2011
StrategicManagement Journal,32(13),14371464
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(understanding ofdynamiccapabilities)
8Hodgkinsonand Healey,2011
StrategicManagement Journal,32(13),15001516
Conceptual
9Boerjessonand Elmquist,2011
CreativityandInnovation Management,20(3), 171-184
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(nofocuson dynamiccapability development)
10FestingandEidems,2011HumanResource ManagementReview, 21(3),162-173
Conceptual
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AppendixA.(continued)
ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
11Buy,Boone,and Matthyssens,2011
StrategicOrganization,9(3), 240-246
Conceptual
12Sigglekow,2011JournalofManagement Studies,48(5),11261140
Quantitative
13Pandza,2011JournalofManagement Studies,48(5),10151043
QualitativecasestudyIncludedin meta-synthesis
14Mitchell,Shepherd,and Sharfman,2011
StrategicManagement Journal,32(7),683-704
Quantitative
15GaryandWood,2011StrategicManagement Journal,32(6),569-594
Quantitative
16Kaplan,2011JournalofManagement Studies,48(3),665-695
Review
17Arndt,2011SouthAfricanJournalof BusinessManagement, 42(1),1-8
Quantitative
18VanBeuningen,deRuyter, andWetzels,2011
JournalofServiceResearch, 14(1),108-125
Quantitative
19Yang,2011InternationalJournalof TechnologyManagement, 56(1),40-52
Quantitative
20Autio,George,and Alexy,2011
EntrepreneurshipTheory andPractice,35(1), 11-37
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(nofocuson dynamiccapability development)
21Valorinta,Schildt,and Lamberg,2011
IndustryandInnovation, 18(8),765-790
Historicalanalysis—
(continued)
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AppendixA.(continued)
ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
22Gaertner,2011ManagementDecision, 49(2),253-269
Conceptual
23Bonet,Peris-Ortiz,and Pechuan,2011
ManagementDecision, 49(2),270-283
Conceptual
24Aspara,Lamberg,Laukia, andTikkanen,2011
ManagementDecision, 49(3-4),622-647
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(theoretical framing)
25Danneels,2011StrategicManagement Journal,32(1),1-31
QualitativecasestudyIncludedin meta-synthesis
26Eisenhardt,Furr,and Bingham,2011
OrganizationScience,21(6), 1263-1273
Conceptual
27Kunc,2010StrategicManagement Journal,31(11), 1164-1182
Quantitative
28ZbarackiandBergen,2010OrganizationScience,21(5), 955-972
Groundedtheorizing—
29Dangelico,Garavelli,and Petruzelli,2010
Technovation,30(2),142153
Quantitative
30ByingtonandFelps,2010ResearchinOrganizational Behavior,30,175-202
Irrelevant citation
31Yang,Lin,andLi,2010IndustryandInnovation, 7(3),285-302
Irrelevant citation
32Desarbo,Grewal,and Wang,2010
StrategicManagement Journal,30(13),14201439
Quantitative
33LaamanenandWallin, 2009
JournalofManagement Studies,46(6),950-981
QualitativecasestudyIncludedin meta-synthesis
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AppendixA.(continued)
ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
34TaylorandHelfat,2009OrganizationScience,20(4), 718-739
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(illustrative caseexamples)
35Narayanan,Colwell, andDouglas,2009
BritishJournalof Management,20, S25-S40
QualitativecasestudyIncludedin meta-synthesis
36NeweyandZara,2009BritishJournalof Management,20, S81-S100
Processresearch study —
37PandzaandThorpe,2009BritishJournalof Management,20, S118-S131
Conceptual
38AgarwalandHelfat,2009OrganizationScience,20(2), 281-293
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(illustrative caseexamples)
39Floriceland Ibanescu,2008
R&DManagement,38(5), 452-467
Quantitative
40Marshall,2008ManagementLearning, 39(4),413-435
Irrelevant citation
41Consoli,2008TechnologyAnalysis& StrategicManagement, 20(4),409-425
Quantitative
42Mahnke,Venzin,and Zahra,2007
JournalofManagement Studies,44(7), 1278-1298
Conceptual
43Bingham,Eisenhardt, andFurr,2007
StrategicEntrepreneurship Journal,1(1-2),27-47
Quantitative
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AppendixA.(continued)
ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
44ReuberandFischer,2007JournalofBusiness Venturing,22(3), 363-387
Literature review
45Lanzaraand Patriotta,2007
OrganizationStudies,28(5), 635-660
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(notionof dynamiccapabilities used)
46Lambergand Tikkanen,2006
IndustrialandCorporate Change,15(5),811-846
Historicalanalysis—
47Khoumbatiand Themistocleous,2006
JournalofManagement InformationSystems, 22(4),69-108
Irrelevant citation
48Jacobides,2006IndustrialandCorporate Change,15(1),151-171
Conceptual
49Gilbert,2006OrganizationScience,17(1), 150-167
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(noinitial framinginthedynamic capabilityapproach
50Lavie,2006AcademyofManagement Review,31(1),153-174
Conceptual
51Gavetti,2005OrganizationScience,16(6), 599-617
Conceptual
52Bhattacharyaand Gibson,2005
JournalofManagement, 31(4),622-640
Quantitative
53KhanandQuaddus, 2004
GroupDecisionand Negotiation,13(5), 463-480
Quantitative
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AppendixA.(continued)
ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
54VanRieland Lievens,2004
InternationalJournalof ServiceIndustry Management,15(1), 72-101
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(theoretical framing)
55AdnerandHelfat,2003StrategicManagement Journal,24(10), 1011-1025
Quantitative
56Durand,2003StrategicManagement Journal,24(9),821-838
Quantitative
57Cohendetand Llerena,2003
