Social Barriers to Implementing Continuous Improvement Initiatives

Author
Michael J. Urick, Muyang Li, Selin Konur, Terrance Smith
Region
Europe
North America
Topic
Ethics & Social Justice
Human Resources & Organizational Behavior
Length
30 pages
Keywords
Continuous Improvement
organization culture
operational excellence
grounded theory
social barriers
Student Price
$0.00
Target Audience
Faculty/Researchers
Graduate Students
Undergraduate Students
Executive Education

Organizations report challenges in implementing continuous improvement or operational excellence initiatives as they strive for sustainability, yet few have considered the impact that social barriers have in creating resistance to implementation. Through a qualitative grounded theory method, this study highlights several contributions. First, social barriers are stronger than other challenges to implementing operational excellence. Second, these barriers include interpersonal (e.g., communication challenges, unwillingness to change, and workplace relationships) and organizational (e.g., employee treatment, cultural values, and formal organizational characteristics) issues. This article thus links sustainability to operational excellence and suggests that the greatest barriers to becoming more sustainable are likely social in nature. The study then concludes, in addition to these contributions, with a consideration of limitations and directions for future research.