Ambidexterity traditionally refers to the ability to use both hands with equal skill. In the business context, it describes the capacity to balance and excel in both exploration and exploitation activities. As Dr. Maximilian Lude explains in this video, organizational ambidexterity is a company's ability to optimize its existing core competencies while simultaneously exploring new opportunities.
You can envision it like an acrobat balancing on two ropes at once: one side represents efficiency, and the other innovation. Exploitation involves leveraging and enhancing existing resources and capabilities to maximize efficiency, while exploration entails testing new markets and products to foster innovation.
Exploration encompasses innovation and experimenting with new ideas, while exploitation focuses on refining and enhancing existing capabilities, processes, and products.
The interest in and research on this topic have exploded over the past 20 years. Let us take a closer look.
As we have learned so far, the core idea of ambidexterity is that leaders and their teams must build two entirely different organizational structures simultaneously. These can be envisioned as two fundamentally distinct systems: one for exploration and one for exploitation. The key to our understanding of ambidexterity is recognizing that these systems are inherently inconsistent. Leaders must consistently embrace these inconsistencies and build these divergent structures concurrently to achieve success today and tomorrow.
For leaders and their teams, clarity about the company’s identity is crucial for winning both now and in the future. While establishing ambidextrous structures might be straightforward, the critical factor that determines success or failure is the leader’s and the team's ability to embrace contradictions and paradoxes. The competency to be comfortable with inconsistency and to consistently navigate these contradictions is what defines the most successful ambidextrous organizations.
In conclusion, organizational ambidexterity is crucial for modern companies to navigate the complexities of today’s business landscape. By balancing exploration and exploitation, organizations can drive innovation, remain competitive, and achieve long-term success.
If you want to become an ambidextrous business leader, explore our programs at Tomorrow University. Learn more about our Impact MBA, Master's program, or Impact Certificates on Leadership and how you can be part of the next generation of leaders driving progress and innovation.
Dr. Maximilian Lude, Professor of Innovation & Strategy and program director of Responsible Entrepreneurship & Management at Tomorrow University, focuses on the nexus of innovation and marketing, including business model innovation and innovation culture, with a particular interest in SMEs and family firms. His work has been published in reputable journals like Entrepreneurship Theory and Practice and the Journal of Business Research. Additionally, Maximilian contributes as a reviewer and editorial board member for several academic journals. He also leads philoneos GmbH, a Munich-based consultancy specializing in strategy and innovation for family businesses.
Read more about Max’s work here, and follow him on LinkedIn here.
Ambidextrie im Mittelstand," LinkedIn Post by Dr. Maximilian Lude.
Bechthold, L., Lude, M., & Prügl, R. (2021). "Crisis Favors the Prepared Firm: How Organizational Ambidexterity Relates to Perceptions of Organizational Resilience." IGI Global.
Tushman, M. L. (2020). "Ambidextrie Gestern und Heute." Fachmagazin Zeitschrift Organisations Entwicklung, 4/2020, pp. 4–9.