This review examines when and how Total Quality Management (TQM) enables or constrains firms’ innovation and entrepreneurial dynamics, with a particular focus on transferability to emerging-economy industrial contexts. Building on ISO 9000/9001:2015 principles (customer focus, leadership, people engagement, process approach, improvement, evidence-based decision making, and relationship management), we synthesize prior research on the TQM–innovation nexus and highlight the mechanisms that convert quality routines into organizational learning. The evidence indicates that TQM tends to support innovation when implemented as a learning system: continuous improvement, structured problem solving, employee involvement, data-driven steering, and stakeholder collaboration combined with exploratory capabilities such as scanning, experimentation, and external openness are associated with higher levels of process and incremental innovation and, under ambidextrous governance, can also facilitate more novel innovation. Conversely, innovation may be hindered when standardization hardens into rigidity (defensive compliance, risk aversion, and documentation overload). The paper contributes an integrated conceptual framework that links TQM principles, innovation types, entrepreneurial orientation, and performance outcomes, and it proposes a “conditions mechanisms effects” grid to anticipate when TQM will be an innovation enabler versus a constraint. Managerial and policy implications are discussed to help organizations align quality discipline with exploration in competitive and regulated environments. Keywords: Total Quality Management; Innovation; Entrepreneurship; Quality 4.0; Organizational Performance
ISLAH et al. (Fri,) studied this question.