Publication Date:
2012
abstract:
How does service innovation emerge through stabilized changes in delivery routines? Drawing on theories of service innovation and organizational routines, we theoretically frame service innovation as a form of "organizational routines change". Then, through a longitudinal, explorative and inductive case study, we trace the co-evolutionary changes that relate traditional service innovation dimensions with intra-firm and cross-firm delivery routines. We submit that representing service innovation as a change in organizational routines is consistent with its multi-dimensional nature since it simultaneously addresses changes in the service delivery system, the service process, and performance outcomes. Additionally, organizational routines provide a useful lens to assess - faithful to a Schumpeterian tradition - the discontinuous nature, the replicability and the economic impact of service innovation. Finally, and more generally, the paper shows the advantage of adopting a practice lens and an organizational routine-based framework to cast light on how the service innovation process develops according to an interactive model in which planning and emergence are highly intertwined.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Service innovation; organizational routines; longitudinal case study
List of contributors: