| Article ID: | iaor201525406 |
| Volume: | 66 |
| Issue: | 2 |
| Start Page Number: | 202 |
| End Page Number: | 218 |
| Publication Date: | Feb 2015 |
| Journal: | Journal of the Operational Research Society |
| Authors: | O'Brien Frances A |
| Keywords: | knowledge management |
This paper presents an exploratory account of how Operational Research/Management Science (OR/MS) practitioners understand their role in supporting an organisational strategy process. The role of strategy support is characterised by five dimensions: the activities supported within the strategy process; the nature of support provided; the orientation of the support provided; the tools used in providing support; and the nature of the relationship between consultant and client. The research draws on case studies of four OR/MS practitioners working as internal and as external consultants. The work of the practitioners is mapped onto the framework and gaps are identified. The research proposes a further dimension, namely, ‘the purpose of the support provided’, and suggests four purposeful support roles adopted by practitioners in supporting strategy within organisations: sensemaking/sensegiving; decision support tool development; problem solving/solution exploration; and process facilitation. The paper concludes with suggestions for further research.