IndustrialandCorporate Change,12(2),271-297
Conceptual
58Celuch,Kasouf,and Peruvemba,2002
IndustrialMarketing Management,31(6), 545-554
Quantitative
59TylerandGnyawali, 2002
JournalofProductInnovation Management,19(4), 259-276
Quantitative
60KogutandKulatilaka,2001OrganizationScience,12(6), 744-758
Quantitative
61TripsasandGavetti,2000StrategicManagement Journal,21(10-11), 1147-1161
QualitativecasestudyIncludedin meta-synthesis
62Lam,2000OrganizationStudies,21(3), 487-513
Conceptual
63Bloodgoodand Chae,2010
ManagementDecision, 48(1-2),85-104
Irrelevant citation
(continued)
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ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
64Ginsbergand Morecroft,1997
ManagementLearning, 28(4),455-473
Irrelevant citation
65Keil,Autio,and George,2008
JournalofManagement Studies,45(8),14751505
QualitativecasestudyIncludedin meta-synthesis
66McDermottand Coates,2007
IEEETransactionsof Engineering Management,54(2), 340-350
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(nofocus ondynamiccapability development)
67Winter,2011JournalofInstitutional Economics,7(2),257277
Conceptual
68DeGrauwe,2010PublicChoice,144(3-4), 413-443
Quantitative
69Allen,Strathern,and Baldwin,2007
JournalofEvolutionary Economics
Irrelevant citation
70Bai,White,and Sundaram,2011
ProceedingsIrrelevant citation 71Rinaldi,2011ProceedingsIrrelevant citation 72Arechavalaand McCarthy,2010 ProceedingsIrrelevant citation 73Zhang,2010ProceedingsIrrelevant citation 74Zhang,2009ProceedingsQuantitative 75Blomqvist,2009ProceedingsIrrelevant citation
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AppendixA.(continued)
ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
76Sole,Carlucci,and Schiuma,2009
ProceedingsIrrelevant citation
77Wenliangand Junzheng,2007
ProceedingsQuantitative
78Dan-li,2007ProceedingsIrrelevant citation 79Demartini,2007ProceedingsQualitativecasestudyExcluded(understanding ofdynamiccapabilities) 80Dixit,Sharma,and Karna,2007 ProceedingsQualitativecasestudyExcluded(understanding ofdynamiccapabilities) 81ChenandLiu,2005ProceedingsIrrelevant citation Obtainedfromcomplementarysearch 82Salvato,2003JournalofManagement Studies,40(1),83-108 QualitativecasestudyExcluded(nofocuson dynamiccapabilities approach) 83Salvato,2009OrganizationScience,20, 384-409 QualitativecasestudyIncludedin meta-synthesis 84Holbrooketal.,2000StrategicManagement Journal,21(10-11), 1017-1041 QualitativecasestudyExcluded(nofocuson dynamiccapability development) 85Pabloetal.,2007JournalofManagement Studies,44,87-708 QualitativecasestudyExcluded(no managerialcognition inresearchquestion)
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AppendixA.(continued)
ArticlesIdentifiedintheBasic LiteratureSearchStrategyasWell asintheComplementarySearch
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirTitle/Abstract/Keywords
ArticlesAssessedand CategorizedAccordingto TheirFull-TextVersion
No.Author/YearJournal
False Positives
Conceptual Article
Review Article
Quantitative Study
Qualitative Study
CaseStudies Included/Excluded intheMeta-Synthesis
86Rosenbloom,2000StrategicManagement Journal,21(10-11), 1083-1103
Historicalanalysis—
87Martin,2011OrganizationScience,22(1), 118-140
QualitativecasestudyExcluded(nomanagerial cognitioninresearch question) 16162233023
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Appendix B List of Studies Included in the Meta-Synthesis
Danneels, E. (2010). Trying to become a different type of company: Dynamic capability at Smith Corona. Strategic Management Journal, 32, 1-31. Keil, T., Autio, E., & George, G. (2008). Corporate venture capital, disembodied experimentation, and capability development. Journal of Management Studies, 45, 1475-1505. Laamanen, T., & Wallin, J. (2009). Cognitive dynamics of capability development paths. Journal of Management Studies, 46, 950-981. Narayanan, V. K., Colwell, K., & Douglas, F. L. (2009). Building organizational and scientific platforms in the pharmaceutical industry. A process perspective on the development of dynamic capabilities. British Journal of Management, 20, 25-40. Pandza, K. (2011). Why and how will a group act autonomously to make an impact on the development of organizational capabilities? Journal of Management Studies, 48, 1015-1043. Salvato, C. (2009). Role of ordinary activities in evolution of product development processes. Organization Science, 20, 384-409. Tripsas, M., & Gavetti, G. (2000). Capabilities, cognition, and inertia: Evidence from digital imaging. Strategic Management Journal, 21, 1147-1161.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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Author Biography
Christina Hoon is a postdoctoral researcher in the Institute of Human Resource Management at the Leibniz University of Hannover, Germany. She received her PhD from the Leibniz University of Hannover. Her research focuses on dynamic capabilities, strategic change, and research methods. Her main research interests are in the area of organizational and strategic change in pluralistic settings with an emphasis on strategy as practice, organizational sensemaking, dynamic capabilities, and qualitative research, in particular case study methods and qualitative meta-synthesis. Her work is published in journals including Human Relations, Research Methodology in Strategy and Management, and British Journal of Management.
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