Analysis of the Influencing Factors of Organizational Resilience in the ISM Framework: An Exploratory Study Based on Multiple Cases
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. The Connotation of Organizational Resilience
Category of Resilience | Connotation | Characteristics | Applicable Objects |
---|---|---|---|
Engineering Resilience | The ability of a system to recover or return to its original state after a shock or disturbance. The concept emphasizes the equilibrium stability of the system state after a response (Walker, 2006) [50]. | Recoverability, single equilibrium, static stability | Physical System and Engineering Systems |
Ecological Resilience | The possibility of the system developing to another state after a disturbance (which may be lower than the original equilibrium state, may decline, or may move to a better state), it emphasizes the multiple stability of the system (Simmie and Martin, 2010) [51]. | Intermittent equilibrium, multiple equilibria, dynamic stability | Ecosystem |
Adaptive Resilience | Systems minimize the impact of shocks or disturbances by mutual adaptation and co-evolution after being subjected to a shock or disturbance. The concept emphasizes the adaptive capacity of the system (Martin, 2012) [52]. | Complex adaptation, non-equilibrium, dynamic evolution | Organizational System and Economic System |
2.2. Influencing Factors of Organizational Resilience
3. Multi-Case Analysis of Factors Influencing Organizational Resilience
3.1. Case Selection
3.2. Data Collection and Analysis Strategy
3.3. Multi-Case Factor Extraction
4. Research Methodology and Process
4.1. Research Methodology
4.2. Model Building and Calculation Process
4.2.1. Build the Adjacency Matrix
4.2.2. Calculate the Reachable Matrix
4.2.3. Hierarchical Processing of Reachable Matrices
4.2.4. Constructing an ISM of the Factors Influencing Organizational Resilience
5. Importance Analysis of Factors Influencing Organizational Resilience
5.1. Analysis Process of ANP Model
5.1.1. Network Structure Construction of Decision Indicators
5.1.2. ANP Weightless Supermatrix Construction
5.1.3. Weight Supermatrix Construction
5.1.4. Limit Supermatrix Solution
5.2. Establishment of ANP for Factors Influencing Tissue Toughness
5.3. Calculation of the Weights of Factors Influencing Organizational Resilience
5.3.1. Construction of Weightless Supermatrix
5.3.2. Build the Weight Supermatrix
5.3.3. Limit Supermatrix Solution
5.4. Analysis of Results
6. Conclusions and Outlook
6.1. Research Conclusions
6.2. Discussion and Practical Insights
6.3. Research Shortcomings and Outlook
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Example of Original Statement | Conceptualization | Categoryization (Extraction Factors) |
---|---|---|
Our goal is to design a capital structure that leverages various capital levers to maximize returns for our shareholders over the long term. We will combine the strengths and weaknesses of our people to move them to positions that will allow them to perform their duties better. We have created a flat organizational structure to allow for quick and effective communication between organizations and departments. | Capital Structure Personnel Structure Hierarchy | Organizational Structure |
Usually when we encounter a problem that cannot be solved, effective communication with our superiors is the most effective way. Sometimes effective communication between organization members will help us to eliminate misunderstandings, better identify and solve problems, and make the departments more coordinated and work in tandem. When there is a major crisis, we increase the number of communications to help us respond in a timely manner to the crisis that arises. | Communication with superiors Horizontal Communication Frequency of communication | Organizational Communication |
Some issues require specialized PR staff to deal with, and recruit these people in case they are needed. When a business is in crisis, tightening financial resources can help us get through the crisis and help us rise again in the future. There was a time when everyone was experiencing a crisis and pooling the most advantageous resources, or even making resource substitutions, became the source of everyone living and even competing. | Human Resources Financial Resources Material Resources | Organizational Resources |
