In search of operational resilience : how and when improvisation matters

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Authors

Essuman, Dominic
Ataburo, Henry
Boso, Nathaniel
Anin, Emmanuel Kwabena
Appiah, Listowel Owusu

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

The need to improvise during supply chain disruptions to enhance operational resilience is ever more critical. Yet, managers appear to lack an understanding of how and when improvisation matters. We apply conservation of resources theory to conceptualize how firms activate spontaneous and creative improvisation during supply chain disruptions and theorize how that relates to operational resilience in low and high supply chain disruption conditions. We test our arguments on primary data from a sample of 256 firms in Ghana. We find that creative improvisation has a positive relationship with operational resilience, and this relationship is stronger in high supply chain disruption conditions. Spontaneous improvisation, on the other hand, is unrelated to operational resilience in both low and high supply chain disruption conditions. These findings indicate that not all types of improvisation contribute to operational resilience, suggesting the need for a nuanced approach to theorizing and applying the improvisation concept in supply chains.

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Keywords

Supply chain disruption, Organizational improvisation, Operational resilience, Conservation of resources theory, Decomposed and contingency model

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Essuman, D., Ataburo, H., Boso, N., Anin, E. K., & Appiah, L. O. (2023). In search of operational resilience: How and when improvisation matters. Journal of Business Logistics, 44, 300–322. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbl.12343.