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THE STRATEGY-AS-PRACTICE THROUGH THE LENS OF THE MICROFOUNDATIONS OF DYNAMIC CAPABILITIES

A ESTRATÉGIA COMO PRÁTICA ATRAVÉS DA LENTE DOS MICROFUNDAMENTOS DAS CAPACIDADES DINÂMICAS

LA ESTRATEGIA COMO PRÁCTICA A TRAVÉS DEL LENTE DE LOS MICROFUNDAMENTOS DE LAS CAPACIDADES DINÁMICAS

ABSTRACT

Organizational practices are the link between the micro and the macro level of organizations. At the micro level we find theorists as strategy-as-practice, focused on strategy as a social practice, strategies and day-to-day activity, concerned with strategizing. At the macro level we find theories such as dynamic capabilities with a focus on routines and capabilities at the organizational level. This study correlates two distinct perspectives, the first strategy-as-practice, with its roots in social practices, the second dynamic capabilities, which has its economic roots. The study aims to analyze strategy-as-practice, through the lens of the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. The results demonstrate the organizational heterogeneities responsible for the development of dynamic capabilities. It is also shown that practical social activities are decisive in the process of building organizational strategies, creating armored dynamic capabilities.

Keywords:
Strategy-as-practice; Dynamic capabilities; Heterogeneous capabiblities; Senzing; seizing and transforming.

As práticas organizacionais são o elo entre os níveis micro e macro das organizações. No nível micro, encontramos teóricos como “Estratégia-Como-Prática”, focados na estratégia como prática social, estratégias e atividade cotidiana, preocupados com a estratégia. No nível macro, encontramos teorias como capacidades dinâmicas com foco em rotinas e capacidades no nível organizacional. Este estudo correlaciona duas perspectivas distintas, a primeira estratégia como prática, com suas raízes nas práticas sociais; a segunda, como capacidades dinâmicas, que tem raízes econômicas. O estudo tem como objetivo analisar a estratégia como prática, através das lentes das microfundamentações das capacidades dinâmicas. Os resultados demonstraram as heterogeneidades organizacionais responsáveis pelo desenvolvimento de capacidades dinâmicas. Mostra-se também que as atividades sociais práticas são decisivas no processo de construção das estratégias organizacionais, criando capacidades dinâmicas blindadas.

Palavras-chave
Estratégia como prática; Capacidades dinâmicas; Capacidades heterogêneas; Senzing; seizing e transforming.


Las prácticas organizacionales son el vínculo entre el nivel micro y macro de las organizaciones. En el nivel micro encontramos teóricos como Estrategia-Como-Práctica, enfocados en la estrategia como práctica social, estrategias y actividad del día a día, preocupados por la elaboración de estrategias. A nivel macro, encontramos teorías como las capacidades dinámicas con un enfoque en las rutinas y capacidades a nivel organizacional. Este estudio correlaciona dos perspectivas distintas, la primera estrategia-como-práctica, con sus raíces en las prácticas sociales, la segunda, las capacidades dinámicas, que tiene sus raíces económicas. El estudio tiene como objetivo analizar la estrategia como práctica, a través de la lente de los microfundamentos de las capacidades dinámicas. Los resultados demostraron las heterogeneidades organizacionales responsables del desarrollo de capacidades dinámicas. También se muestra que las actividades sociales prácticas son decisivas en el proceso de construcción de estrategias organizacionales, creando capacidades dinámicas blindadas.

Palabras clave:
Estrategia como práctica; Capacidades dinámicas; Capacidades heterogéneas; Senzing; seizing y transforming.


INTRODUCTION

The understanding of the strategies presented at the macro organizational level (KOUAMÉ; LANGLEY, 2018KOUAMÉ, S.; LANGLEY, A. Relating microprocesses to macro-outcomes in qualitative strategy process and practice research. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 559-581, 2018.; SALVATO; RERUP, 2011SALVATO, C.; RERUP, C. Beyond collective entities: Multilevel research on organizational routines and capabilities. Journal of Management, v. 37, n.2, p. 468-490, 2011.), are directly related to the activities that are performed at the micro level (JOHNSON; LANGLEY; MELIN; WHITTINGTON, 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.). The description of the linkage of micro-organizational processes to respond to results at the macro level are real challenges for organizational studies (JOHNSON et al., 2007JOHNSON, G.; LANGLEY, A.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON, R. The Practice of Strategy: Research directions and resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.; KOUAMÉ; LANGLEY, 2018KOUAMÉ, S.; LANGLEY, A. Relating microprocesses to macro-outcomes in qualitative strategy process and practice research. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 559-581, 2018.; PETTIGREW; WOODMAN; CAMERON, 2001PETTIGREW, A. M.; WOODMAN, R. W.; CAMERON, K. S. Studying organizational change and development: Challenges for future research. Academy of Management Journal, v. 44, n. 4, p. 697-713, 2001.). In order to understand the organizational strategies, it is necessary to leave the macro level and be prepared to get involved with the development of the strategies that were built at the micro levels of organizational analysis (JOHNSON et al., 2007JOHNSON, G.; LANGLEY, A.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON, R. The Practice of Strategy: Research directions and resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.; KOUAMÉ; LANGLEY, 2018KOUAMÉ, S.; LANGLEY, A. Relating microprocesses to macro-outcomes in qualitative strategy process and practice research. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 559-581, 2018.).

The collective heuristic, such as organizational performance, is justified in terms of actions and interactions of lower level entities (FELIN et al., 2012FELIN, T.; FOSS, N. J.; HEIMERIKS, K. H.; MADSEN, T. L. Microfoundations of routines and capabilities: Individuals, processes, and structure. Journal of Management Studies, v. 49, n. 8, p. 1351-1374, 2012.). In turn, micro-entities can be influenced by macro entities, Coleman's “bathtub” (1990) illustrates this perspective.

Interventions designed to change a variable at the macro level are often done at levels below those of the system as a whole (COLEMAN, 1990COLEMAN, J.S. Foundations of Social Theory. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. 1990.). Building robust, reliable and adaptable capabilities requires significant knowledge of what is happening at microeconomic levels, such as learning mechanisms and responses to practitioners' needs (FOSS et al., 2010FOSS, N. J.; HUSTEDK, K.; MICHAILOVA, S. Governing Knowledge Sharing in Organizations: Levels of Analysis, Governance Mechanisms, and Research Directions. Journal of Management Studies, v. 47, n. 3, p. 455-482, 2010.). The study of strategies-as-practice, presents itself as a perspective, which can contribute to the identification of micro activities that give rise to macro strategies (FOSS et al., 2010FOSS, N. J.; HUSTEDK, K.; MICHAILOVA, S. Governing Knowledge Sharing in Organizations: Levels of Analysis, Governance Mechanisms, and Research Directions. Journal of Management Studies, v. 47, n. 3, p. 455-482, 2010.; JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; PETTIGREW et al., 2001PETTIGREW, A. M.; WOODMAN, R. W.; CAMERON, K. S. Studying organizational change and development: Challenges for future research. Academy of Management Journal, v. 44, n. 4, p. 697-713, 2001.; WHITTINGTON, 1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996., 2002WHITTINGTON, R. Practice perspectives on strategy: unifying and developing a field. Academy of Management Conference Proceedings, Denver, August, 2002.).

Practice is the link between the micro and the macro level (WHITTINGTON, 2002WHITTINGTON, R. Practice perspectives on strategy: unifying and developing a field. Academy of Management Conference Proceedings, Denver, August, 2002.). At the micro level we find theorists like strategy-as-practice (WHITTINGTON, 1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996.; JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.), focused on social strategy-as-practice, with strategies and day-to-day activity, concerned with strategizing. At the macro level we find theories as dynamic capabilities (EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000.; HELFAT, 2000HELFAT, C. The Evolution of Firm Capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v.21, n. (Special issue, Oct-Nov), 2000.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.; TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.), with a focus on routines and capabilities at the organizational level.

This study seeks to correlate two distinct perspectives, the first of which is strategy-as-practice, with its roots in social and socio-cultural practices, the second dynamic capabilities, which has its economic/ financial roots.

In the view of strategy-as-practice in the view of (JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.), strategy is understood as a flow of organizational activities, in which thinking and acting, formulation and implementation are suppressed by strategic practice. The strategy-as-practice has three categories: practices, praxis and practitioners (JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2019JARZABKOWSKI, P. ; LÊ, J. ; BALOGUN, J. The social practice of coevolving strategy and structure to realize mandated radical change. Academy of Management Journal, v. 62, n. 3, p. 850-882, 2019.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.; WHITTINGTON, 1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996., 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006.).

In the view of dynamic capabilities (EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000.; HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.), the study of dynamic capabilities becomes important for analyzing how organizations are renewing their strategies, capabilities and resources, for the creation of competitive advantages in a dynamic environment (AREND; BROMILEY, 2009AREND, R. J.; BROMILEY, P. Assessing the dynamic capabilities view: Spare change, everyone? Strategic Organization, v. 7, n. 1, p. 75-90, 2009.; HELFAT; PETERAF, 2009HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Understanding dynamic capabilities: progress along a developmental path. Strategic Organization, v. 7, n. 1, p. 91-102, 2009.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.; TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007., 2017TEECE, D.J. Business models and dynamic capabilities. Long Range Planning, v. 51, n. 1, p. 40-49, 2017.; WILDEN, DEVINNEY; DOWLING, 2016WILDEN, R.; DEVINNEY, T. M.; DOWLING, G. R. The Architecture of Dynamic Capability Research: Identifying the Building Blocks of a Configurational Approach. Academy of Management Annals, v. 10, n.1, p. 997-1076, 2016.).

The process of operationalizing dynamic capabilities is operationalized through its microfoundations that have three dimensions: senzing, seizing and transforming (HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.). Its operationalization aims to analyze the origins of dynamic capabilities, in order to build strong, robust, and armored capabilities, providing long-term competitive advantage (HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; PETERAF, 1993PETERAF, M. The cornerstones of competitive advantage: a resource-based view. Strategic Management Journal, v. 14, n. 3, p. 179-191, 1993.; PETERAF et al., 2013PETERAF, M.; DI STEFANO, G.; VERONA, G. The elephant in the room of dynamic capabilities: Bringing two diverging conversations together. Strategic Management Journal, v. 34, n. 12, p. 1389-1410, 2013.; PETERAF; TSOUKAS 2017PETERAF, M.; TSOUKAS, H. Rethinking dynamic capabilities: How differences in understanding the dynamic capabilities construct may be reconciled through process research. In J. Sandberg, L. Rouleau, A. Langley, and H. Tsoukas (Eds.), Skillful Performance: Enacting Capabilities, Knowledge, Competence, and Expertise in Organizations, p. 160-183. Oxford University Press, 2017.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.; TEECE 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.).

