| Article ID: | iaor20063192 |
| Country: | United States |
| Volume: | 14 |
| Issue: | 5 |
| Start Page Number: | 463 |
| End Page Number: | 482 |
| Publication Date: | Sep 2003 |
| Journal: | Organization Science |
| Authors: | Hannan Michael T., Carroll Glenn R., Plos Lszl |
This article develops a formal theory of the structural aspects of organizational change. It concentrates on changes in an organization's architecture, depicted as a code system. It models the common process whereby an initial architectural change prompts other changes in the organization, generating a cascade of changes that represents the full reorganization. The main argument ties centrality of the organizational unit initiating a change to the total time that the organization spends reorganizing and to the associated opportunity costs. The central theorem holds that the expected deleterious effect of a change in architecture on the mortality hazard increases with viscosity and the intricacy of the organizational design.