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Management redeemed : debunking the fads that undermine corporate performance / Frederick G. Hilmer, Lex Donaldson.

LIBRA HD31 .H492 1996
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hilmer, Frederick G.
Contributor:
Donaldson, Lex.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Industrial management.
Industrial management--United States.
United States.
Comparative management.
Physical Description:
xvi, 223 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
New York : Free Press, [1996]
Summary:
Frederick G. Hilmer and Lex Donaldson challenge five of the most widely held beliefs about management. Drawing on examples from GE, Microsoft, Nike, Ford, Gillette, and other corporations, as well as on years of research from top business scholars, Management Redeemed argues that multiple layers of management and formal hierarchical structure actually help to make organizations more productive. Supporting another equally contrarian position, the authors demonstrate that reflection, analysis, and intellectual activity are as important to managerial success as quick action and intuition. They also warn against the dangers of corporate culture and quick-fix solutions such as TQM, reengineering, value-based planning, benchmarking, niche marketing, and gainsharing. And finally, in one of their most surprising revelations, Hilmer and Donaldson rebut the notion that independent boards are necessary to ensure that management works in the best interest of the shareholders. In fact, their evidence illustrates that boards with a majority of outside directors generally underinvest in R&D, retarding corporate success. In contrast to all who decry managers and management, Hilmer and Donaldson have a strikingly positive view of managers. And, unlike those who predict the imminent extinction of managers, these authors foresee a larger role for them in the corporations of the future. Rather than doing away with classical management, Hilmer and Donaldson urge that it be upgraded to a profession on par with medicine, engineering, law, or architecture. To meet that standard, the authors say, corporations, business schools, and professional associations must work together to establish a firm set of idealsand ethics, a sound body of required knowledge, and a clear, jargon-free vocabulary.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 205-214) and index.
ISBN:
0684831627
OCLC:
34772131

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