The study of the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities (senzing, seizing and transforming) through the categories of strategy-as-practice (practices, praxis and practitioners) indicates a successful path to identify the origins of dynamic capabilities (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.).

In the dynamic environment where organizations are inserted (EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.), heterogeneity and variations in organizational practices are common (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.). Organizations are systems that are adaptable to the environment, requiring practical activities as well as unique strategies in order to respond to the constantly changing environment (EISENHARDT; BROWN, 1999EISENHARDT, K. M.; BROWN, S. L. Patching: restitching business portfolios in dynamic markets. Harvard Business Review, v. 77, n. 3, p. 72-82, 1999.; JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; JARZABKOWSKI, et al., 2019; PASCALE, 1999PASCALE, R.T. Surfing the edge of chaos. Sloan Management Review, Spring, p. 83-94. 1999.).

Although the economic perspectives (dynamic capabilities) and socio-cultural (strategy-as-practice) are so different, it is possible to correlate the theories, through microfoundations, so that the socio-cultural contributes to the analysis of the economic (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.).

The strategy-as-practice has been proposed as a means of deepening the study of social complexity and unpacking dynamism in the theory of dynamic capabilities (AMBROSINI et al., 2007AMBROSINI, V.; BOWMAN, C.; BURTON-TAYLOR, S. B. Inter-team coordination activities as a source of customer satisfaction. Human Relations, v. 60, n. 1, p. 59-98, 2007.; JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003., 2007JOHNSON, G.; LANGLEY, A.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON, R. The Practice of Strategy: Research directions and resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.; REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.), presenting a way of how social practices, the daily routines of organizational actors, can contribute to the process of building the dynamic capabilities of organizations (KOUAMÉ; LANGLEY, 2018KOUAMÉ, S.; LANGLEY, A. Relating microprocesses to macro-outcomes in qualitative strategy process and practice research. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 559-581, 2018.; HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; Hernes and SCHULTZ 2020HERNES, T.; SCHULTZ, M. Translating the Distant into the Present: How actors address distant past and future events through situated activity. Organization Theory, v.1, n. 1, p. 1-20, 2020.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003., TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.). “Frequently lacking is an appreciation of the microfoundations, which provide an explanation for the origins and development of dynamic capabilities” (FALLON-BYRNE; HARNEYFALLON-BYRNE, L.; HARNEY, B. Microfoundations of dynamic capabilities for innovation: a review and research agenda. Irish Journal of Management, v. 36, n. 1, p. 21-31. 2017., p. 23).

In this context, this study has as its main objective "to analyze strategy-as-practice, through the lens of the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities".

The literature is concerned with the marginalization of research on strategy-as-practice in not providing academics and professionals, as the processes and practices of the lower level (engaged by individuals and groups) are connected to the macro level of the organization (process level and results, including strategy, organizational capabilities, and performance) (JOHNSON et al., 2007JOHNSON, G.; LANGLEY, A.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON, R. The Practice of Strategy: Research directions and resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.; KOUAMÉ; LANGLEY, 2018KOUAMÉ, S.; LANGLEY, A. Relating microprocesses to macro-outcomes in qualitative strategy process and practice research. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 559-581, 2018.; PETTIGREW; WOODMAN; CAMERON, 2001PETTIGREW, A. M.; WOODMAN, R. W.; CAMERON, K. S. Studying organizational change and development: Challenges for future research. Academy of Management Journal, v. 44, n. 4, p. 697-713, 2001.; SZULANSKI; PORAC; DOZ, 2005SZULANSKI, G., Porac, J.; DOZ, Y. The challenge of strategy process research. Advances in Strategic Management, v. 22, n. xiii-xxxvi, 2005.).

Although studies on strategy-as-practice can aggregate strategic content or capabilities, there is still little research that seeks to establish this relationship between dynamic capabilities and strategy-as-practice (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.). A dynamic view of strategy, needs to go beyond simple correlations between variables and explain the mechanisms of how certain conditions, of social practice, interact to produce certain organizational assets (BROMILEY, 2005BROMILEY, P. The Behavioral Foundation of Strategic Management. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2005.; CAMPBELL-HUNT, 2007CAMPBELL-HUNT, C. Complexity in practice. Human Relations, v. 60, n. 5, p. 59-98. 2007.; KING, 2000KING, A. Thinking with Bourdieu Against Bourdieu: A ‘Practical’ Critique of the Habitus, Sociological Theory, v. 18, n. 3, p. 417-433, 2000.; TSOUKAS; KNUDSEN, 2002TSOUKAS, H.; KNUDSEN, C. The conduct of strategy research. In A. Pettigrew, H. Thomas; R. Whittington (Eds.), Handbook of Strategy and Management: 413-437. London: SAGE, 2002.; WHITTINGTON; YAKIS-DOUGLAS, 2020WHITTINGTON, R.; YAKIS-DOUGLAS, B. The Grand Challenge of Corporate Control: Opening strategy to the normative pressures of networked professional. Organization Theory. v. 1, n.4, p. 1-19, 2020.).

An increasing group of scholars began to use a practical lens to understand the problems of strategy development in organizations, arising the need for new studies that address and deepen organizational practices, (JARZABKOWSKI; KAPLAN, 2010JARZABKOWSKI, P.; KAPLAN, S. Taking “strategy-as-practice” across the Atlantic. In: Baum, J. A. C.; Lampel, J. Advances in Strategy Management - v. 27, The Globalization of Strategy Research. Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2010. p. 51-71. 2010.).

1 SOCIAL STRATEGY-AS-PRACTICE

The study of strategy-as-practice leads us to a movement focused on social practices, which has been gaining increasing prominence by social science scholars, such as Bourdieu (1990)BOURDIEU, P. The Logic of Practice. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1990., Giddens (1984)GIDDENS, A. The Constitution of Society. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 1984., Schatzki (2002)SCHATZKI, T.R. The Site of the Social. University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2002. and Sztompka (1991)SZTOMPKA, P. Society in Action: The theory of social becoming. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 1991.. Organizational actors (practitioners) are agents of action, responsible for the construction of reality, which is carried out through the dialectic between organizational actors and the environment itself (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004., 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.).

In the 90s, strategy-as-practice began to be the focus of some researchers (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004., 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.; WHITTINGTON, 1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996.). However, Smircich and Stubbart (1985)SMIRCICH, L.; STUBBART, C. Strategic Management in an Enactecd World. Academy of Management Review, v. 10, n. 4, p. 724-736, 1985. had already presented a study with a more practical perspective of strategy, when they considered that “environments are staged through social construction and the interaction processes of organized actors”, highlighting that people, strategists who act at different levels and positions of the organization, with their actions, which will determine how the strategy will be implemented.

Whittington (2006)WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., analyzes the different perspectives of strategy (politics, planning, process and practice), stating that the focus of the latter as a practical perspective is a strategy as a social practice, where the practitioners of the strategy can act and interact. Social strategy-as-practice occurs much more through tacit knowledge than through formal or universal knowledge (JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.).

Globalization brought about the need for investigations into the actions of strategy-as-practices (BALOGUN et al., 2003BALOGUN, J.; HUFF, A. S.; JOHNSON, P. Three responses to the methodological challenges of studying strategizing. Journal of Management Studies, v.40, n. 1, p. 197-224, 2003., PETRICEVIC; TEECE, 2019PETRICEVIC, O.; TEECE, D. The structural reshaping of globalization: Implications for strategic sectors, profiting from innovation, and the multinational enterprise, Journal of International Business Studies. v. 50, n. 9, p. 1487-1512, 2019.). The globalization process presents rapid reformulations of the economic order in organizations (PETRICEVIC; TEECE, 2019PETRICEVIC, O.; TEECE, D. The structural reshaping of globalization: Implications for strategic sectors, profiting from innovation, and the multinational enterprise, Journal of International Business Studies. v. 50, n. 9, p. 1487-1512, 2019.), causing the need to know the process of building dynamic capabilities (TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.), which begins at the micro level, in order to shield the capabilities built by organizations.

Strategy-as-practice is the study of practices performed by its practitioners in the place where they occur, in the context in which they are inserted (BALOGUN et al., 2003BALOGUN, J.; HUFF, A. S.; JOHNSON, P. Three responses to the methodological challenges of studying strategizing. Journal of Management Studies, v.40, n. 1, p. 197-224, 2003.; BURGELMAN; FLOYD; LAAMANEN; MAINTAINE; VAARA; WHITTINGTON, 2018; HAMBRICK, 2004HAMBRICK, D. C. The disintegration of strategic management: It’s time to consolidate our gains. Strategic Organization, v. 2, n. 1, p. 91-98, 2004.; JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.; SAMRA-FREDRICKS, 2003SAMRA-FREDERICKS, D. Strategizing as lived experience and strategists’ everyday efforts to shape strategic direction. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n.1, p. 141-174, 2003.; SEIDL; WHITTINGTON, 2014SEIDL, D.; WHITTINGTON, R. Enlarging the Strategy-as-Practice Research Agenda: Towards Taller and Flatter Ontologies. Organization Studies, v. 35, n. 10, p. 1407-1421, 2014.). The strategy-as-practice highlights the way in which the middle manager (FLOYD; WOOLDRIDGE, 2000FLOYD, S. W.; WOOLDRIDGE, B. Building Strategy from the Middle: Reconceptualizing Strategy Process. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2000.; ROULEAU, 2005ROULEAU, L. Micro-practices of strategic sensemaking and sensegiving. Journal of Management Studies, v. 42, p. 1413-1441, 2005.; ROULEAU; BALOGUN, 2011ROULEAU, L.; BALOGUN, J. Middle managers, strategic sensemaking, and discursive competence. Journal of Management Studies, v. 48, n. 5, p. 953-983, 2011.), carries out his strategies, emphasizing the concept of strategizing, which relates the performance of activities with strategy development by strategists (JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2016JARZABKOWSKI, P.; LÊ, J.; SPEE, P. Taking a Strong Process Approach to Analyzing Qualitative Data. In Ann Langley, Haridimos Tsoukas (Eds): The SAGE Handbook of Process Organization Studies, London; Thousand Oaks, California; New Delhi; Singapore: Sage Publishing. 2016.; WHITTINGTON, 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007., 2017WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy as practice, process and institution: Converging on activity. In A. Langley and H. Tsoukas (Eds.), Sage Handbook of Process Organization Studies, p. 387-401. London, England: Sage, 2017., WHITTINGTON et al., 2004).

The strategy-as-practice has some points of confluence. This is because in the study of strategy there is the simultaneous interest of the organizational strategy with the practical, praxis and practitioner themes and their connections (JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.). The strategy comes to be understood as a flow of organizational activities, in which thinking and acting, formulation and implementation are suppressed by strategic practice (JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.; JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.).

