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Digital Transformation in Business Organizations: A Critical Review of Strategy, Technology Adoption, and Organizational Change in the Era of Data-Driven Enterprises
Digital transformation has emerged as a central imperative for organizations navigating the data-driven economy, fundamentally reshaping strategy, technology adoption, and organizational structures. This systematic and integrative review synthesizes peer-reviewed scholarship to examine how firms conceptualize digital transformation, pursue strategic renewal, implement digital technologies, and manage ensuing organizational changes. The analysis reveals that digital transformation is not merely technological upgrading but a multifaceted process involving strategic intent, capability reconfiguration, and structural redesign—often accompanied by significant tensions between legacy routines and emergent data-driven logics. Key insights trace the evolution of digital transformation research from early strategic framing toward more nuanced explorations of adoption barriers, managerial role shifts, and adaptive outcomes. Strategic drivers emphasize alignment with dynamic capabilities, while technology adoption processes underscore the interplay between implementation and business model innovation. Organizational change manifests in redesigned processes, cultures, and governance systems, yet persistent barriers such as cultural inertia and capability erosion hinder progress. To integrate these fragmented streams, this review introduces the Integrative Digital Transformation Framework, which maps interconnections across thematic layers and offers a structured lens for orchestrating sustainable transformation. By tracing temporal evolution and identifying theoretical gaps, this synthesis advances management scholarship and provides practitioners with actionable guidance for navigating digital transformation in data-driven enterprises.
Journal of Digital Business and Management Studies
Review | Open access | 18 September 2021 | Article: 5

The Rise of Platform-Based Competition: A Review of Theoretical Perspectives on Digital Marketplaces, Network Effects, and Ecosystem Strategy
Platform-based competition has fundamentally transformed competitive dynamics in digital markets by shifting the locus of rivalry from firm-level products to multi-sided ecosystems sustained by network effects and orchestrated participation. This integrative review synthesizes theoretical and empirical insights from peer-reviewed scholarship to examine how digital marketplaces, network externalities, and ecosystem strategies reshape value creation, competitive advantage, and strategic positioning. Early foundations in two-sided market theory established the centrality of cross-side and same-side network effects in driving platform scale and winner-take-most outcomes. Subsequent scholarship advanced understanding of platform envelopment, multihoming, complementor dynamics, and governance tensions between openness and control. The review identifies persistent strategic paradoxes: platforms must simultaneously encourage generativity to fuel innovation while safeguarding value appropriation and architectural integrity. By organizing the literature into a conceptual synthesis, the paper illuminates the interdependent layers through which platform leaders coordinate users and complementors, navigate openness-control trade-offs, and evolve in response to competitive feedback. Contributions include bridging fragmented perspectives across strategy, information systems, and economics, highlighting the temporal evolution from network effects to ecosystem orchestration, and delineating future research directions for platform evolution amid rapid technological change and regulatory scrutiny. The analysis underscores that sustainable competitive advantage in platform markets derives less from proprietary assets than from dynamic capabilities in governance, orchestration, and adaptive ecosystem design.
Journal of Digital Business and Management Studies
Review | Open access | 18 September 2021 | Article: 6

Business Analytics and Strategic Management: A Review of Organizational Capabilities and Managerial Practices in Data-Driven Decision Making
Business analytics has revolutionized strategic management by enabling organizations to harness vast datasets to improve decision-making, enhance agility, and gain a competitive edge. This narrative literature review synthesizes peer-reviewed studies, focusing on organizational capabilities and managerial practices that underpin data-driven decision-making processes. Drawing from high-impact journals in management and information systems, the analysis reveals how analytics capabilities—spanning data infrastructure, analytical skills, and cultural alignment—mediate the translation of raw data into strategic outcomes. Key patterns demonstrate consistent positive linkages to firm performance through process optimization and innovation. At the same time, managerial practices emerge as critical bridges that interpret algorithmic insights and align them with organizational goals. Five interconnected research streams are identified: analytics capabilities linked to performance, data-driven strategic decision processes, organizational technology adoption, managerial dynamics in analytics-enabled environments, and analytics as a driver of innovation and competitive advantage. A conceptual synthesis model illustrates these relationships, showing pathways from capabilities through managerial practices to strategic advantages. Despite advances, tensions persist between technological determinism and a human-centric interpretation, with unresolved challenges in governance and the maturation of capabilities. This review advances the field by integrating diverse theoretical perspectives and highlighting avenues for deeper exploration of sustainable analytics-driven strategies in volatile markets.
Journal of Digital Business and Management Studies
Review | Open access | 18 September 2022 | Article: 16

