TY - JOUR
T1 - Communities of practice and innovation
T2 - a review and research agenda
AU - Haas, Aurore
AU - Borzillo, Stefano
AU - Bootz, Jean-Philippe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Emerald Publishing Limited
PY - 2025/11/25
Y1 - 2025/11/25
N2 - Purpose This study aims to explore the role of communities of practice (CoPs) in supporting organizational innovation. It provides a thorough review of how CoPs contribute to or shape innovation and concludes with an agenda for future research. Design/methodology/approach A hybrid narrative approach examines the existing research literature on CoPs and their impact on innovation. This review incorporates mainstream databases as well as an artificial intelligence tool. Findings The literature highlights three overarching themes: (1) innovation in informal CoPs, focusing on knowledge sharing and creation as key mechanisms driving innovation through knowledge management, the development of meta-capabilities and enhanced social capital; (2) innovation at the boundaries of communities, exploring how interactions between CoPs and connections with external communities promote innovation via boundary-spanning practices; and (3) innovation in organizational CoPs (OCoPs), examining how the dynamic interplay between autonomy and organizational objectives shapes OCoPs’ innovation potential. Research limitations/implications Future research should empirically examine how boundary-spanning activities (in and between communities) and proactive leadership of communities optimize measurable innovation outcomes, both within and beyond organizational frontiers. This calls for theorizing CoPs not merely as mechanisms for knowledge creation, but as pivotal structures that orchestrate, modulate and sustain an open and adaptive form of organizational ambidexterity. Originality/value To the best of authors’ knowledge, this study presents the first in-depth literature review on the relationship between CoPs and innovation, leveraging a combination of traditional academic sources and artificial intelligence tools.
AB - Purpose This study aims to explore the role of communities of practice (CoPs) in supporting organizational innovation. It provides a thorough review of how CoPs contribute to or shape innovation and concludes with an agenda for future research. Design/methodology/approach A hybrid narrative approach examines the existing research literature on CoPs and their impact on innovation. This review incorporates mainstream databases as well as an artificial intelligence tool. Findings The literature highlights three overarching themes: (1) innovation in informal CoPs, focusing on knowledge sharing and creation as key mechanisms driving innovation through knowledge management, the development of meta-capabilities and enhanced social capital; (2) innovation at the boundaries of communities, exploring how interactions between CoPs and connections with external communities promote innovation via boundary-spanning practices; and (3) innovation in organizational CoPs (OCoPs), examining how the dynamic interplay between autonomy and organizational objectives shapes OCoPs’ innovation potential. Research limitations/implications Future research should empirically examine how boundary-spanning activities (in and between communities) and proactive leadership of communities optimize measurable innovation outcomes, both within and beyond organizational frontiers. This calls for theorizing CoPs not merely as mechanisms for knowledge creation, but as pivotal structures that orchestrate, modulate and sustain an open and adaptive form of organizational ambidexterity. Originality/value To the best of authors’ knowledge, this study presents the first in-depth literature review on the relationship between CoPs and innovation, leveraging a combination of traditional academic sources and artificial intelligence tools.
KW - Ambidexterity
KW - Communities of practice
KW - Exploitation
KW - Exploration
KW - Innovation
KW - Organizational communities of practice
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024459766
U2 - 10.1108/JKM-01-2025-0106
DO - 10.1108/JKM-01-2025-0106
M3 - Article
SN - 1367-3270
SP - 1
EP - 28
JO - Journal of Knowledge Management
JF - Journal of Knowledge Management
ER -