Strategic activities (at the macro or micro level of the organization) and the socio-cultural context are interconnected (JOHNSON et al., 2007JOHNSON, G.; LANGLEY, A.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON, R. The Practice of Strategy: Research directions and resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.). The constructions of practices involve cognitive, behavioral, procedural, discursive, motivational and physical activities are combined, coordinated and adapted, generating new practices (JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2007JARZABKOWSKI, P.; BALOGUN, J.; SEIDL, D. Strategizing: The challenges of a practice perspective. Human Relations, v. 60, n. 1, p. 5-27, 2007.; JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2012JARZABKOWSKI, P. A.; LÊ, J. K.; FELDMAN, M. S. Toward a theory of coordinating: Creating coordinating mechanisms in practice. Organization Science, v. 23, n. 1, p. 907-927, 2012.; JOHNSON et al., 2007JOHNSON, G.; LANGLEY, A.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON, R. The Practice of Strategy: Research directions and resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.).

Strategy-as-practice presents itself as a field in which its evolution took place in a quick and enriching manner, providing the generation of theory that analyzes the way strategic processes are carried out in their daily organizational life (VAARA; WHITTINGTON, 2012VAARA, E.; WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy as practice: Taking social practices seriously. Academy of Management Annals, v. 6, n. 1, p. 285-336, 2012.).

Practices are understood by Vaara and Whittington (2012)VAARA, E.; WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy as practice: Taking social practices seriously. Academy of Management Annals, v. 6, n. 1, p. 285-336, 2012. as tools, norms and strategic procedures that give rise to organizational strategies. The artifacts that contribute to strategy practices and decision-making processes involve meetings, spreadsheets, graphical representations, flip-charts, strategic events and reviews that will contribute to strategic processes (JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2019JARZABKOWSKI, P. ; LÊ, J. ; BALOGUN, J. The social practice of coevolving strategy and structure to realize mandated radical change. Academy of Management Journal, v. 62, n. 3, p. 850-882, 2019.; JARZABKOWSKI; SEIDL, 2008JARZABKOWSKI, P.; SEIDL, D. The role of meetings in the social practice of strategy, Organization Studies, v. 29, n. 1, p. 1391-1426, 2008.; JARZABKOWSKI; SPEE, 2009JARZABKOWSKI, P.; SPEE, A. P. Strategy-as-practice: A review and future directions for the field. International Journal of Management Reviews, v. 11, n. 1, p. 69-95, 2009.; VAARA; WHITTINGTON, 2012VAARA, E.; WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy as practice: Taking social practices seriously. Academy of Management Annals, v. 6, n. 1, p. 285-336, 2012.).

According to Stander and Pretorius (2016)STANDER, K.; PRETORIUS, M. The next step in the strategy-as-practice evolution: A comparative typology matrix. Acta Commercii - Independent Research Journal in the Management Sciences; v. 16, n. 1, p. 1-11, 2016., corroborating with Johnson et al., (2003)JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003. and Whittington (2002WHITTINGTON, R. Practice perspectives on strategy: unifying and developing a field. Academy of Management Conference Proceedings, Denver, August, 2002., 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.), the strategy-as-practice is positioned as a moderator who seeks to explain the practice or doing of the strategy, instead of getting stuck in theory, examining the social practice known as strategy.

The importance of strategy-as-practice lies in allowing us to examine what is really necessary for organizational goals to be successfully achieved. Strategy-as-practice can be associated with knowledge, learning and, thus, be responsible for better organizational performance, through the flow of activities, practices and organizational actors, articulated by middle management.

2 DYNAMIC CAPABILITIES AND THEIR CONCEPTS

Dynamic capabilities take into account the role of dynamism in the environment (EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000.; HELFAT, 2007HELFAT, C. E. Dynamic Capabilities: understanding strategic change in organizations. Blackwell, Malden, 2007.; TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.) in determining competitive advantage (DURAND; VAARA, 2009DURAND, R.; VAARA, E. Causation, counterfactuals, and competitive advantage. Strategic Management Journal, v. 30, n. 12, p. 1245-1264, 2009.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.). The way in which organizations react to this dynamism over time, whether through routines, processes, or even through other capacities, allowing the organization to reach new configurations of resources and capacities (DURAND; VAARA, 2009DURAND, R.; VAARA, E. Causation, counterfactuals, and competitive advantage. Strategic Management Journal, v. 30, n. 12, p. 1245-1264, 2009.; EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000.; HELFAT, 2007HELFAT, C. E. Dynamic Capabilities: understanding strategic change in organizations. Blackwell, Malden, 2007.; TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.).

In a competitive market, where the scenario is constantly changing, dynamic capabilities emerge to contribute to understanding competitive advantage (HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; PETRICEVIC; TEECE, 2019PETRICEVIC, O.; TEECE, D. The structural reshaping of globalization: Implications for strategic sectors, profiting from innovation, and the multinational enterprise, Journal of International Business Studies. v. 50, n. 9, p. 1487-1512, 2019.). Dynamic capabilities are the skills of organizations to integrate, build and reconfigure competencies internally and externally, to address a rapidly changing environment (TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.).

Eisenhardt and Martin (2000)EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000. conceptualize dynamic capabilities as the organization's processes that use resources - specifically the processes to integrate, reconfigure, win and release resources - to combine and even create market changes. According to Eisenhardt and Martin (2000)EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000., dynamic capabilities are the organizational and strategic routines by which organizations achieve new configurations of resources as markets emerge, collide, divide, evolve and die.

According to Peteraf et al., (2013)PETERAF, M.; DI STEFANO, G.; VERONA, G. The elephant in the room of dynamic capabilities: Bringing two diverging conversations together. Strategic Management Journal, v. 34, n. 12, p. 1389-1410, 2013. the seminal study by Teece et al., (1997)TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997. presents a concept linked to the economic area and is related to a highly dynamic environment, while the concept of Eisenhardt and Martin (2000)EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000. is more procedural, applied to a moderately dynamic environment. Capacity is directly linked to the change that provides for redeployment and reconfiguration of organizational resources, meeting the demands of its customers (ZAHRA; GEORGE 2002ZAHRA, S.; GEORGE, G. Absorptive capacity: A review, reconceptualization, and extension. Academy of Management Review, v. 27, n. 2, p. 185-203, 2002.), in a purposeful way, dynamic capabilities can create extend or even modify organizational resources (HELFAT et al., 2007HELFAT, C.; FINKELSTEIN, S.; MITCHELL, W.; PETERAF, M. A.; SINGH, H.; TEECE, D. J.; WINTER, S. G. Dynamic capabilities. Resource-based change in organizations. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 2007.).

Dynamic capabilities occur in the interaction between the organization and practitioners at all organizational levels, who take advantage of their creative potential to provide opportunities in the generation of assets for the organization (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.), a process that is developed continuously over time (TEECE 2012TEECE, D. J. Dynamic capabilities: Routines versus entrepreneurial action. Journal of Management Studies, v. 49, n. 8, p. 1395-1401, 2012.). Dynamic capabilities provide the improvement of the organization's operational routines (WILHELM et al., 2015WILHELM, H.; SCHLOMER, M.; MAURER, I. How dynamic capabilities affect the effectiveness and efficiency of operating routines under high and low levels of environmental dynamism. British Academy of Management, v. 26, n. 2, p. 327-345, 2015.), constantly seek to seize opportunities and survive the threats presented in the dynamic environment in which organizations are inserted.

Dynamic capabilities become an important theory for the analysis of strategic renewals, developed in order to explain how to achieve growth or even sustain competitive advantage in the face of the dynamism of the environment (AREND; BROMILEY, 2009AREND, R. J.; BROMILEY, P. Assessing the dynamic capabilities view: Spare change, everyone? Strategic Organization, v. 7, n. 1, p. 75-90, 2009.; ARORA-JONSSON, BRUNSSON; HASSE, 2020ARORA-JONSSON, S.; BRUNSSON, N.; HASSE, R. Where Does Competition Come From? The role of organization. Organization Theory, v. 1, n. 1, p. 1-24, 2020.; HELFAT; PETERAF, 2009HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Understanding dynamic capabilities: progress along a developmental path. Strategic Organization, v. 7, n. 1, p. 91-102, 2009.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.; TEECE 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007., 2017TEECE, D.J. Business models and dynamic capabilities. Long Range Planning, v. 51, n. 1, p. 40-49, 2017., 2018; WILDEN et al., 2016WILDEN, R.; DEVINNEY, T. M.; DOWLING, G. R. The Architecture of Dynamic Capability Research: Identifying the Building Blocks of a Configurational Approach. Academy of Management Annals, v. 10, n.1, p. 997-1076, 2016.).

The competitive advantage lies in managerial and organizational processes (activities, routines, patterns of current practice and learning), (BURGELMAN et al., 2018BURGELMAN, R. A.; FLOYD, S. W.; LAAMANEN, T.; MANTERE, S.; VAARA, E.; WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy processes and practice: Dialogues and intersections. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 531-558, 2018.; JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.; JARZABKOWSKI; SPEE, 2009JARZABKOWSKI, P.; SPEE, A. P. Strategy-as-practice: A review and future directions for the field. International Journal of Management Reviews, v. 11, n. 1, p. 69-95, 2009.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.; SEIDL; WHITTINGTON, 2014SEIDL, D.; WHITTINGTON, R. Enlarging the Strategy-as-Practice Research Agenda: Towards Taller and Flatter Ontologies. Organization Studies, v. 35, n. 10, p. 1407-1421, 2014.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006.; 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.); shaped by the positions of specific resources/ assets (technological, complementary, financial assets, reputation, structure, institutional and market), the strategic alternative paths available for organization and the opportunities presented by technology and the market (TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.).

Dynamic capabilities are not limited to specific organizational capabilities as a form of competitive advantage, their focus is on the process by which the organization develops and renews its competence. The essence of the dynamic capabilities of its competitive advantage, according to Teece et al., (1997)TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997. is based on the tripod of processes, positions and paths.

Dynamic capabilities visualize the competitive advantage resulting from high operational performance routines within an organization, shaped by process and positions (HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.). Environmental dynamism forces organizations to shape themselves based on internal resources, building and reconfiguring their assets, in order to adapt to market changes. The market is unpredictable, factors such as values, culture, organizational experiences, distinctive skills and capacity in general, cannot be acquired, they must be built (EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.).

In order to operationalize the process of building dynamic capabilities, Teece (2007)TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007. proposed a way of identifying the origins of dynamic capabilities through microfoundations. The study by Teece (2007)TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007. provided a visualization of the operationalization of the studies of dynamic capabilities, which we will analyze in the next sections first, which are microfoundations and then analyze the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities.