Effective decision-making by leaders helps us find our way through confusing decisions. At the same time, we sometimes have a lot of hesitation, and the leader’s typography helps us better determine our direction. We all actively encourage our employees to be bold and innovative, and the example and inspiration effect of leaders is the source of passion for employees. Leaders also need to continue to learn so that they can better understand the problems that the business may encounter in the future. | Leadership decisions Leadership Inspiration Leadership Learning | Organizational leadership |
We often reflect dialectically on each step we take, profoundly reflecting on the accuracy and timeliness of our responses, and continuously optimizing our decisions in our reflections. Learning from other companies is an effective way to deal with the crisis, and we will obtain relevant experience from related companies to make up for our shortcomings. Sharing knowledge and experience with members of our organization and other organizations helps us to better communicate, enrich our experience and enhance our capabilities. | Critical Reflection Organizational Acquisition Organizational Sharing | Organizational Learning |
Influencing Factors | Code | Description |
---|---|---|
Organizational Structure | F1 | Organizational structure refers to how work tasks are divided, grouped and coordinated for cooperation. |
Organizational Communication | F2 | Organizational communication refers to the exchange and transfer of information within an organization. These include a wide range of information, such as news, information, knowledge, experience, etc. |
Organizational Resources | F3 | Organizational resources are the indicators of resources and capabilities at the overall level of the enterprise, the application and integration of individual resources, mainly in the corporate culture and spirituality, corporate image and reputation, the organization’s coordination ability, learning ability and resilience. |
Organizational leadership | F4 | Organizational leadership is is an operational process that brings a group of people together to function according to set goals. |
Organizational Learning | F5 | Organizational learning refers to the various actions taken by an organization around information and knowledge skills in order to achieve development goals and improve core competencies; it is the process by which an organization continuously strives to change or redesign itself to adapt to a continuously changing environment. |
Organizational Relationships | F6 | Organizational relationships refer to the status and interrelationship of the organization’s personnel, such as the organization’s institutional set-up and the division of management authority. |
Organizational Competence | F7 | Organizational capability refers to the ability to carry out organizational work and is the ability of a company to transform its various factor inputs into products or services with the same level of productivity or higher quality as its competitors’ inputs. |
Organizational Trust | F8 | Organizational trust refers to the emotional confidence and support that employees hold in their hearts for the organization. |
Organizational Strategy | F9 | Organizational strategy refers to the planning and decision making of the organization regarding the overall, long-term and programmatic goals. It is the planning and decision-making of the organization on the global, long-term and programmatic goals of production and management and sustainable and stable development in order to adapt to the changes in the future environment. |
Business Model | F10 | The business model refers to the various trading relationships and connections between companies, between departments of companies, and even with customers and channels. |
Emotional competence | F11 | Emotional competence means that happiness and sadness are normal human reactions, and that emotions flow naturally in moderation. |
Social Responsibility | F12 | Social responsibility refers to an organization’s responsibility to society. |
Social Capital | F13 | Social capital refers to the associations between individuals or groups—social networks, norms of reciprocity and the resulting trust—and is the resource that people bring to their position in the social structure. |
Threat Perception | F14 | Threat perception refers to an organization’s ability to perceive threats that arise from outside sources. |
Work Passion | F15 | Work passion is defined as a strong tendency of people willing to invest time and energy in their work, with good explanatory power for burnout, creativity, happiness, performance, etc. in the workplace. |
Organizational Commitment | F16 | Organizational commitment is the identification with and trust in the goals and values of the organization to which an individual belongs, and the positive emotional experiences that result. |
