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Showing 1 - 17 of 17 matches in All Departments
In this volume, Bartlett and Ghoshal examine the transnational firm, its development and future. Ending their chapter is a debate about the future of international management research involving several individual scholars including Julian Birkinshaw (London Business School), Yves Doz (INSEAD), and Eleanore Westney (MIT). Three leading scholars in the international management field, Michael Kotabe (Temple University), Alan Rugman (Indiana University) and Srilata Zaheer (University of Minnesota) provide comments on Bartlett and Ghoshal's work and on future international management research. The present volume also presents five other articles that make a contribution to the main theme of the book. Together, they cover a set of topics in international management studies including: process issues and the evolution of collaboration in the management of international strategic alliances (alliances), the antecedents and outcomes from international entry modes (market entry), examination of the localization of HRM practices in American and European multinationals (resources), and the cultural, economic and political effects on national entrepreneurial potential (resources). The work in this volume provides a diversity of theoretical and methodological approaches and represents the thinking in the field on managing transnational firms focused on resources, market entry and alliances.
This volume provides a more detailed and profound understanding of
an important and, until recently ignored, global phenomenon ???
marketplaces where individuals living in poverty buy/sell products
and services. It is estimated that as many as 4 billion people with
buying power exceeding $14 trillion fall into this market segment.
Historically, the research in this area was conducted among
consumers from industrialized economies. This research is rooted in
fundamental assumptions about literacy and numeracy skills, life
stability, cognitive predilections, and consumer access to basic
resources such as education, water, and sanitation that often do
not hold for poverty-stricken marketplaces.
This new volume publishes four selected articles covering an
interesting set of topics in international management studies with
a comparative focus, including: organizational control in joint
ventures; institutional and cultural effects on subsidiary
operations; corporate governance practices; and employee's choice
of dissatisfaction behavior display. These articles along with the five Research Forum papers, present a rich diversity of theoretical and methodological approaches. They also represent the state-of-the-art and some of the best thinking in the field.
The decade long period of slow growth in Japan has raised
provocative questions relating to theory development in
international management. Japan??'s "lost decade" has led to
changes in both overall strategy and to increased variety in
individual firm responses to slower growth. The combination of
internal changes in the Japanese domestic business environment and
external changes in the international environment has generated
strong incentives for Japanese firms to seek new ways to structure
and compete. These adjustments have necessitated changes not only
in the management of Japanese firms domestically, but in overseas
markets as well. This volume includes contributing chapters from authors based in Asia, Europe, and North America to examine how Japanese firms have responded to the challenge of a slower domestic economy and a more competitive international economy. Articles were selected to address three aspects of this issue: adaptation to domestic environmental changes, adjustments in inter-organizational relations, and the experience in foreign MNCs in Japan and Japanese MNCs abroad.
This volume includes contributing chapters from authors based in
Asia, Europe, and North America to examine an emerging topic in the
international management field - managing multinationals in a
knowledge economy. They were selected to reflect the influences of
three key factors - economics, culture, and human resources - on
managerial decisions that affect multinationals and their effective
operations. Leading the volume is an invited article by John H.
Dunning, "An Evolving Paradigm of the Economic Determinants of
International Business Activity." It presents a comprehensive
review of his thirty-plus years of research on the eclectic
paradigm, and a preview of his most recent work on the role of
relational and institutional assets in foreign direct investment.
This article, along with commentaries on Dunning's work written by
Jose de la Torre, Timothy Devinney, Will Mitchell, and Stephen
Tallman, can be found in the Research Forum section.
This book is a complete guide to planning and executing successful mergers and acquisitions.
The early research on multinational enterprises usually relied on
traditional economic theory or relatively simple but powerful
theories developed in the field of international business. They
were developed to help us understand why firms entered
international markets. The book is divided into three parts, with the first focused on the new and visible theory of the metanational firm by Yves Doz and comments on this work and Yves Doz??'s broader contributions to the field by three top scholars in the international management field. The second part contains two works that examine the evolving nature of theory on the multinational firm in international management research. The third part contains five papers that present diverse yet highlyimportant theoretical perspectives on the multinational enterprise. This work provides a base upon which future excellent research in the field of international management will be advanced.
An authoritative overview of the prior development, current state, and future opportunities in strategic management The strategic management field, now a vibrant arena that offers valuable knowledge for managerial practice, has experienced significant growth in the more than forty years since its inception. And, until now, there has not been a book that captured the rich breadth and depth of knowledge of the discipline, while also looking to the future. Strategic Management provides a critical overview of the prior development, current state, and future opportunities in the strategic management field. Editors Irene M. Duhaime, Michael A. Hitt, and Marjorie A. Lyles bring together an exceptional group of scholars to explore specialized topics such as corporate strategy, strategic entrepreneurship, cooperative strategies, global strategy, strategic leadership, governance, innovation, strategy process and strategy practice, and strategic human capital. The book focuses heavily on the future developments and research opportunities available in the field, while also providing a solid base of knowledge for understanding strategic management as a whole. With articles from major leaders in the field, this authoritative volume will be useful to every strategic management scholar.
This major reference work is distinct from many other handbooks. It
provides original contributions from top strategic management
scholars rather than pure research reviews or collections of
previously published articles. In the original chapters provided by
these outstanding strategic management scholars, major ideas and
theories relating to their particular areas of expertise are
presented. The contributors examine the background on their topic
through their own lenses, whilst also introducing new ideas that
will influence the future of research in the field.
