Title of article :
Strategic Orientations in Management Literature: Three Approaches to Understanding the Interaction between Market, Technology, Entrepreneurial and Learning Orientations
Abstract :
Market, technology, entrepreneurial and learning orientations have attracted major
scholarly interest within their specific streams of literature for some decades. These
strategic orientations are seen as principles that direct and influence the activities of a
firm and generate the behaviours intended to ensure its viability and performance.
Prior studies have argued that firms should develop and use multiple orientations, yet
the relationship between different orientations has received only fragmented attention.
This paper presents a systematic review of this literature, covering 67 scholarly articles
published between 1987 and 2010 which investigate multiple orientations. The paper
contributes first by summarizing the current state of knowledge on the interplay
between these orientations. Many of these relationships have not been studied to any
great degree, and there are research gaps in the information available on the relationships
between entrepreneurial, technology and learning orientation in particular. Secondly,
the paper contributes to further theoretical and empirical enquiry by
synthesizing the empirical findings into a three-approach framework. The sequential,
alternatives and complementary approaches to perceiving the relationship between
orientations all suggest areas for further research. The sequential approach could
further contribute by developing better constructs for explaining the orientation of the
firm; while the alternatives approach could increase its relevance to management
through the exploration of contingency settings and comparative studies. The complementary
approach encourages discussion between researchers from the different
streams of literature through the investigation of the relationships. It suggests focus
on the investigation of both universal- and contingency-dependent-orientation
configurations.