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"Through 18 brand new case studies this book shows how companies
did not manage labor and customers as long as they did not need to.
With competition becoming tougher and tougher, they tried to
recover control, using more and more processes and reporting
systems. The result is exactly the opposite: the more they rule,
the more they lose control"--
Building on his previous book, The Customer's Victory, François Dupuy outlines ways to manage a change process. Using practical examples from new case studies and discussion of current theories of organizational change, this book explains how true organizational change can be effected in both private businesses and public organizations. With a strong pedagogical format, case studies and a helpful glossary of terms, this is an invaluable guide both for managers having to deal with change implementation and for students and researchers of change management.
This work describes and analyses how managers need to understand
organizations in order to help them effectively implement the
changes necessary to operate in today's competitive environment.
Focusing on the need to cooperate, the author provides a diagnostic
and a methodology that aims to show managers how to understand why
people do what they do and how they can use this knowledge to
implement organizational change.
Steering change is a major issue for managers today. But how do we
develop the ability to control it, and not just become a spectator
to it? Following on from the success of his previous books, The
Customer's Victory and The Chemistry of Change, Francois Dupuy
further develops his theories about the relationship between
sharing knowledge and managing change. With a strong pedagogical
format, new case studies and a helpful glossary, this is an
invaluable guide both for managers having to deal with change
implementation and for students and researchers of change
management. MARKET 1: Researchers and postgraduate students of
change management; Managers involved in implementing change - the
book will be used as a support for seminars given by the author to
executives on different campuses, mainly INSEAD in France and IU in
the United States MARKET 2: Managers dealing with change
implementation
Using 18 new cases this book shows that in the past companies did
not manage labour or customers as long as they did not need to.
Tougher competition has forced them to recover control using more
processes and reporting systems. But the result has been the
opposite: the more they rule, the more they lose control.
Steering change is a major issue for managers today. But how do we
develop the ability to control it, and not just become a spectator
to it? Following on from the success of his previous books, The
Customer's Victory and The Chemistry of Change , Francois Dupuy
further develops his theories about the relationship between
sharing knowledge and managing change. With a strong pedagogical
format, new case studies and a helpful glossary, this is an
invaluable guide both for managers having to deal with change
implementation and for students and researchers of change
management.
Francois Dupuy's book describes and analyses how managers need to
understand organisations in order to help them effectively
implement the changes necessary to operate in today's competitive
environment. Focusing on the need to cooperate, Dupuy provides a
diagnostic and a methodology that shows managers how to understand
why people do what they do and how they can use this knowledge to
implement organisational change.
Following on from his previous book, The Customer's Victory ,
Francois Dupuy here outlines how to manage a change process. Using
practical examples from new case studies and discussion of current
theories of organisational change this book explains how true
organisational change can be effected in both private businesses
and public organisations. With a strong pedagogical format, case
studies and a helpful glossary of terms, this is an invaluable
guide both for managers having to deal with change implementation
and for students and researchers of change management.
The insistence on UAVs in today's counter-insurgency (COIN) fight
is monumental. The demand for UAVs exceeds supply and will continue
to exceed it, even after the Services have built all of their
programmed UAVs. Within this context and the context of pre-QDR
2010 roles and missions debate between the Services, the Services
must achieve an optimal medium altitude UAV force balance in
support of COIN operations. The Army's validated requirement and
procurement of the MQ-1C Sky Warrior Extended Range Multi-Purpose
(ER/MP) Unmanned Aerial System (UAS) fuels a possible dilemma that
the Air Force faces: encroachment of the ground forces into the
"USAF-owned" air domain versus optimal UAS support to the joint
forces commander (JFC). Finding the right balance between directly
supporting ground forces and employing Air Force capabilities in
other operational areas is critical to achieving the JFC's desired
end state and is best accomplished through a strategy framework of
means, ways, and ends. The means are Air Force and Army UAVs; the
ways are doctrine; and the ends are support to the JFC and to the
warfighter. As long as the joint force maintains unity of command
and unity of effort, and adheres to centralized control and
decentralized execution, the Army's procurement and use of medium
altitude UAVs for use in today's COIN fight does not change Air
Force UAS force structure requirements. Consequently, JFC
capability is increased and the Army gets more direct support.
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