The "Handbook" is structured into five sections looking at the strategic management process, the theoretical foundations of the field, various types of strategy, human factors, and teaching methods. As a whole, the volume will serve as a critical reference tool for students, scholars and professional managers.
An authoritative overview of the prior development, current state, and future opportunities in strategic management The strategic management field, now a vibrant arena that offers valuable knowledge for managerial practice, has experienced significant growth in the more than forty years since its inception. And, until now, there has not been a book that captured the rich breadth and depth of knowledge of the discipline, while also looking to the future. Strategic Management provides a critical overview of the prior development, current state, and future opportunities in the strategic management field. Editors Irene M. Duhaime, Michael A. Hitt, and Marjorie A. Lyles bring together an exceptional group of scholars to explore specialized topics such as corporate strategy, strategic entrepreneurship, cooperative strategies, global strategy, strategic leadership, governance, innovation, strategy process and strategy practice, and strategic human capital. The book focuses heavily on the future developments and research opportunities available in the field, while also providing a solid base of knowledge for understanding strategic management as a whole. With articles from major leaders in the field, this authoritative volume will be useful to every strategic management scholar.
In his best selling book The World is Flat, Friedman (2005) argues
that many more countries and companies now compete in global
markets than ever before. The effects of globalization are
pervasive and are leading to the emergence of new social, political
and business models. This flattening of the world represents a
fundamental change and requires that managers of organizations
throughout the world develop and use a global mindset.
Two recent developments from globalization have fundamentally
altered the nature of work organizations: (1) the workforce has
become increasingly diverse in national and cultural origins, and
(2) work assignments are increasingly performed by teams consisting
of members located in different countries. Together, these changes
have resulted in employees increasingly finding themselves working
in culturally diverse, geographical dispersed, multinational teams.
Yet, relatively little scholarship has been done to study the
dynamics of such teams and how they can be better managed. The
current volume presents cutting-edge theorizing and research from a
multidisciplinary (e.g., psychology-, This book is divided into three parts. The first includes four chapters focusing on culture and other intra-group factors that affect the effective functioning of multinational teams. The second includes five chapters that examine the effect of technology and other external influences on team processes and outcomes. The third part includes four chapters dealing with leadership and management issues. The two final chapters were written by authors who have been actively involved as organizers of multi-country academic research teams whose life spans many years and continues today. Cumulatively, this book??'s chapters provide management scholars a diversity of theoretical and methodological perspectives, at many levels of analysis, and include insights borne from the authors??? observation-based and/or living-based experience withthe culturally-challenging issues they discuss. Additionally, these chapters also provide practicing managers useful ideas on both intra- and external-group dynamics that help increase their understanding about the effective functioning of multinational teams. As a result, this book offers both breadth and depth on the topic of managing multinational teams in a global context that promise to make its contents of interest to many audiences.
Research-based investigations of creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship have the potential to inform each other and enrich our knowledge of each of these areas, particularly with regard to cognitive processes and effective behaviors. Yet, while these research streams have increasingly received a great deal of attention, they have developed largely independently of one another. The Oxford Handbook of Creativity, Innovation, and Entrepreneurship addresses the critical need to integrate these three interrelated literatures. The Handbook features contributions from the leading scholars in these research areas. As a group, the chapters examine the intersections of these topics to synthesize contemporary research and provide direction and stimulation for further interdisciplinary investigations of organizational creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship.
In Great Minds in Management, Ken G. Smith and Michael A. Hitt have
brought together some of the most influential and original thinkers
in management. Their contributions to this volume not only outline
their landmark contributions to management theory, but also reflect
on the process of
In Great Minds In Management Ken G. Smith and Michael A. Hitt have
brought together some of the most influential and original thinkers
in management. Their contributions to this volume not only outline
their landmark contributions to management theory, but also reflect
on the process of theory development, presenting their own personal
accounts of the gestation of these theories.
Large, diversified firms face unique challenges as they compete
worldwide, and corporate restructuring is one way multinationals
strive for competitive advantage. Weighing the pros and cons of a
variety of approaches to restructuring, Downscoping offers
executives a clear, strategic path through the maze.
Good strategies can fail because they are poorly implemented. Behind this straightforward statement is a complex reality. This innovative volume explores various aspects of strategy implementation, a process that is as challenging as it is important. For strategies to be implemented effectively, firms must have the right resources and capabilities available. Available resources must be integrated in ways that create the capabilities needed and then those capabilities must be leveraged to effectively implement the strategy in order to create and sustain a competitive advantage. This handbook focuses on how strategy implementation is influenced by resources and governance, human capital and management of it, and accounting-based control systems. It examines how the dynamic, competitive, and international environment increases the importance of knowledge and its acquisition, effective governance as a signal of proper incentives, the interaction of legality and legitimacy, and the connections between compliance and enforcement. Because people implement the strategies through the completion of their job tasks and achievement of their job-related goals, the second section explores how changes in workforce demographics have influenced and may influence strategy. Major factors include the greater proportion of older workers and the increasing role women play in leadership. Acquiring, developing, and having a motivated work force is critical to implementation, whether and how best practices spread is explored, as is the effectiveness of setting goals. Controlling managerial behavior plays a critical role in the implementation of strategies, and is the focus of the third section on accounting-based control systems. These can be helpful both in identifying inappropriate behaviors and in promoting positive managerial actions to achieve desired financial outcomes. They can also encourage experimentation and creativity. The effectiveness of accounting and accountability systems is influenced by four dimensions, including the intended users, standards of compliance, enforcement criteria, and the assurance process.
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