Digital Platform Governance in Contemporary Markets: A Review of Institutional Structures, Strategic Coordination Mechanisms, and Ecosystem Power Dynamics
Digital platforms have become central orchestrators of value creation in contemporary markets, yet their governance remains a fragmented but critical domain of inquiry. This narrative literature review synthesizes peer-reviewed studies published to examine how institutional structures, strategic coordination mechanisms, and ecosystem owner dynamics shape platform-based competition. Drawing from leading journals in management, information systems, and innovation, the analysis identifies five core research streams: governance architectures, coordination mechanisms, platform leadership and orchestration, power asymmetries, and regulatory-institutional challenges. Key findings reveal persistent tensions between openness for innovation and control for value capture, evolving governance practices that balance cocreation with cost management, and growing power imbalances between platform owners and complementors. The analysis culminates in a conceptual synthesis model that illustrates the interconnected flows of coordination, control, and value within ecosystems. This review demonstrates that effective governance is not merely technical but fundamentally institutional, influencing complementor participation, ecosystem stability, and market outcomes. By integrating disparate perspectives, this work highlights unresolved tensions in multi-sided markets and proposes directions for future scholarship on global platform regulation and adaptive governance in volatile digital environments. The synthesis offers practical guidance for managers and policymakers navigating the complexities of platform-dominated economies.
Journal of Digital Business and Management Studies
Review | Open access | 18 September 2022 | Article: 17

Organizational Adaptation to Digital Transformation: Reviewing Strategic, Cultural, and Structural Responses in Technology-Driven Business Environments
Digital transformation has emerged as a pervasive force reshaping how organizations operate, compete, and create value in technology-driven environments. This conceptual research agenda article synthesizes the evolution of scholarly inquiry into organizational adaptation to digital transformation, with particular emphasis on strategic reconfiguration, cultural shifts, and structural redesign. Drawing on a curated set of peer-reviewed publications, the analysis traces major theoretical milestones—from early recognition of digital disruption as a trigger for strategic responses to multidisciplinary frameworks distinguishing digitization, digitalization, and full-scale transformation. Scholarship has progressively shifted from technology adoption to holistic organizational change, highlighting the interplay among dynamic capabilities, leadership roles, and business model innovation as critical mechanisms for adaptation. Emerging phenomena such as digitally enabled agility, platform-based ecosystems, AI-augmented decision-making, and cultural ambidexterity are examined as they challenge traditional organizational paradigms. A conceptual roadmap is proposed to visualize the interconnected evolution of strategic, cultural, and structural mechanisms and their linkages to unresolved theoretical tensions. The article identifies persistent gaps, including the under-theorized role of contextual contingencies in adaptation processes and the long-term sustainability of cultural transformations. By proposing a forward-looking agenda, this work aims to guide future research toward more integrated, multilevel, and process-oriented understandings of how organizations can thrive amid continuous technological upheaval. Ultimately, successful adaptation requires not merely implementing digital tools but orchestrating profound shifts across strategy, culture, and structure to foster resilience and innovation in volatile digital economies.
Journal of Digital Business and Management Studies
Review | Open access | 18 September 2022 | Article: 18

Artificial Intelligence in Business Strategy Research: A Comprehensive Review of Organizational Implications and Emerging Theoretical Directions
Artificial intelligence has emerged as a transformative force in business strategy research, reshaping how organizations conceptualize competitive advantage, reconfigure capabilities, and restructure decision architectures. This integrative review synthesizes peer-reviewed studies to map the evolving role of AI in strategic management. Drawing on literature from leading journals in strategy, information systems, and innovation, the analysis examines how AI is conceptualized—as both a decision-support tool and an autonomous strategic actor—and evaluates its organizational implications across adoption, governance, and transformation processes. Key findings reveal convergences around AI’s augmentation of dynamic capabilities and competitive positioning, yet persistent tensions exist regarding automation-augmentation paradoxes, managerial role erosion, and ethical governance challenges. The review introduces the AI Strategic Organizational Integration Model, a novel synthesis framework comprising five interconnected domains that organize prior research and highlight pathways toward emerging theoretical directions. By classifying studies along dimensions of strategic cognition, capability transformation, organizational redesign, governance tensions, and market-level outcomes, the model illuminates gaps in longitudinal evidence and cross-level theorizing. This work advances an integrative understanding of AI’s strategic significance while offering a structured foundation for future research on intelligent systems in dynamic business environments.
Journal of Digital Business and Management Studies
Review | Open access | 18 September 2023 | Article: 29

Platform Ecosystems in Management Scholarship: Reviewing Research on Governance Structures, Strategic Leadership, and Innovation Dynamics
Platform ecosystems represent a distinctive organizational form in the digital economy, characterized by interdependent actors coordinated through digital infrastructure. This systematic integrative review synthesizes peer-reviewed studies to examine three core themes in management scholarship: governance structures, strategic leadership, and innovation dynamics. Drawing on targeted literature from leading journals, the analysis reveals how platform owners balance openness and control to sustain generativity while mitigating power asymmetries. Strategic leadership emerges as a dynamic capability for ecosystem orchestration, enabling platform firms to align complementor incentives and drive value co-creation. Innovation processes are shown to depend on complementor participation, selective promotion of complements, and evolving coordination mechanisms that address tensions between autonomy and collective performance. The review traces the evolution of research from an early emphasis on governance mechanisms to a later focus on leadership, power dynamics, and the ecosystem lifecycle. An original synthesis model—the Platform Ecosystem Governance-Leadership-Innovation Synthesis Model—is introduced to integrate fragmented insights into five interconnected layers. By classifying the literature thematically and highlighting persistent tensions, this review provides a unified architecture for future platform research and offers actionable insights for ecosystem managers.
Journal of Digital Business and Management Studies
Review | Open access | 18 September 2023 | Article: 30