Abstract
This study contributes to the literature by examining antecedents to different combinations of management control systems. These combinations include combined use, focusing on the absolute magnitude of the project manager's organic and mechanistic control activities, and the balanced use, that is their relative magnitude. It is proposed that project managers' perceived task uncertainty and tolerance for ambiguity have direct and interaction effects on their balanced and combined use of different combinations of project control. Consistent with the hypotheses, the results show negative relationships between high tolerance for ambiguity and balanced and combined use of organic and mechanistic controls. Further, task uncertainty appears to have a direct, significant negative effect on balanced use, but not on combined use. Furthermore, as proposed, a negative significant interaction effect was found. The results were controlled for project size, project type and level of innovativeness.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank the two anonymous referees, Professor Robert H. Chenhall and the editor for their very insightful comments.
Notes
A complementary effect implies that two or more controls strengthen each other in achieving the desired outcome (Widener, Citation2007).
He and Wong Citation(2004) and Cao et al. Citation(2009) show two differing interpretations of ambidexterity (i.e. simultaneous use of exploration and exploitation), both understandings being very distinct. They conclude that ambiguity in the treatment of the ambidexterity construct may have material implications in terms of theory development, management practice as well as different operationalizations of the construct.