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Apply Institutional Theory (DiMaggio and Powell, 1983) to analyze how coercive, mimetic, and normative isomorphic pressures shape organizational structures and practices. Use this skill when the user needs to explain why organizations in the same field look alike, evaluate whether a practice was adopted for legitimacy vs efficiency, analyze regulatory or social pressures on strategy, or when they ask 'why do all firms in this industry do the same thing', 'is this best practice or just conformity', or 'how do regulations shape our structure'.
npx skill4agent add asgard-ai-platform/skills grad-strat-institutionalIRON LAW: Organizations may adopt practices for LEGITIMACY, not
EFFICIENCY. Assuming all organizational practices are efficiency-
driven will misdiagnose the real adoption motive and lead to
incorrect strategic recommendations.| Mechanism | Source | Driver | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coercive | Regulations, laws, mandates from powerful actors | Compliance with authority | Government mandating ESG reporting |
| Mimetic | Uncertainty; copying successful/prominent organizations | Uncertainty reduction | Startups copying FAANG organizational structures |
| Normative | Professionalization, education, professional networks | Professional standards | MBA programs teaching identical frameworks |
## Institutional Analysis: [Context]
### Organizational Field Definition
- Field boundaries: ...
- Key actors: ...
### Isomorphic Pressures
| Practice/Structure | Mechanism | Source | Motive (Efficiency/Legitimacy) |
|-------------------|-----------|--------|-------------------------------|
| [practice] | [C/M/N] | [source] | [motive] |
### Decoupling Assessment
- Formally adopted but decoupled: ...
- Tightly coupled (genuine adoption): ...
### Strategic Implications
1. [respond to coercive pressures: compliance strategy]
2. [respond to mimetic pressures: differentiation vs conformity]
3. [respond to normative pressures: professional development]