3 PERSPECTIVES AND CONCEPTIONS OF MICROFOUNDATIONS

In recent years, interest in studies on microfoundations has increased (POWELL; RERUP, 2017POWELL, W. W.; RERUP, C. Opening the black box: The microfoundations of institutions. In R. Greenwood, C. Oliver, T. B. Lawrence, and R. E. Meyer (Eds.), The Sage Handbook of Organizational Institutionalism (2nd ed.). Thousand Oaks: Sage, 2017.), mainly in disciplines such as administration, economics, political sciences and sociology (HAACK, SIEWEKE; WESSEL, 2020HAACK, P.; SIEWEKE, J.; WESSEL, L. Microfoundations and Multi-Level Research on Institutions. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of Institutions, v. 65(A), p. 11-40, Bingley, UK: Emerald, 2020.).

Current research on dynamic capabilities has evolved from a macro-level view to analyze its foundations at the micro level (AMBROSINI; BOWMAN, 2009AMBROSINI, V.; BOWMAN, C. What are dynamic capabilities and are they a useful construct in strategic management? International Journal of Management Reviews, v. 11, n. 1, p. 29-49, 2009.; HELFAT et al., 2007HELFAT, C.; FINKELSTEIN, S.; MITCHELL, W.; PETERAF, M. A.; SINGH, H.; TEECE, D. J.; WINTER, S. G. Dynamic capabilities. Resource-based change in organizations. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 2007.; KOUAMÉ; LANGLEY, 2018KOUAMÉ, S.; LANGLEY, A. Relating microprocesses to macro-outcomes in qualitative strategy process and practice research. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 559-581, 2018.; PETRICEVIC; TEECE 2019PETRICEVIC, O.; TEECE, D. The structural reshaping of globalization: Implications for strategic sectors, profiting from innovation, and the multinational enterprise, Journal of International Business Studies. v. 50, n. 9, p. 1487-1512, 2019.; REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.; 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.). Microfoundations are described as processes and routines implicit in dynamic capabilities (HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; PETRICEVIC; TEECE, 2019PETRICEVIC, O.; TEECE, D. The structural reshaping of globalization: Implications for strategic sectors, profiting from innovation, and the multinational enterprise, Journal of International Business Studies. v. 50, n. 9, p. 1487-1512, 2019.; TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.; 2009TEECE, D. J. Dynamic Capabilities & Strategic Management. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.).

Microfoundations are not a new topic, studies in the 1960s already addressed the theme when economists began to discuss how to link micro and macroeconomics, such as Hayek (1948)HAYEK, F. A. Individualism and Economic Order. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1948., in their studies at the Austrian school of economic thought.

The microfoundations were also in the studies of Coleman (1964)COLEMAN, J. S. Collective decisions. Sociological Inquiry, v. 34, n. 2, p. 166-81, 1964., Lazarsfeld and Menzel (1970)LAZARSFELD, P. F.; MENZEL, H. On the Relation Between Individual and Collective Properties. In A. Etzioni (eds), A Sociological Reader on Complex Organizations. London: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970. and Popper (1957)POPPER, K. The Open Society and its Enemies. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1957., who studied the philosophy and sociology of the influence of the collective and the individual in society. They still have Barnard (1938)BARNARD C. I. The Functions of the Executive. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1938. and March and Simon (1958)MARCH, J. G.; Simon, H. A. Organizations. New York: Wiley, 1958., on the micro-level phenomena as people, processes and structures that influence organizational performance.

Some studies analyze the interaction and influence of individuals' microfoundations and processes and structures as causing the emergence of capacities (FELDMAN; PENTLAND, 2003FELDMAN, M. S.; PENTLAND, B. T. Reconceptualizing organizational routines as a source of flexibility and change. Administrative Science Quarterly, v. 39, n. 1, p. 484-510, 2003.; FELIN et al., 2012FELIN, T.; FOSS, N. J.; HEIMERIKS, K. H.; MADSEN, T. L. Microfoundations of routines and capabilities: Individuals, processes, and structure. Journal of Management Studies, v. 49, n. 8, p. 1351-1374, 2012.; HOOPES; MADSEN, 2008HOOPS, D. G.; MADSEN, T. L. A capability-based view of competitive heterogeneity. Industrial and Corporate Change, v. 17, n. 3, p. 393-426, 2008.; MILLER et al., 2012MILLER, K. D.; PENTLAND, B. T.; CHOI, S. Dynamics of performing and remembering organizational routines. Journal of Management Studies, v. 49, n. 8, p. 1536-58, 2012.; SALVATO, 2003SALVATO, C. The role of micro-strategies in the engineering of firm evolution. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n.1, p. 83-108, 2003.). Concomitantly, other studies have conducted research on the origins of resources and dynamic capabilities (FELIN et al., 2012FELIN, T.; FOSS, N. J.; HEIMERIKS, K. H.; MADSEN, T. L. Microfoundations of routines and capabilities: Individuals, processes, and structure. Journal of Management Studies, v. 49, n. 8, p. 1351-1374, 2012.; HEIMERIKS et al., 2012HEIMERIKS, K. H.; SCHIJVEN, M.; GATES, S. Manifestations of higher-order routines: The underlying mechanisms of deliberate learning in the context of post-acquisition integration. Academy of Management Journal, v. 55, n. 1, p. 703-726, 2012.; HELFAT et al., 2007HELFAT, C.; FINKELSTEIN, S.; MITCHELL, W.; PETERAF, M. A.; SINGH, H.; TEECE, D. J.; WINTER, S. G. Dynamic capabilities. Resource-based change in organizations. Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 2007.; PISANO, 2000PISANO, G. In Search of Dynamic Capabilities: The Origins of R&D Competence in Biopharmaceuticals. In Dosi, G., Nelson, R. R., and Winter, S. (Eds.), The Nature and Dynamics of Organizational Capabilities, p. 129-154. Nova York: Oxford University Press, 2000.; ZOLLO; WINTER, 2002ZOLLO, M.; WINTER, S. G. Deliberate learning and the evolution of dynamic capabilities. Organization Science, v. 13, n. 3, p. 339-351, 2002.).

Microfoundations have their roots in the foundations of institutional theory, such as ethnomethodology (SEGRE, 2004SEGRE, S. Ethnomethodology in Italy. Sociological Theory, v. 22, n.4, p. 647-661, 2004.; WAKEHAM, 2017WAKEHAM, J. Bullshit as a Problem of Social Epistemology, Sociological Theory, v. 35, n. 1, p. 15-38, 2017.; ZUCKER; SCHILKE, 2020ZUCKER, L. G.; SCHILKE, O. Towards a theory of micro-institutional processes: Forgotten roots, links to social-psychological research, and new ideas. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of Institutions, v. 65(B), p. 371-389, 2020.), symbolic interactionism (BLUMER, 1969BLUMER, H. Symbolic Interactionism: Perspective and Method, Englewood Cliffs, Prentice-Hall, 1969.; FURNARI, 2019) and Bourdieu's theory of practice (ANESA; CHALKIAS; JARZABKOWSKI; SPEE, 2019ANESA, M.; CHALKIAS, K.; JARZABKOWSKI, P.; SPEE, A. P. Practicing capitals across fields: Extending Bourdieu to study inter-field dynamics. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of Institutions, v. 65(B), p. 129-142, Bingley, UK: Emerald. 2020.; BOURDIEU, 1990BOURDIEU, P. The Logic of Practice. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1990.; GOLDENSTEIN; WALGENBACHGOLDENSTEIN, J.; WALGENBACH, P. Embodied and reflexive agency in institutional fields: An integrative neo-institutional perspective of institutional change. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of Institutions, v. 65(A), p. 135-152, Bingley, UK: Emerald, 2020., 2019). More recent perspectives also present possibilities of approach such as inhabited institutionalism (HALLETT, 2010HALLETT, T. The myth incarnate recoupling processes, turmoil, and inhabited institutions in an urban elementary school. American Sociological Review, v. 75, n. 1, p. 52-74, 2010.; HALLETT; VENTRESCA, 2006HALLETT, T.; VENTRESCA, M. J. Inhabited institutions: social interactions and organizational forms in Gouldner’s Patterns of Industrial Bureaucracy. Theory and Society, v. 35, n. 2, p. 213-236, 2006.; HALLETT; HAWBAKER, 2020HALLETT, T.; HAWBAKER, A. Bringing society back in again: The importance of social interaction in an inhabited institutionalism. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of Institutions, v. 65(B), p. 317-336. Bingley, UK: Emerald. 2020.) and Scandinavian institutionalism (BOXENBAUM; PEDERSEN, 2009BOXENBAUM, E.; PEDERSEN, J. S. Scandinavian Institutionalism: A case of institutional work. In T. B. Lawrence, R. Suddaby, and B. Leca (Eds.), Institutional Work: Actors and Agency in Institutional Studies of Organizations (p. 178-204). Cambridge University Press. 2009.; SURACHAIKULWATTANA; PHILLIPS, 2020SURACHAIKULWATTANA, P.; PHILLIPS, N. Creating the British academic health science centres: Understanding the microfoundations of the translation of organizational forms. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of institutions, v. 65(B), p. 273-296. Bingley, UK: Emerald, 2020.).

Research on microfoundations presents three perspectives that stand out: communicative, cognitive and behavioral (CORNELISSEN; DURAND; FISS; LAMMERS; VAARA, 2015; JEPPERSON; MEYER, 2011JEPPERSON, R.; Meyer, J. W. Multiple levels of analysis and the limitations of methodological individualisms. Sociological Theory, v. 29, n. 1, p. 54-73, 2011.; THORNTON et al., 2012THORNTON, P. H; OCASIO, W.; LOUNSBURY, M. The Institutional Logics Perspective - A new approach to culture, structure, and process. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.; SIEWEKE, 2014SIEWEKE, J. Imitation and processes of institutionalization: Insights from Bourdieu’s theory of practice. Schmalenbach Business Review, v. 66, n.1, p. 24-42, 2014.; SMETS et al., 2015SMETS, M.; JARZABKOWSKI, P.; Burke, G. T.; SPEE, P. Reinsurance trading in Lloyd’s of London: Balancing conflicting-yet-complementary logics in practice. Academy of Management Journal, v. 58, n.3, p. 932-970, 2015.; ZILBER, 2002). Specifically, scholars who emphasize a cognitive perspective explore how institutional change and maintenance are shaped by thought structures and emotions (CORNELISSEN, et al., 2015; SIEWEKE, 2014SIEWEKE, J. Imitation and processes of institutionalization: Insights from Bourdieu’s theory of practice. Schmalenbach Business Review, v. 66, n.1, p. 24-42, 2014.; THORNTON et al., 2012THORNTON, P. H; OCASIO, W.; LOUNSBURY, M. The Institutional Logics Perspective - A new approach to culture, structure, and process. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.). A communicative perspective highlights the role of various communicative media in developing an understanding of appropriate behavior (CORNELISSEN et al., 2015CORNELISSEN, J. P.; DURAND, R.; FISS, P. C.; LAMMERS, J. C.; VAARA, E. Putting communication front and center in institutional theory and analysis. Academy of Management Review, v. 40, n. 1, p. 10-27, 2015., HAACK, et al., 2020). A behavioral perspective explores how daily activities and routines structure and restructure institutional contexts. (JEPPERSON; MEYER, 2011JEPPERSON, R.; Meyer, J. W. Multiple levels of analysis and the limitations of methodological individualisms. Sociological Theory, v. 29, n. 1, p. 54-73, 2011.; SMETS et al., 2015SMETS, M.; JARZABKOWSKI, P.; Burke, G. T.; SPEE, P. Reinsurance trading in Lloyd’s of London: Balancing conflicting-yet-complementary logics in practice. Academy of Management Journal, v. 58, n.3, p. 932-970, 2015.; ZILBER, 2002).

