Humanities & Social Sciences Communications (Aug 2024)

Organizational slack, ambidextrous search and high-tech SMEs’ performance: do strategic orientations matter?

  • Qingwen Bo,
  • Mengxiao Cao,
  • Yan Wang,
  • Yuhuan Xia,
  • Wei Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-03588-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Ambidextrous search behaviors that jointly looking for technological and market knowledge gain attention in the innovation management literature. This study treats the ambidextrous search behaviors as a technology-market search paradox and examines the effect of organizational slack on the paradox and further explore whether this paradox has synergistic effects on performance in high-tech small medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). Besides, by integrating the literature of ambidextrous search and strategic management, we seek to understand the roles of strategic orientations, including growth-oriented and profit-oriented, in SMEs’ technology-market search paradox. Based on panel data of 547 high-tech SMEs, we find that organizational slack promotes both technology and market search, and ambidextrous search separately enhance high-tech SMEs’ performance, while the interaction of technology search and market search is negatively related to performance. Further, a growth-oriented strategy positively moderates the link between organizational slack and ambidextrous search and a profit-oriented strategy reinforces the relationship between organizational slack and technology search. We further enrich search-related and strategic literature.