TY - JOUR AB - Two views of organizational change dominate the management literature. The incremental view holds that organizations experience largeā€scale strategic changes quite slowly while the revolutionary view proposes that organizations experience long periods of relatively little strategic variation punctuated by short, intense periods of major change. Commonalties among the two change theories provide the basis for a study of 101 businesses over a six year period. The research examines two theoretical implications: change is bimodally and discretely distributed and skewed toward incremental strategic change, and firms undergoing revolutionary strategic change will be more likely to experience simultaneous changes on multiple organizational dimensions than firms undergoing incremental strategic change. Consistent with Proposition 1, it was found that change is skewed toward incremental, but also that change is unimodal and continuously distributed, contrary to Proposition 1. Contrary to Proposition 2, revolutionary change on multiple dimensions was found to be rare. VL - 1 IS - 3 SN - 1055-3185 DO - 10.1108/eb028792 UR - https://doi.org/10.1108/eb028792 AU - Fornaciari Charles J. AU - Lamont Bruce T. AU - Mason Ben AU - Hoffman James J. PY - 1993 Y1 - 1993/01/01 TI - INCREMENTAL AND REVOLUTIONARY STRATEGIC CHANGE: AN EMPIRICAL TEST OF COMMON PREMISES T2 - The International Journal of Organizational Analysis PB - MCB UP Ltd SP - 273 EP - 290 Y2 - 2024/04/23 ER -