The cognitive perspective refers to individuals and structures of collective thinking and mental representations, such as pictures, categories, schemes and scripts, that prescribe legitimate ways of acting (CORNELISSEN et al., 2015CORNELISSEN, J. P.; DURAND, R.; FISS, P. C.; LAMMERS, J. C.; VAARA, E. Putting communication front and center in institutional theory and analysis. Academy of Management Review, v. 40, n. 1, p. 10-27, 2015.; SIEWEKE, 2014SIEWEKE, J. Imitation and processes of institutionalization: Insights from Bourdieu’s theory of practice. Schmalenbach Business Review, v. 66, n.1, p. 24-42, 2014.; THORNTON et al., 2012THORNTON, P. H; OCASIO, W.; LOUNSBURY, M. The Institutional Logics Perspective - A new approach to culture, structure, and process. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012. ). The organization can serve as a critical window for the recursive relationships between macro and micro levels of institutions (CORNELISSEN et al., 2015CORNELISSEN, J. P.; DURAND, R.; FISS, P. C.; LAMMERS, J. C.; VAARA, E. Putting communication front and center in institutional theory and analysis. Academy of Management Review, v. 40, n. 1, p. 10-27, 2015.). A cognitive perspective explored as institutional change and maintenance are shaped by thought structures and emotions (HAACK et al., 2020HAACK, P.; SIEWEKE, J.; WESSEL, L. Microfoundations and Multi-Level Research on Institutions. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of Institutions, v. 65(A), p. 11-40, Bingley, UK: Emerald, 2020.).

The communicative perspective, highlighting the role of various communicative media in developing an understanding of appropriate behavior, (HAACK et al., 2020HAACK, P.; SIEWEKE, J.; WESSEL, L. Microfoundations and Multi-Level Research on Institutions. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of Institutions, v. 65(A), p. 11-40, Bingley, UK: Emerald, 2020.). According to CORNELISSEN et al., (2015)CORNELISSEN, J. P.; DURAND, R.; FISS, P. C.; LAMMERS, J. C.; VAARA, E. Putting communication front and center in institutional theory and analysis. Academy of Management Review, v. 40, n. 1, p. 10-27, 2015., cognition, communication and institutions are inherently interconnected. Communication is equivalent to a construct that is defined as a process of interaction in which the actors exchange points of view and build mutual understanding (CORNELISSEN et al., 2015CORNELISSEN, J. P.; DURAND, R.; FISS, P. C.; LAMMERS, J. C.; VAARA, E. Putting communication front and center in institutional theory and analysis. Academy of Management Review, v. 40, n. 1, p. 10-27, 2015.). Thoughts and / or perspectives are created from combinations of past and present impressions.

The behavioral perspective focuses on how practices, which are understood as the grouping of recurring human activities, are formed by institutions and are known for institutional perspectives (HAACK et al., 2020HAACK, P.; SIEWEKE, J.; WESSEL, L. Microfoundations and Multi-Level Research on Institutions. In P. Haack, J. Sieweke, and L. Wessel. (Eds.), Microfoundations of Institutions, v. 65(A), p. 11-40, Bingley, UK: Emerald, 2020.). Thus, this perspective deals with the fact that institutions are flexibly instantiated and reiterated, without having a fixed structural order, so that immediate processes lead individuals to adapt to any situation. The idea that individuals are essential for institutions is uncontroversial (JEPPERSON; MEYER, 2011JEPPERSON, R.; Meyer, J. W. Multiple levels of analysis and the limitations of methodological individualisms. Sociological Theory, v. 29, n. 1, p. 54-73, 2011.), since they continually produce the institutions in which they are inserted (SMETS et al., 2015SMETS, M.; JARZABKOWSKI, P.; Burke, G. T.; SPEE, P. Reinsurance trading in Lloyd’s of London: Balancing conflicting-yet-complementary logics in practice. Academy of Management Journal, v. 58, n.3, p. 932-970, 2015.; ZILBERZILBER, T. B. The methodology/theory interface: Ethnography and the microfoundations of institutions. Organization Theory, v. 1, n. 2, p. 1-27, 2020., 2002), being that, it is for through the interactions and daily practices that institutions come to exercise their influence.

The microfoundations analyze how the micro organizational environment, through the practices of organizational actors, can influence the results of the macro environment, such as organizational performance. Likewise, the micro level is influenced by the macro environment through strategies that are deliberated by the top actors. The microfoundations study the interaction of the micro and macro levels of the organization and the influence that one implies on the other, showing that both are interconnected.

According to Felin et al., (2012)FELIN, T.; FOSS, N. J.; HEIMERIKS, K. H.; MADSEN, T. L. Microfoundations of routines and capabilities: Individuals, processes, and structure. Journal of Management Studies, v. 49, n. 8, p. 1351-1374, 2012., microfoundations can serve as causal explanations for the creation of a routine capacity, or even for studies of their origins. According to Teece (2007)TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007., dynamic capabilities allow organizations to create, implement and protect intangible assets that support superior long-term business performance.

4 MICROFOUNDATIONS OF CAPABILITIES DYNAMIC

The process of operationalizing dynamic capabilities occurs through the three categories Teece (2007)TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.: (i) (sensing) refers to detection, the ability to perceive and model opportunities and threats; (ii) (seizing) refers to the ability to take advantage of the opportunities that have been identified and (iii) (transforming) refers to reconfiguration, the ability to remain competitive through reinforcement, combination, protection and, when necessary , the reconfiguration of the organization's tangible and intangible assets.

The development and implementation of the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities presents challenges, being influenced by the skills, processes, procedures, organizational structures, decision rules and distinct disciplines, which end up sustaining the capacity for sensing, seizing and reconfiguring (Teece, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.).

“Sensing” is the identification, development, co-development and evaluation of technological opportunities in relation to the customer's needs (HELFAT; WINTER, 2011HELFAT, C.E.; WINTER, S. Untangling Dynamic and Operational Capabilities: Strategy for the (N)Ever-Changing World. Strategic Management Journal, v. 32, n. 11, p. 1243-1250, 2011.; HELFAT; PETERAF, 2003HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. The dynamic resource-based view: capability lifecycles, Strategic Management Journal, v. 24, n. 10, p. 997-1010, 2003., 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.. TEECE, 2014TEECE, D. J. A dynamic capabilities-based entrepreneurial theory of the multinational enterprise. Journal of International Business Studies, v. 4, n. 1, p. 8-37, 2014.). According to Nonaka et al., (2016)NONAKA, I.; HIROSE, A.; TAKEDA, Y. ‘Meso’-Foundations of dynamic capabilities: Team-Level Synthesis and Distributed Leadership as the Source of Dynamic Creativity. Global Strategy Journal, v. 6, n. 3, p. 168-182, 2016., sensing results mainly from organizational actors on the front lines that interact directly with the environment, where the opportunities identified by these actors are synthesized and organized by them.

“Seizing”, they are aimed at understanding the highlighted opportunities and, to design solutions and business models that guarantee consumer satisfaction (HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.). Included in the capabilities of this group are those aimed at guaranteeing and complying with resources for carrying out the actions designed, as well as the ability to develop strong relationships along the production chain, in the organization's relationship with suppliers, complementaries or even customers (TEECE, 2011TEECE, D. Dynamic Capabilities: A guide for managers. Ivey Business Journal, v. 75, n. 2, p. 29-33, 2011.; 2014TEECE, D. J. A dynamic capabilities-based entrepreneurial theory of the multinational enterprise. Journal of International Business Studies, v. 4, n. 1, p. 8-37, 2014.).

“Transforming” is the continuous renovation and organizational transformation (TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.; 2014TEECE, D. J. A dynamic capabilities-based entrepreneurial theory of the multinational enterprise. Journal of International Business Studies, v. 4, n. 1, p. 8-37, 2014.), it refers to the organization's skills to combine and manage the service strategy, and the organizational design to achieve strategic adjustment (HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; ŽITKIENĖ et al., 2015ŽITKIENĖ, R.; KAZLAUSKIENĖ, E.; DEKSNYS, M. Dynamic capabilities for service Innovation. MIC 2015 - Management Internacional Conference. Portoroz, Slovenia 28-30may, 2015.). The horizontal organizational structure allows easier knowledge sharing, increasing not only the capabilities of “transforming”, but also “sensing” and “seizing” (TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.).

The study of the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities provides a detailed analysis of activities, day-to-day practices, social and cultural actions involved in the process of developing dynamic capabilities. Also, this approach provides for the identification of heterogeneity of dynamic capabilities (HAMBRICK; CROSSLAND, 2018HAMBRICK, D. C.; CROSSLAND, C. A strategy for behavioral strategy: Appraisal of small, midsize, and large tent conceptions of this embryonic community. Behavioral Strategy in Perspective, v. 3, n. 1, p. 23-39, 2018.; POWELL et al., 2011POWELL, T. C.; LOVALLO, D.; FOX, C. R. Behavioral strategy. Strategic Management Journal, v. 32, n. 13, p. 1369-1386, 2011.), which contributes to their long-term process.

5 THE CORRELATION OF STRATEGY-AS-PRACTICE AND DYNAMIC CAPABILITIES

Studies from the perspective of strategy-as-practice, with its social focus (JARZABKOWSKI; LÊ; BALOGUN, 2019JARZABKOWSKI, P. ; LÊ, J. ; BALOGUN, J. The social practice of coevolving strategy and structure to realize mandated radical change. Academy of Management Journal, v. 62, n. 3, p. 850-882, 2019.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., 2019WHITTINGTON, R. Opening strategy: Professional strategists and practice change, 1960 to Today. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019.), contribute to the construction of dynamic capabilities, with their focus economic (HELFAT, 2007HELFAT, C. E. Dynamic Capabilities: understanding strategic change in organizations. Blackwell, Malden, 2007.; Teece et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997., TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.). Dynamic capabilities focus on addressing processes of aggregation of evolutionary selection and organizational levels, which are shaped for a more economic context (HELFAT; PETERAF, 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.). The strategy-as-practice complements the dynamic capabilities and provides suggestions for a dynamic view of the strategy, addressing the microfoundations of the dynamics that give rise to organizational assets. (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.; 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.).

