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The current issue and full text archive of this journal is available at www.emeraldinsight.com/0144-3577.htm IJOPM Operations management 28,8 research: evolution and alternative future paths 710 Christopher W. Craighead Department of Supply Chain and Information Systems, Received February 2007 Smeal College of Business, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Revised March 2008 Accepted April 2008 Pennsylvania, USA, and Jack Meredith Babcock Graduate School of Management, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA Abstract Purpose – This paper aims to investigate the evolution of operations management (OM) research along two major dimensions from 1977 to 2003 and discusses possible paths for research progression in the future. Design/methodology/approach – To identify OM research papers, a careful definition of OM research was constructed based initially on earlier work and then more precisely extended through empirical analysis. The research on OM builds on a previous study that took snapshots of OM research in 1977 and 1987. It then extends and updates it through a content analysis of 593 articles published in 1995 and 2003 in five journals recognized for publishing OM research. Findings – The overall results illustrate that OM has evolved from heavily rationalistic, axiomatic analyses based on artificial reconstructions of reality toward more interpretive analyses based on natural observations of reality. Research limitations/implications – As the OM field continues to evolve, it is important to monitorandreassesspublishedresearchtodiscernitschangingdimensions.Whilethiseffortisnotan exhaustive review of all OM research and does not consider all relevant journals and years, it does offer the “big picture” perspective needed for analyzing changing research approaches in the field. Practical implications – The research provides an analysis of the evolution of knowledge creation within the field and possible paths for its future development. The practical implications are that as research becomes more interpretive and observation-based, the findings will have more relevance for managers and the problems they face. Originality/value – While several authors have analyzed the OM field relative to select research methods and journals, this paper provides a broader and more encompassing view of OM research along two important research dimensions: the researcher’s framework and the source of the data. Keywords Researchmethods,Operationsmanagement,Functionevaluation Paper type Literature review Introduction International Journal of Operations & Research in operations management (OM) has changed dramatically over the years. Production Management Originally concerned with industrial management methods and procedures for Vol. 28 No. 8, 2008 improving processes (Buffa, 1980, p. 1), the field moved through relatively simple pp. 710-726 qEmeraldGroupPublishingLimited mathematical techniques for independent process improvements such as assembly 0144-3577 DOI 10.1108/01443570810888625 line balancing and job shop scheduling to more sophisticated management science techniques for optimizing flows, blends, and resource allocations. More recently, there Operations has been a movement toward a more diverse set of empirical (i.e. based on direct sense management experiences or observations) and even interpretive frameworks based on research surveys/questionnaires, case/field studies, and interviews. Moreover, we are also seeing changes in the means of data collection such as the use of postal, e-mail, and internet communication, direct personal contact with managers, and even personal observation of the unit of analysis such as when a plant or manufacturing cell is 711 involved. The purposes of this paper are to first track the evolution of OM research as published in several top journals and then discuss various alternative paths that may definethefutureevolutionofresearchinourfield.Weareparticularlyinterestedintwo patterns of OM research: (1) the rationalistic versus interpretive orientation of the researcher; and (2) whether the researcher desires observational or artificial data for conducting the research. Wewill elaborate on these two patterns shortly but we wish to emphasize that we are not talking about research methods, though methods naturally embody these two patterns of interest. Background In terms of research in OM, 1980 marked an epoch in the field. Two new journals devoted to research solely in OM started publication: International Journal of Operations & Production Management (IJOPM) in Europe and Journal of Operations Management(JOM)inAmerica.Included in that first issue of JOM were two seminal articles written by recognized leaders in the field, Elwood Buffa and Richard Chase. They summarized the past history of both research content and process in the field, and both called for major changes in research approaches. Buffa (1980) forecast that future OM research would move away from mathematical optimization, which we would characterize as being a heavily rationalistic treatment of artificial reconstructions of the situation of interest. Likewise, Chase (1980) noted the prevalence of mathematical/computer modeling, the unsophisticated research designs, andthepaucityof“macro-oriented”research.ThenarrownessofOMresearch(“micro” in the terms of Chase, 1980) was reemphasized by Miller et al. (1981). In 1989, Meredith et al. (1989) defined a “Research Matrix” (Meredith et al., 1989, Figure 3, p. 309) intended to more explicitly describe the character of research approaches other than just listing various research methods. The axes of the matrix consisted of two separate dimensions: (1) the researcher’s framework ranging from rational (i.e. highly deductive, axiomatic) to existential (inductive, interpretive); and (2) the source of the data ranging from natural (i.e. empirical, directly observed) to artificial (typically hypothetical reconstruction). These two dimensions better identify research movement in a field because selected research methods (e.g. surveys, mathematical modeling, interviews) inherently embodyboththeresearcher’sframeworkaswellashowtheresearcherobtainsdatafor analysis. For example, the researcher’s framework may be closer to rational than, say, IJOPM interpretive and thus be at the logical positivist/empiricist level, favoring, for example, 28,8 experimentation. But to obtain data, the researcher can experiment either through direct observation of human subjects during laboratory experiments, or by artificial reconstruction using computer simulation. Similarly, a researcher may be dedicated to artificial reconstruction for obtaining data, but could