well as in-depth interviews with 31 people
composed of immigration officials, passport
applicants and partners-working with immigration
offices that support service activities.
3 RESULTS
3.1. Institutional Dynamic Capabilities:
Case on Immigration Office Class I
Surabaya Regions
Passport issuance service is one of public service
which be an attention for citizen of Indonesia.
Passport has become one of the important
documents for the peoples today along with the
increasing economic ability of society in Indonesia
every year which impact on the high intensity of
society to travel abroad. In 2017, the number of
passport applicants in Indonesia reached 3,1 million
people, a higher number compared to 2015 which
reached 2,9 million people (setkab.go.id). In
addition to high passport applications by the
community, other challenges faced by the
immigration office are the high complaints about
public dissatisfaction with the quality of services
provided, the increasing of brokers, the uncertainty
of the services provided, and the technical problems
of the service.
Immigration Office Class I Surabaya Regions is
one of the main institutions that provide a passport
service for east java with working area includes a
part of Surabaya (south, central, and north
Surabaya’s), Mojokerto city, Mojokerto regency,
and Jombang regency. Although the working area is
limited to the 4 areas, but the people applying for
passports at the Immigration Office Class I Surabaya
Regions come from various regions, especially in
the eastern part of Indonesia including the applicants
from East Java, Sulawesi Island, Kalimantan to
Papua.
This situation requires institutions to be able to
have dynamic capabilities, “dynamic capabilities is
the firm's ability to integrate, build, and reconfigure
internal and external competencies to address
rapidly changing environment” (Helfat dkk, 2007:2).
Dynamic institutions are able to design their various
service activities to adapt to environmental changes
and community demands to create excellent service
quality. In Neo and Chen (2007) the dynamic
capabilities of institutions are seen from their ability
to apply the three main mindsets that will lead to
dynamic governance. The mindset consists of
thinking ahead, thinking again and thinking across.
Thinking ahead is an institutional capacity to
identify future environmental and community
development needs, to understand its implications
for activities in achieving organizational goals and to
identify strategies and options needed to anticipate
them (Neo and Chen, 2007:30). The executive
manager (head and chief of division) in immigration
office class I Surabaya aware that their main
position in carrying the reputation of public service
of Indonesian immigration in the public view,
therefore they emphasize how the door-to-door
activity in the passport service can be reduced by
issuing various service system changes, first through
“one stop service” innovation to simplify the
passport service flow becomes shorter. Second, the
online passport queue to provide certainty to the
public to obtain a passport queue that was previously
enforced manually; Third, remove the payment
system manually into via bank in 76 cooperating
banks and PT Pos Indonesia; Fourth, by creating an
innovation service checking the status of taking
passport via whatsapp official account of
Immigration Office Class I Surabaya Regions.
Thinking again is the institutional ability to
utilize actual data, information, measurements and
feedback on problems that impede performance,
review various derivatives of policies and programs
from the past to find ways of improving their
performance (Neo and Chen, 2007: 36). The
realization of the process of thinking again an
institution that is on the evaluation of the service
activities. The formal process of evaluating service
performance in reporting is done in several phases,
every month, quarterly, in semester and years. In
addition, immigration office employees, especially
the sector that give the passport serving (division of
information and communication; and section of
immigration documents service) also conduct non-
formal performance evaluations such as in the form
of brainstorming, working meetings between
executive managers and each division at least once a
week. This has an impact on the immigration office
to detect changes that need to be made to improve
service effectiveness.
The evaluation and review of the various service
activities resulted in various policy changes and
redesign of passport services to improve services so
that in accordance with the public’s demands in
order to create excellent service.