The structure (rules and resources) (JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2019JARZABKOWSKI, P. ; LÊ, J. ; BALOGUN, J. The social practice of coevolving strategy and structure to realize mandated radical change. Academy of Management Journal, v. 62, n. 3, p. 850-882, 2019.), the agents (organizational actors / practitioners) (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; NICOLINI, 2013NICOLINI, D. Practice Theory, Work and Organization. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., 2019WHITTINGTON, R. Opening strategy: Professional strategists and practice change, 1960 to Today. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019.) and the reconfiguration of activities (routines / practices) (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.) form a study area that provides for the creation and / or reconfiguration of dynamic capabilities (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.). A dynamic view of strategy needs to go beyond simple correlations between variables and should explain the mechanism of how a certain condition interacts to produce a certain organizational asset (BROMILEY, 2005BROMILEY, P. The Behavioral Foundation of Strategic Management. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2005.; HELFAT; PETERAF 2015HELFAT, C. E.; PETERAF, M. A. Managerial cognitive capabilities and the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 36, n. 6, p. 831-850, 2015.; TSOUKAS; KNUDSEN, 2002TSOUKAS, H.; KNUDSEN, C. The conduct of strategy research. In A. Pettigrew, H. Thomas; R. Whittington (Eds.), Handbook of Strategy and Management: 413-437. London: SAGE, 2002.).

Capacity at the organizational level is essential in any dynamic examination of the strategy, but it needs to be related to the activity and interacting both at the individual and group levels to understand its origin, the way it changes over time, the processes and mechanisms underlying social factors (FELDMAN; ORLIKOWSKI, 2011FELDMAN, M. S.; ORLIKOWSKI, W. J. Theorizing practice and practicing theory. Organization Science, v. 22, p. 1240-1253, 2011.; JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2019JARZABKOWSKI, P. ; LÊ, J. ; BALOGUN, J. The social practice of coevolving strategy and structure to realize mandated radical change. Academy of Management Journal, v. 62, n. 3, p. 850-882, 2019.; JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; NICOLINI, 2013NICOLINI, D. Practice Theory, Work and Organization. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013.; REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., 2019WHITTINGTON, R. Opening strategy: Professional strategists and practice change, 1960 to Today. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2019.).

To identify the origin of dynamic capabilities (EISENHARDTE; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.), studies of activities and micro practices (JOHNSON et al., 2007JOHNSON, G.; LANGLEY, A.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON, R. The Practice of Strategy: Research directions and resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.; KOUAMÉ; LANGLEY, 2018KOUAMÉ, S.; LANGLEY, A. Relating microprocesses to macro-outcomes in qualitative strategy process and practice research. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 559-581, 2018.) are presented as the way to find the answers, and to be able to develop the dynamic capabilities that consolidate the competitive advantage before the competing market.

With regard to the root discipline, while strategy-as-practice is rooted in the social theory of authors such as Bourdieu (1990)BOURDIEU, P. The Logic of Practice. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1990., Giddens (1984)GIDDENS, A. The Constitution of Society. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 1984., Schatzki (2002)SCHATZKI, T.R. The Site of the Social. University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2002. and Sztompka (1991)SZTOMPKA, P. Society in Action: The theory of social becoming. Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 1991., the fundamental interest of strategy-as-practice (JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.; WHITTINGTON, 1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996.; 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006.; 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.) is focused on social strategic-as-practice, with strategies and day-to-day activity, concerned with strategizing, focused on the micro-organizational level.

On the other hand, dynamic capabilities (EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.; WINTER, 2003WINTER, S. G. Understanding dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 24, n. 10, p. 991-995, 2003.), have roots in the evolutionary economics discipline of authors such as Nelson, Winter, Penrose, Schumpeter and Teece (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.) , concerned with the organizational level with a focus on routines and capacities at the macro organizational level (KOUAMÉ; LANGLEY, 2018KOUAMÉ, S.; LANGLEY, A. Relating microprocesses to macro-outcomes in qualitative strategy process and practice research. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 559-581, 2018.).

The two perspectives have not only differences, but also similarities. The focus on processes is one of these convergences, where strategy-as-practice focuses on continuous process in terms of practice, while dynamic capabilities focus on continuous process in routine terms (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.; 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.). Both strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities explicitly emphasize standardized processes (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; WINTER, 2003WINTER, S. G. Understanding dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 24, n. 10, p. 991-995, 2003.).

Another similar characteristic among the perceptives is related to the historical and local context on which the strategy develops (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.). While the strategy-as-practice perspective mainly focuses on the social and cultural context, the dynamic capabilities perspective focuses mainly on the economic context (BAUM; DOBBIN, 2000BAUM, J.A.; DOBBIN, F. Economics meets sociology in strategic management. Advances in Strategic Management, 17. Stamford CT: JAI Press. 2000.; REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.; 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.).

The comparative shows that both elements are correlated, identifying that it is possible to study strategy-as-practice (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.) through dynamic capabilities (TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.; WINTER, 2003WINTER, S. G. Understanding dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 24, n. 10, p. 991-995, 2003.) , where strategy-as-practice acts as a lens to study and understand the process of building dynamic organizational capabilities.

The strategy-as-practice emphasizes the practical strategy, the day-to-day strategy, the activities present in the daily strategy formation processes, involving the most diverse levels of the organization, from the highest organizational level (ADNER; HELFAT, 2003ADNER, R.; HELFAT, C. Corporate effects and dynamic managerial capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 24, n. 10, p. 1011-1025, 2003.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.; WÓJCIK, 2020WÓJCIK, P. Paradoxical nature of dynamic capabilities research: a content analysis of literature. Baltic Journal of Management, v. 15, n. 5, p. 727-755, 2020.), up to the operational level, including external actors, all are involved, contributing to the strategy-as-practice process (BALOGUN; JOHNSON, 2004BALOGUN, J.; JOHNSON, G. Organizational restructuring and middle manager sensemaking. Academy of Management Journal, v. 47, n. 4, p. 523-549, 2004.; FLOYD; WOOLDRIDGE, 2000FLOYD, S. W.; WOOLDRIDGE, B. Building Strategy from the Middle: Reconceptualizing Strategy Process. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2000.).

The top organizational level has often, explicitly or implicitly, remained in the spotlight and this remains true for many of the studies on dynamic capabilities (ADNER; HELFAT, 2003ADNER, R.; HELFAT, C. Corporate effects and dynamic managerial capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 24, n. 10, p. 1011-1025, 2003.; FLOYD; WOOLDRIDGE, 2000FLOYD, S. W.; WOOLDRIDGE, B. Building Strategy from the Middle: Reconceptualizing Strategy Process. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2000.; Teece et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.). In contrast, in the strategy-as-practice approach, researchers like Burgelman (1983aBURGELMAN, R. A. A model of the interaction of strategic behavior, corporate context, and the concept of strategy. Academy of Management Review, v. 8, n. 1, p. 61-70, 1983a., bBURGELMAN, R. A. A process model of internal corporate venturing in the diversified major firm. Administrative Science Quarterly, v. 28, n. 2, p. 223-244, 1983b.) and Regnér (1999)REGNÉR, P. Strategy creation and change in complexity adaptive and creative learning dynamics in the firm. Institute of International Business, Stockholm School of Economics (IIB), 1999. explicitly recognize that a diverse set of actors (practitioners) may be involved in the development of new strategies and the accumulation of assets organization (TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.).

Middle managers can easily be influential (BALOGUN; JOHNSON 2004BALOGUN, J.; JOHNSON, G. Organizational restructuring and middle manager sensemaking. Academy of Management Journal, v. 47, n. 4, p. 523-549, 2004.; FLOYD; WOOLDRIDGE, 2000FLOYD, S. W.; WOOLDRIDGE, B. Building Strategy from the Middle: Reconceptualizing Strategy Process. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2000.), so that strategies and new organizational assets can be generated at different organizational levels and, not only at the top manager level, but also between middle manager and bottom manager (BALOGUN et al., 2003BALOGUN, J.; HUFF, A. S.; JOHNSON, P. Three responses to the methodological challenges of studying strategizing. Journal of Management Studies, v.40, n. 1, p. 197-224, 2003.; FLOYD; WOOLDRIDGE, 1992FLOYD, S. W.; WOOLDRIDGE, B. Middle management involvement in strategy and its association with strategic type: A research note. Strategic Management Journal, v. 13, n. 1, p. 153-167, 1992.; 2000FLOYD, S. W.; WOOLDRIDGE, B. Building Strategy from the Middle: Reconceptualizing Strategy Process. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage. 2000.; WOOLDRIDGE; FLOYD 1990WOOLDRIDGE, B.; FLOYD, S. The Strategy Process, Middle Management Involvement, and Organizational Performance, Strategic Management Journal, v. 11, n. 3, p. 231-241, 1990.; FLOYD; LANE, 2000FLOYD, S. W.; LANE P. J. Strategizing throughout the organization: Managing role conflict in strategic renewal. Academy of Management Review, v. 25, n. 1, p. 154-177, 2000.).

The strategy formation process also involves external, broader groups, such as consultants, regulators and consumers (MANTERE, 2005MANTERE, S. Strategic practices as enablers and disablers of championing activity. Strategic Organization, v.3, n. 2, p. 157-84, 2005.). The inclusion of several strategists allows for organizational heterogeneity (HAMBRICK; CROSSLAND, 2018HAMBRICK, D. C.; CROSSLAND, C. A strategy for behavioral strategy: Appraisal of small, midsize, and large tent conceptions of this embryonic community. Behavioral Strategy in Perspective, v. 3, n. 1, p. 23-39, 2018.; POWELL et al., 2011POWELL, T. C.; LOVALLO, D.; FOX, C. R. Behavioral strategy. Strategic Management Journal, v. 32, n. 13, p. 1369-1386, 2011.), where different actors can reflect on capabilities and can encourage endogenous changes in such capabilities (FELDMAN; PENTLAND, 2003FELDMAN, M. S.; PENTLAND, B. T. Reconceptualizing organizational routines as a source of flexibility and change. Administrative Science Quarterly, v. 39, n. 1, p. 484-510, 2003.).

In short, strategy-as-practice can help to complement dynamic capabilities, identifying how dynamic capabilities generate value for the organization, looking from a practical and social perspective, involving actors from all levels of the organization, in order to identify social origins, cultural and practical dynamic capabilities.

6 THEORETICAL MODEL OF STRATEGY-AS-PRACTICE THROUGH THE LENS OF DYNAMIC CAPABILITIES MICROFOUNDATIONS

The environment in which the organization operates is a trigger for the need for change and, consequently, for the creation of dynamic capabilities (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.). Their construction being operationalized through the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities (TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.), which are influenced by strategy-as-practice (BALOGUN et al., 2003BALOGUN, J.; HUFF, A. S.; JOHNSON, P. Three responses to the methodological challenges of studying strategizing. Journal of Management Studies, v.40, n. 1, p. 197-224, 2003.), through the intersection of practices, praxis and practitioners.