use mathematical modeling if she or he held a logical positivist/empiricist’s framework or conceptual modeling with an 712 interpretivist’s framework. The Meredith et al. (1989) paper identified a series of alternative research approaches in OM and plotted the trends of three OM research journals – JOM, Management Science (MS), and Decision Sciences (DS) – during the years 1977 and 1987 on the axes of the Research Matrix. Almost two-thirds of the papers wereclassified in the highly rational (axiomatic) category, almost one-third were in the adjacent logical positivist/empiricist category, and 9 percent were in the interpretive category. There seemed to be a slight shift toward the existential end of the scale over the decade. The great majority (93 percent) of the papers fell in the artificial end of the natural-artificial continuum and there was no significant change over the decade. In 1993, Neely (1993) used a modification of Chase’s categorization to examine all the articles published in IJOPM during the decade of the 1980s. His objective was to see if the research content and research processes of European (primarily) OM publications had changed substantially over the decade. He found that while the content had changedfromafocusonsmall,hardissuestolarger(“macro,”inChase’sterminology), softer issues, there had been no discernable change in the research processes. He speculated that the reason may have been because research content is often driven by the P/OM community and environment, whereas the research process (framework and data source) is selected by the individual doing the investigation and reflects personal preference and situational needs. The previously discussed literature, along with many other analyses (Amoako-Gyampah and Meredith, 1989; Scudder and Hill, 1998; Pannirselvam et al., 1999; Rungtusanatham et al., 2003; Chopra et al., 2004), has provided valuable insights into selected aspects of OM research. However, most of the analyses have been narrowly focused in one way or another, such as those that have looked at a particular topic (Voss, 2005), a select research method (Malhotra and Grover, 1998; McCutcheon and Meredith, 1993), institutional productivity (Malhotra and Kher, 1996; Young et al., 1996), or particular journals (Chopra et al., 2004; Pilkington and Fitzgerald, 2006). Although all of these have been informative, they have typically centered on topics, methods, journals, researchers, schools, or some other limited aspect of the field. There is a need to examine OM research in a larger, more philosophical framework along multiple dimensions, such as those selected in the Meredith et al. (1989) study: the perspective of the researcher and the data source. The purpose of this study is to provide such a broader, more all-encompassing analysis of research in the field. Research study Asnotedearlier,thepurposeofthisresearchistotracktheevolutionofOMresearchwith afocusontwodimensionsoftheresearchfromthepasttothepresent.Itmightbenoted that many other business fields have conducted the same type of analysis during their evolution. For example, Information Systems has had a long history of attempting to define its boundaries of research (Agarwal and Lucas, 2005; Benbasat and Zmud, 2004; Benbasat and Weber, 1996; Orlikowski and Iacono, 2001; Whinston and Geng, 2004), Operations even though it is an extremely young field. management research Journal selection We wished to expand the journals included in the study beyond the three in the Meredith et al. (1989) paper. We used Barman et al. (2001) which captured journal 713 perceptions from US scholars and Soteriou et al. (1999) which captured European perceptions. Specifically, we took the top journals from Table 5 in both Barman et al. (2001, p. 376) and Soteriou et al. (1999, p. 232). We felt that by including journals that are highly regarded by both US and European scholars, our research would be less biased toward any single view of acceptable OM research outlets. The final list of journals included the original three – MS, DS, and JOM – as well as two other well-recognized journals: IJOPM, and Production and Operations Management (POM). It should be noted that by selecting highly-regarded (i.e. by established scholars) outlets, we are potentially biasing our results against new approaches (i.e. the choice and use of various research methods). Hence, our results about the evolution of OM research could fall on the more conservative side of change. Article inclusion Owingtothe journals selected (i.e. DS and MS are interdisciplinary), it was necessary to extract articles that were primarily OM rather than another discipline. Our approach was to start with the definitions of OM research employed by other researchers (Young et al., 1996; Malhotra and Kher, 1996) as our initial set of criteria for article inclusion. The initial criteria involved lengthy discussion and underwent several revisions based on the results of several pilot rounds. We first decided that each article had to contribute to only OM research, thus eliminating introductions to special issues, articles that focused on teaching or curriculum issues (including research on teaching), and articles that focused on the discipline of the OM field itself such as publication productivity rankings and journal rankings. To be included in our study, an article’s focus must either be on an OM topic (see A, below) or on OM research itself (B): A. Similar to Malhotra and Kher (1996), the article’s major emphasis had to fall within the OperationsManagementBodyofKnowledge(OMBOK),asdefined(e.g.Youngetal.,1996)by the major topics in OM textbooks, rather than within management science, engineering, economics, or other allied field. “Major emphasis” means the primary focus of the paper, rather than the strict number of pages, title, intent of the work, types of references, or some other mechanical characteristic of the paper. In those often difficult cases where a quantitative model was a substantial portion of the paper, the article would be considered an Operations Management paper if either substantial insights were provided into the OMBOK in terms of better understanding the relationships and concepts that form the foundations of Operations Management, or substantial guidance was provided for OM managers based on the outcome of the research. B. The article had to analyze and contribute to the research being conducted in OM, though not necessarily restricted to a specific topic in the OMBOK. This would thus include analyses of the literature and research methodologies as long as the analysis culminated in substantial recommendations for improving OM research.
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