Material artifacts:practices for doing strategy with 'stuff'
Data(s) |
01/02/2013
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Resumo |
This paper addresses the dearth of research into material artifacts and how they are engaged in strategizing activities. Building on the strategy-as-practice perspective, and the notion of epistemic objects, we develop a typology of strategy practices that show how managers use material artifacts to strategize by a dual process of knowledge abstraction and substitution. Empirically, we study the practice of underwriting managers in reinsurance companies. Our findings first identify the artifacts – pictures, maps, data packs, spreadsheets and graphs – that these managers use to appraise reinsurance deals. Second, the analysis of each artifact’s situated use led to the identification of five practices for doing strategy with artifacts: physicalizing, locating, enumerating, analyzing, and selecting. Last, we developed a typology that shows how practices vary in terms of their level of abstraction from the physical properties of the risk being reinsured and unfold through a process of substituting. Our conceptual framework extends existing work in the strategy-as-practice field that calls for research into the role of material artifacts. |
Formato |
application/pdf |
Identificador |
http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/18565/1/Material_artifacts.pdf Jarzabkowski, Paula; Spee, Paul and Smets, Michael (2013). Material artifacts:practices for doing strategy with 'stuff'. European Management Journal, 31 (1), 41–54. |
Relação |
http://eprints.aston.ac.uk/18565/ |
Tipo |
Article PeerReviewed |