Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-2025

Department

College of Business

Abstract

Despite the strengthened efforts on sustainability and technological activities by firms, the existing literature lacks a clear picture regarding how green orientation (GO) and technological agility (TAG) can be transformed into sustainable competitive advantage (SCA) and at what time the conversion process may be most efficient. This paper conceptualizes organizational agility (OGA) based on the resource-based view (RBV) and dynamic capabilities theory (DCT) and hypothesizes that GO and TAG indirectly affect SCA with the mediating impact of environmental uncertainty (ELU). A moderated-mediation model was tested based on a sample of 200 managers (HR, marketing, accounting/finance, quality control, R&D) of auto-parts manufacturers in industrial clusters in Gujarat, India, and measured with PLS-SEM. The findings indicate that GO and TAG have positive effects on OGA and SCA and that OGA plays a significant mediation role in the association of GO and SCA, as well as TAG and SCA. Nevertheless, the conditional indirect hypothesis effects of ELU were not significant and indicated that the routinized agility could shield the firms against the legitimacy turbulence in the process of transforming the sustainability intent and technological responsiveness into competitive results. The research makes a contribution to theory by explaining how the effects of orientations make sense when beneficial and defining a condition of what might be termed a limit in which the capability effects are enhanced. On the managerial front, it emphasizes the aspects of co-investment of GO and TAG along with the institutionalization of agility routines to achieve sustainability-driven competitiveness in dynamic markets.

Publisher's Statement

Publisher's version of record: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.joitmc.2025.100675

Publication Title

Journal of Open Innovation Technology Market and Complexity

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