ON THE MITIGABILITY OF UNCERTAINTY AND THE CHOICE BETWEEN PREDICTIVE AND NONPREDICTIVE STRATEGY

成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Packard, Mark D.; Clark, Brent B.
署名单位:
Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno; University of Nebraska System
刊物名称:
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT REVIEW
ISSN/ISSBN:
0363-7425
DOI:
10.5465/amr.2018.0198
发表日期:
2020
页码:
766-786
关键词:
FREE WILL ORGANIZATIONAL-STRUCTURE CAPACITY INVESTMENT decision-making prospect-theory EFFECTUATION environment creation illusion MARKET
摘要:
Managers face a critical issue in deciding when to employ a predictive planning approach versus a more adaptive and flexible strategic approach. We suggest that determining which approach is ideal for a given context hangs on the extent to which uncertainty is, or might be, mitigable within that context. To date, however, the mitigability of uncertainty has not been adequately distilled. Here, we take on this issue, distinguishing mitigable ignorance of pertinent but knowable information (i.e., epistemic uncertainty) from immitigable indeterminacy (i.e., aleatory uncertainty). We review the current state of the debate on the existence of free will, because the acceptance or rejection of conscious agents as a true first cause has fundamental implications. A critical examination of the arguments for and against the free will hypothesis land us on the side of voluntarism, which implies immitigable indeterminacy (but not complete unpredictability) wherever conscious actors are involved. Accepting the existence of immitigable or aleatory uncertainty, then, we revisit the determination of strategic logics and produce important theoretical nuance and key boundary conditions in the normative choice between predictive and nonpredictive strategies.