(i) practices: are related to shared routines, behaviors, traditions, norms and procedures for thinking and acting (WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006.; JOHNSON; LANGLEY; MELIN; WHITTINGTON, 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.). Practices are social, symbolic and material tools used in making the strategy (JARZABKOWSKI; SPEE 2009JARZABKOWSKI, P.; SPEE, A. P. Strategy-as-practice: A review and future directions for the field. International Journal of Management Reviews, v. 11, n. 1, p. 69-95, 2009.).

(ii) praxis: refer to the identification, explanation and analysis of the practices used by the organization, as well as the way in which people carry out activities (JARZABKOWSKI; SPEE, 2009JARZABKOWSKI, P.; SPEE, A. P. Strategy-as-practice: A review and future directions for the field. International Journal of Management Reviews, v. 11, n. 1, p. 69-95, 2009., WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006.; JOHNSON; LANGLEY; MELIN; WHITTINGTON, 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.).

(iii) practitioners: refer to strategists or strategy workers who carry out their practices and carry out their praxis (WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006.; Johnson et al., 2007JOHNSON, G.; LANGLEY, A.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON, R. The Practice of Strategy: Research directions and resources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.). Practitioners are the actors who carry out the formulation of strategies (JARZABKOWSKI; SPEE 2009JARZABKOWSKI, P.; SPEE, A. P. Strategy-as-practice: A review and future directions for the field. International Journal of Management Reviews, v. 11, n. 1, p. 69-95, 2009.).

Figure 1 illustrates the model that we now present for the analysis of this study. The model is structured in three elements: (i) dynamic environment, functioning as a kitten to create dynamic capabilities; (ii) interaction of microfoundations of dynamic capabilities through the lens of strategy-as-practice, where the transformation of strategies generating dynamic capabilities occurs; and finally; (iii) dynamic capabilities, which are generated and provide the identification of its origins, as well as its shielding from the knowledge of the elements that formed and implemented it.

Figure 1
strategy-as-practice, through the lens of Microfoundations of dynamic capabilities

The dynamic environment in which organizations are found, provides the entry of novelties (threats and / or opportunities), which will allow variations in the environment, which will be managed by the medium level (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.). The trigger, caused by the dynamic environment, forces organizations to create dynamic capabilities to survive environmental changes. Dynamic capabilities are operationalized by the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities (sensing, seizing and transforming), which are influenced by strategy-as-practice (practices, praxis and practitioners).

The strategy-as-practice through the lens of the microfoundations of capabilities has nine categorizations that were conceptualized from the main authors about microfoundations of dynamic capabilities such as Ellonen et al., (2011)ELLONEN, H.; JANTUNEN, A.; KUIVALAINEN, O. The role of dynamic capabilities in developing innovation-related capabilities. International Journal of Innovation Management, v. 15, n. 3, p. 459-478, 2011., Regnér (2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.) and Teece (2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007., 2009TEECE, D. J. Dynamic Capabilities & Strategic Management. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009., 2014TEECE, D. J. A dynamic capabilities-based entrepreneurial theory of the multinational enterprise. Journal of International Business Studies, v. 4, n. 1, p. 8-37, 2014.); and from the main authors on strategy-as-practice like Jarzabkowski et al. (2007)JARZABKOWSKI, P.; BALOGUN, J.; SEIDL, D. Strategizing: The challenges of a practice perspective. Human Relations, v. 60, n. 1, p. 5-27, 2007., Jarzabkowski and Spee (2009)JARZABKOWSKI, P.; SPEE, A. P. Strategy-as-practice: A review and future directions for the field. International Journal of Management Reviews, v. 11, n. 1, p. 69-95, 2009., Jarzabkowski, (2005)JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005., Jarzabkowski and Whittington, (2008)JARZABKOWSKI, P.; WHITTINGTON. Shaping Strategy as a Structuration Process. Academy of Management Journal, v. 51, n. 4, p. 621-650, 2008., Regnér (2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.), Whittington (1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996., 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006.).

Table 1
Categories of microfoundations of dynamic capabilities through the lens of strategy-as-practice

Table 1, the concepts of the categories of the micro-fundament of dynamic capabilities, correlates with the categories of strategy-as-practice, in order to present a way of analyzing practices, praxis and practitioners, through the lens of sensing, seizing and transforming.

Practices (JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2007JARZABKOWSKI, P.; BALOGUN, J.; SEIDL, D. Strategizing: The challenges of a practice perspective. Human Relations, v. 60, n. 1, p. 5-27, 2007.; WHITTINGTON, 1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996., 2002WHITTINGTON, R. Practice perspectives on strategy: unifying and developing a field. Academy of Management Conference Proceedings, Denver, August, 2002.) are present in dynamic capabilities (TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.), through the creation and development of activities, routines, processes or even environments that enable and instigate its creation, its development and its improvement.

The correlation of strategy-as-practice, with dynamic capabilities (REGNÉR, 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.), shows that they are in a context of active positions, that is, it uses technological, financial and structural resources for organizational development (TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.).

Strategy-as-practice (JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.) can complement dynamic capabilities (TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.; WINTER, 2003WINTER, S. G. Understanding dynamic capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, v. 24, n. 10, p. 991-995, 2003.), through its praxis, which comes to strengthen, incorporating technological, financial and structural culture in the organization , through artifacts, language and cognitions that contribute to the organizational change necessary to survive the turbulent environment (BURGELMAN et al., 2018BURGELMAN, R. A.; FLOYD, S. W.; LAAMANEN, T.; MANTERE, S.; VAARA, E.; WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy processes and practice: Dialogues and intersections. Strategic Management Journal, v. 39, n. 3, p. 531-558, 2018.; FELDMAN; ORLIKOWSKI, 2011FELDMAN, M. S.; ORLIKOWSKI, W. J. Theorizing practice and practicing theory. Organization Science, v. 22, p. 1240-1253, 2011.; JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2016JARZABKOWSKI, P.; LÊ, J.; SPEE, P. Taking a Strong Process Approach to Analyzing Qualitative Data. In Ann Langley, Haridimos Tsoukas (Eds): The SAGE Handbook of Process Organization Studies, London; Thousand Oaks, California; New Delhi; Singapore: Sage Publishing. 2016.; SEIDL; WHITTINGTON, 2014SEIDL, D.; WHITTINGTON, R. Enlarging the Strategy-as-Practice Research Agenda: Towards Taller and Flatter Ontologies. Organization Studies, v. 35, n. 10, p. 1407-1421, 2014.; VAARA; WHITTINGTON , 2012VAARA, E.; WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy as practice: Taking social practices seriously. Academy of Management Annals, v. 6, n. 1, p. 285-336, 2012.).

Praxis are also present in dynamic capabilities through the activity flows accepted by society and that guide the development strategies of organizations (JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.; JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.; WHITTINGTON, 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006., 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.). The creation of a favorable environment for innovation is seen through the action of praxis, creating an organizational culture focused on innovation (JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.). Innovation is built on a daily basis, in the social environment and on a daily basis of organizational activities, resulting from the interaction of organizational actors and their resources made available by the organization (JARZABKOWSKI et al., 2007JARZABKOWSKI, P.; BALOGUN, J.; SEIDL, D. Strategizing: The challenges of a practice perspective. Human Relations, v. 60, n. 1, p. 5-27, 2007.).

Strategy-as-practice complements dynamic capabilities, through its practitioners, who are at different organizational levels (WHITTINGTON, 2002WHITTINGTON, R. Practice perspectives on strategy: unifying and developing a field. Academy of Management Conference Proceedings, Denver, August, 2002.; REGNÉR, 2015REGNÉR P. Relating Strategy-as-Practice to the resource-based view, capabilities perspectives and the micro-foundations approach. In D. Golsorkhi, L. Rouleau, D. Seidl, and E. Vaara (Eds.), Cambridge Handbook of Strategy-as-Practice, p. 301-316. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2015.). The strategy occurs through the commitment of practitioners to carry out new practices or even the combination of existing ones, in order to achieve the objectives and goals deliberated by the top level (JARZABKOWSKI, 2005JARZABKOWSKI, P. An Activity-Based Approach. London, UK: Thousand Oaks, 2005.; WHITTINGTON, 1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996.; 2006WHITTINGTON, R. Completing the practice turn in strategy research. Organization Studies, v. 27, n. 5, p. 613-634, 2006.; 2007WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy practice and strategy process: Family differences and the sociological eye. Organization Studies, v. 28, n. 10, p. 1575-1586, 2007.).

The practitioner is not only present in dynamic capabilities (EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000., TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.), but also presents himself as a key player in the dynamic process (HELFAT, 2007HELFAT, C. E. Dynamic Capabilities: understanding strategic change in organizations. Blackwell, Malden, 2007.; TEECE, 2007TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007.), acting both individually and collective, internal or external to the organization. Understanding strategic changes requires a greater focus on organizational actors and real experiences, dynamic capabilities require a high level of commitment from practitioners (AMBROSINI; BOWMAN, 2009AMBROSINI, V.; BOWMAN, C. What are dynamic capabilities and are they a useful construct in strategic management? International Journal of Management Reviews, v. 11, n. 1, p. 29-49, 2009.).

The different profiles of practitioners provide organizations with heterogeneous strategies (HAMBRICK; CROSSLAND, 2018HAMBRICK, D. C.; CROSSLAND, C. A strategy for behavioral strategy: Appraisal of small, midsize, and large tent conceptions of this embryonic community. Behavioral Strategy in Perspective, v. 3, n. 1, p. 23-39, 2018.; POWELL et al., 2011POWELL, T. C.; LOVALLO, D.; FOX, C. R. Behavioral strategy. Strategic Management Journal, v. 32, n. 13, p. 1369-1386, 2011.), making it difficult for competitors to copy dynamic capabilities (EISENHARDT; MARTIN, 2000EISENHARDT, K. M. ; MARTIN, J. A. Dynamic capabilities: What are they? Strategic Management Journal, Special Issue, v. 21, n. 10-11, p. 1105-1121. 2000., TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.), ensuring the shielding of strategies over time (JARZABKOWSKI, 2004JARZABKOWSKI, P. Strategy-as-practice: Recursiveness, adaptation and practices-in-use. Organization Studies, v. 24, n. 3, p. 489-520, 2004.; PETERAF, 1993PETERAF, M. The cornerstones of competitive advantage: a resource-based view. Strategic Management Journal, v. 14, n. 3, p. 179-191, 1993.; TEECE et al., 1997TEECE, D. J.; PISANO, G.; SHUEN, A. Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, v. 8, n.7, p. 509-533, 1997.).

