8.4 Organisational learning and enhanced agility
Leadership in the Knowledge Age centres on anticipating ambiguity and removing discontinuities that hinder responsiveness to change. The leading of change, and the capacity to create or identify opportunities for innovation, has become a factor in how managers undertake their work, and how organisations are structured to respond to new imperatives.
Significant discoveries and technological change cannot be ordered or pre-ordained. The innovation that changes technology may be derived only long after the original 'breakthrough'. Hence great periods of innovation can then be followed by stagnation. However, as organisations recognise the competitive advantage which can be gained in quickly identifying and adopting conceptual breakthroughs, cross-fertilisation of ideas and practical usage have seen a quantum leap in improvement and innovation at an organisational level. Unlike the late Industrial Age, in the Information or Knowledge Age the impact of a final innovation is occurring sooner as organisations realise the speed of converting conceptual ideas into applied realities is in fact an area of competitive advantage.
The incremental change to technology can be on occasions be overtaken by radical or dynamic 'breakthroughs' in technology that quickly alter existing products or processes, and may swiftly alter existing environmental conditions within which future technological innovation occurs. (Lundstedt & Colglazier, 1982:32) The more radical a 'breakthrough', the wider is the base for new or novel innovative efforts to accelerate technology change. (Lundstedt & Colglazier, 1982:54)