Service innovation: organizational routines, technology and change processes
Abstract
This dissertation aims at contributing to knowledge and theory about innovation and
change processes in service organizations. It contains three essays, one theoretical
and two empirical. The field research consists of a longitudinal case study of a major
fleet management company and employs inductive analysis of qualitative data.
The first essay provides the theoretical foundations for a processual theory of service
innovation drawing on the concept of organizational routine and adopting a
structuration and practice-based perspective. The second essay uses qualitative data
analysis to trace the co-evolutionary changes that relate the traditional service
delivery system dimensions with (inter-)organizational routines as they develop
during the innovation process and, inductively, contributes to identify mechanisms
underlying replicability and discontinuity in service innovation outputs. The third
essay examines how path-dependence simultaneously unfolds over time at the level
of technology and organizational routines as service innovation is triggered by
deliberate interventions established by management. Empirical findings contributes to
our understanding about how self-reinforcing mechanisms shape organizational
adaptation capability over time. [edited by author]