Organizational Efficiency | F17 | Organizational efficiency refers to the proportional relationship between the output of social organizations of all levels and types and their managers engaged in management activities and the human, material and financial resources consumed, and is the concrete embodiment of management functions. |
Organizational Change | F18 | Organizational change is the process of adjusting, improving and innovating elements of an organization (such as its management philosophy, work style, organizational structure, staffing, organizational culture and technology, etc.) in a timely manner in response to changes in the internal and external environment. |
Organizational Culture | F19 | Organizational culture refers to an organization’s unique cultural image consisting of its values, beliefs, rituals, symbols, ways of doing things, etc. Simply put, it is the various aspects of a company that are expressed in its daily operations. |
Cognitive Competence | F20 | Cognitive ability refers to the human brain’s ability to process, store and extract information, that is, people’s ability to grasp the composition of things, the relationship between performance and other things, the dynamics of development, the direction of development and basic laws. |
Fi | C (Fi) | D (Fi) | E(Fi) = C(Fi) ∩ D(Fi) |
---|---|---|---|
F1 | 1, 2, 6, 12, 16 | 1 | 1 |
F2 | 2, 6, 12, 16 | 1, 2, 4 | 2 |
F3 | 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19 | 3, 13 | 3, 13 |
F4 | 2, 4, 6, 12, 16. | 4 | 4 |
F5 | 5, 7, 17 | 3, 5, 13 | 5 |
F6 | 6, 12, 16 | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 20 | 6, 16 |
F7 | 7, 17 | 3, 5, 7, 13 | 7 |
F8 | 6, 8, 12, 16 | 8 | 8 |
F9 | 6, 9, 10, 12, 16, 17, 18, 19 | 3, 9, 11, 13, 14, 18, 20 | 9, 18 |
F10 | 10, 17 | 3, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 18, 20 | 10 |
F11 | 6, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 | 11, 20 | 11, 20 |
F12 | 12 | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 20 | 12 |
F13 | 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 16, 17, 18, 19 | 3, 13 | 3, 13 |
F14 | 6, 9, 10, 12, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19 | 11, 14, 20 | 14 |
F15 | 15 | 15 | 15 |
F16 | 6, 11, 16 | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19, 20 | 6, 11, 16 |
F17 | 17 | 3, 5, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 17, 18, 20 | 17 |
F18 | 6, 9, 10, 12, 16, 17, 18, 19 | 3, 9, 11, 14, 15, 18, 20 | 9, 18 |
F19 | 6, 12, 16, 19 | 3, 9, 11, 13, 14, 18, 19, 20 | 19 |
F20 | 6, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 | 11, 20 | 11, 20 |
Factors | Weights | Sort by |
---|---|---|
C11 Organizational Communication | 0.197 | 4 |
C12 Organizational Learning | 0.167 | 7 |
C13 Organizational Commitment | 0.027 | 17 |
C14 Organizational Change | 0.024 | 18 |
C15 Organizational Efficiency | 0.033 | 15 |
C21 Organizational Strategy | 0.168 | 6 |
C22 Business Model | 0.076 | 9 |
C23 Organizational Leadership | 0.072 | 10 |
C31 Organizational Structure | 0.007 | 20 |
C32 Organizational Culture | 0.031 | 16 |
C33 Social Responsibility | 0.018 | 19 |
C41 Organizational Competence | 0.214 | 2 |
C42 Emotional Competence | 0.053 | 14 |
C43 Cognitive Competence | 0.053 | 13 |
C44 Threat Perception | 0.067 | 12 |
C45 Work Passion | 0.080 | 8 |
C51 Organizational Resources | 0.227 | 1 |
C52 Organizational Relationships | 0.213 | 3 |
C53 Social Capital | 0.170 | 5 |
C54 Organizational Trust | 0.068 | 11 |
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Liu, Y.; Chen, R.; Zhou, F.; Zhang, S.; Wang, J. Analysis of the Influencing Factors of Organizational Resilience in the ISM Framework: An Exploratory Study Based on Multiple Cases. Sustainability 2021, 13, 13492. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132313492
Liu Y, Chen R, Zhou F, Zhang S, Wang J. Analysis of the Influencing Factors of Organizational Resilience in the ISM Framework: An Exploratory Study Based on Multiple Cases. Sustainability. 2021; 13(23):13492. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132313492
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiu, Yingqi, Ruijun Chen, Fei Zhou, Shuang Zhang, and Juan Wang. 2021. "Analysis of the Influencing Factors of Organizational Resilience in the ISM Framework: An Exploratory Study Based on Multiple Cases" Sustainability 13, no. 23: 13492. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132313492
APA StyleLiu, Y., Chen, R., Zhou, F., Zhang, S., & Wang, J. (2021). Analysis of the Influencing Factors of Organizational Resilience in the ISM Framework: An Exploratory Study Based on Multiple Cases. Sustainability, 13(23), 13492. https://doi.org/10.3390/su132313492