Organizational actors present themselves as key elements for success in the process of creating and / or reconfiguring dynamic capabilities. They orchestrate the internal and external processes for building dynamic capabilities. According to Teece (2007)TEECE, D. J. Explicating dynamic capabilities: The nature and microfoundations of (sustainable) enterprise performance. Strategic Management Journal, v. 28, n.1, p. 1319-1350, 2007., organizational actors have a much larger role than the simple coordination of the organization. The organizational actor needs to recognize problems and trends in order to orchestrate resources and processes, creating organizational opportunities.

The strategy-as-practice is the study of the practices carried out by its practitioners in the place where it occurs in the context in which it is inserted (BALOGUN et al., 2003BALOGUN, J.; HUFF, A. S.; JOHNSON, P. Three responses to the methodological challenges of studying strategizing. Journal of Management Studies, v.40, n. 1, p. 197-224, 2003.). The strategy-as-practice highlights the way in which organizational actors carry out their strategies, emphasizing the concept of strategizing, which relates the performance of activities with the elaboration of strategies by strategists (WHITTINGTON, 1996WHITTINGTON, R. Strategy-as-practice. Long Range Planning, v. 29, n. 1, p. 731-735, 1996.). As the activities generate results for the organization, they show themselves as competitive advantages of the same (JOHNSON et al., 2003JOHNSON, G.; MELIN, L.; WHITTINGTON. R. Micro-strategy and strategizing towards an activity-based view. Journal of Management Studies, v. 40, n. 1, p. 3-22, 2003.).

The term “dynamic” is an expression presented exclusively in relation to dynamic capabilities, on the other hand, practices, praxis and practitioners could show whether the environment is dynamic. Regnér's (2008) studies emphasize that the advance in the approach of studies on dynamic capabilities and strategy-as-practice provides a fertile basis for examining and explaining the dynamic process through which unique organizational assets are developed.

From the point of view of practices, the creation and modification of assets can occur in different ways, such as: making strategies more flexible to better adapt to the turbulent environment; creating processes and routines that favor learning and the appreciation of prior knowledge; also creating not only structure, but an environment conducive to innovative development (CARDOSO, ROSSETTO; DA SILVA, 2018CARDOSO, F. E.; ROSSETTO, C. R.; SILVA, J. R. Microfundamentos das capacidades dinâmicas por meio da lente da estratégia como prática. 2018. Tese (Doutorado) - Curso de Administração e turismo, Universidade vale do Itajaí, Biguaçu.).

Studies, for example, of meeting artifacts, spreadsheets, graphical representations, flipcharts, strategic events and reviews that will contribute to strategic processes, according to Jarzabkowski et al., (2019)JARZABKOWSKI, P. ; LÊ, J. ; BALOGUN, J. The social practice of coevolving strategy and structure to realize mandated radical change. Academy of Management Journal, v. 62, n. 3, p. 850-882, 2019. are also examples of tools that can be analyzed to identify ways that can contribute to strategy practices and decision-making processes, important for building and modifying assets. These are practices that can be studied in organizations in order to analyze the practices carried out that are inserted in a dynamic environment (CHATTERJEE et al., 2021CHATTERJEE, A., BRUCE, K. Collective Mindfulness and Strategy: Integrating the Core Theoretical Streams. In: 81th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, 2021, Nova York. Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management Proceedings. v. 2021.).

From a praxis point of view, it collaborates with the creation and modification of assets in dynamic environments as it identifies and analyzes the practices used by the organization, as well as the analysis of how the organization develops and modifies assets to survive in dynamic environments (CARDOSO et al., 2020CARDOSO, F. E.; ROSSETTO, C. R.; SILVA, J. R.; LAVARDA, R. B. Strategy-as-Practice Activities through the Lens of Microfoundations of Dynamic Capabilities. In: 80th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, 2020, Nova York. Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management Proceedings. v. 2020.). As an example of studies of praxis in a dynamic environment, we can mention the involvement and combination of cognitive, behavioral, procedural, discursive, motivational, emotional and physical activities that when analyzed, combined, coordinated and adapted, they generate new organizational assets, providing the creation and modification of assets for organizations.

With regard to practitioners who are the organizational actors responsible for formulating strategies, they end up becoming key pieces to identify the strategic actions developed for the creation and modification of unique assets in dynamic environments (CARDOSO et al., 2018CARDOSO, F. E.; ROSSETTO, C. R.; SILVA, J. R. Microfundamentos das capacidades dinâmicas por meio da lente da estratégia como prática. 2018. Tese (Doutorado) - Curso de Administração e turismo, Universidade vale do Itajaí, Biguaçu.). For example, actors' creative engagements in practices or capabilities can facilitate endogenous change in such practices and capabilities. According to Kearney et al., (2019)KEARNEY, A., HARRINGTON, D., KELLIHER, F. Strategizing in the micro firm: A ‘strategy as practice’ framework. Industry and Higher Education, 33(1), p. 6-17, 2019, and Regnér (2008)REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., the practitioners' approach can explain how the interactions between certain actors within a sociocultural and cognitive context, surrounded by certain artifacts, can generate a particular type of behavior and, in the end, as a result, generate unique strategies.

For example, studying the activities of middle management (BALOGUN, 2011), it is possible to analyze how these organizational actors (practitioners) perform activities and formulate their strategies, contributing to the construction of unique assets, providing superior performance to organizations. In this way, the study of how strategic activities are built at the micro level can provide the identification of the origins of dynamic capabilities, facilitating the shielding of these resources from competitors.

It is still important to highlight that the studies of practices, praxis and practitioners not individually, but in combination, provide a more in-depth analysis of the strategic activities carried out by organizations in their dynamic environments to generate competitive advantage, through the creation and modification of assets. unique (CHATTERJEE et al., 2021CHATTERJEE, A., BRUCE, K. Collective Mindfulness and Strategy: Integrating the Core Theoretical Streams. In: 81th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, 2021, Nova York. Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management Proceedings. v. 2021..

According to a study by Regnér (2008)REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., strategy-as-practice can complement the studies of dynamic capabilities with regard to the activities underlying organizational assets, providing the creation and/or modification of an organization's assets. At this point, the construction and modification of assets could be analyzed through practices, analyzing the social, symbolic and material tools used in the creation and modification of the assets. Studies of practices and praxis could explain the flow of assets created and modified, as well as studies of organizational actors (practitioners) would allow analyzing how the processes of formulating strategies are carried out.

According to Regnér (2008)REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008., strategy-as-practice examines the detailed internal workings of organizational mechanisms and how certain agents and structures socially incorporated through combinations, rather than treated individually, can generate competitive advantage. In this direction, the combination of strategy-as-practice elements can be an important way to identify the activities responsible for the creation and modification of unique assets that provide organizations with a competitive advantage (BARNEY, 1991BARNEY, J. Firm resources and sustained competitive advantage. Journal of Management. 17(1), p. 99-120, 1991.).

In summary, understanding the different combinations between certain activities, cognitive, behavioral, language structures and artifacts, provides a better understanding of how social practices can help organizations create and modify their dynamic capabilities (CARDOSO et al 2020CARDOSO, F. E.; ROSSETTO, C. R.; SILVA, J. R.; LAVARDA, R. B. Strategy-as-Practice Activities through the Lens of Microfoundations of Dynamic Capabilities. In: 80th Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management, 2020, Nova York. Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management Proceedings. v. 2020.; REGNÉR 2008REGNÉR, P. Strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities: steps towards a dynamic view of strategy. Human Relations, v. 61, n.4, p. 565-588, 2008.).

7 FINAL REMARKS

This study analyzed strategy-as-practice through the lens of the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. It was found that looking at dynamic capabilities through the lens of strategy-as-practice identifies the social and cultural factors involved in the process of developing strategies, which makes it possible to analyze the factors that provide the heterogeneity of dynamic organizational capabilities.

The analysis of organizational strategies at the micro level makes it possible to identify the activities that gave rise to dynamic capabilities, in order to shield them while maintaining them over time, or even by implementing mechanisms that replicate dynamic capabilities in other organizations, when necessary.

The microfoundations of dynamic capabilities can contribute to the analysis of capabilities, but the strategy-as-practice provides for finding heterogeneities in the process of capabilities building, identifying social and cultural factors as well as the role of organizational actors in the process of developing dynamic capabilities.

The conclusion of this study indicates that strategies-as-practice, through the lens of dynamic capabilities, provide an analysis of the construction of dynamic capabilities, in order to identify the strategic activities and organizational assets necessary for the construction of heterogeneous capabilities, maintaining the dynamic capabilities over time.

In this step, we have two perspectives, one being social (strategy-as-practice) and the other economic (dynamic capabilities), which despite having different roots, can correlate so that the first manages to contribute to the construction of the second. To do so, it is necessary to resort to theoretical renunciations that may be necessary in order to take advantage of the full potential of the strategy-as-practice approach and dynamic capabilities, leaving research with a focus on long-term plans, focused on top management, formal strategies and analysis of organizations in stable environments; for studies focusing on short-term plans, involving other organizational levels such as micro or meso, informal strategies and analysis of organizations in dynamic environments.

As limitations of the study, we highlight the care taken to analyze and correlate social aspects through the dynamic capabilities approach. Dynamic capabilities are primarily aimed at high-level actors in the organization, while strategy-as-practice addresses management at different organizational levels. The strategy-as-practice perspective emphasizes the practical strategy, the day-to-day strategy, the activities present in the daily processes of strategy formation. Involving the most diverse levels of the organization, from the high organizational level to the operational level, including external actors, everyone is involved, contributing to the strategy process as a practice. While the characteristic processes such as focal unit and strategic focus of dynamic capabilities are concerned with the ability to generate value for the organization.

Another limitation is in the context of the two perspectives, while the strategy-as-practice is focused on a socially and culturally embedded context, analyzing social, cognitive, language/symbolic factors and artifacts; dynamic capabilities are geared to the context of the positions of technological, financial and structural assets.

As future lines of research, we highlight the need for theoretical and empirical studies that address the care of analyzing social aspects through the perspective of dynamic capabilities, addressing the lack of studies that address the perspectives of strategy-as-practice and dynamic capabilities as a mechanism to improve organizational performance.

Yet as future lines of research, although dynamic capabilities address issues of how organizational assets are created and modified, there are few studies addressing this process and activities in detail that involve how organizational actors carry out their activities.

Thus, we understand that it is possible to establish a relationship from the perspective of the microfoundations of dynamic capabilities. Since capacity building requires the reformulation and remodeling of processes, skills and routines knowing that the mechanism that works in these cases is dynamic capabilities.

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    21 Apr 2023
  • Date of issue
    Jan-Apr 2023

History

  • Received
    07 Feb 2021
  • Accepted
    13 Sept 2022
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