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Corporate Realities, first published in 1995, provides a concise
but comprehensive review of the management issues relating to
different types of organisation. Avoiding academic jargon, it
describes the characteristics of administrative, manufacturing,
service and professional organisations. It explores the features of
both small and large businesses. The authors demonstrate how the
transition from small to large scale can be achieved, as well as
reviewing recent attempts to recreate entrepreneurial forms of
organisation in the context of larger, more complex ones. Most
importantly, it identifies future trends and the skills that will
be needed to manage corporations at the turn of the century. This
book will be of interest to students of business studies.
The changing character of the economies in Eastern and Western
Europe are leading more people to start their own businesses. This
volume, first published in 1987, highlights the trends developing
over the closing decades of the twentieth century. Although
business start-up requires financial and marketing skills, it also
demands important physchological and sociological inputs. On the
basis of detailed accounts of the relevant social processes, this
volume describes the varied experiences of entrepreneurship as they
are emerging among various groups in both Eastern and Western
Europe including the unemployed, women, ethnic minorities and
others. This book will be of interest to students of business
studies and sociology.
Why do women start their own businesses? Is it solely because they
are searching for financial success, or for other reasons? On the
basis of detailed interviews with a number of women who have
started their own businesses, this book, first published in 1985,
reveals the significance of factors that are directly related to
women's experiences at home, at work, and in the wider society. The
author's analysis shows how business start-up enables many women,
but not all, to achieve forms of economic and social independence
that they would not otherwise enjoy. Further, they illustrate ways
in which business proprietorship has a wide variety of effects upon
individuals, and upon their personal relationships and life styles.
They refute the notion of a single entrepreneurial experience and
argue that the causes and consequences of business start-up are
highly conditioned by the extent to which women are committed to
traditionally prescribed roles and to profitability. The findings
of this book will have important implications for the formulation
of small business policies. It will also be of particular value to
those interested in women's studies and small business management.
This book, first published in 1982, is a study of the processes
that shape the reproduction of the entrepreneurial middle class. It
identifies the major dynamics surrounding stages of business
growth. More particularly, it focuses upon obstacles and cleavages
inherent within the process of small-scale capital accumulation.
This book is ideal for students of business and economics.
Why do women start their own businesses? Is it solely because they
are searching for financial success, or for other reasons? On the
basis of detailed interviews with a number of women who have
started their own businesses, this book, first published in 1985,
reveals the significance of factors that are directly related to
women's experiences at home, at work, and in the wider society. The
author's analysis shows how business start-up enables many women,
but not all, to achieve forms of economic and social independence
that they would not otherwise enjoy. Further, they illustrate ways
in which business proprietorship has a wide variety of effects upon
individuals, and upon their personal relationships and life styles.
They refute the notion of a single entrepreneurial experience and
argue that the causes and consequences of business start-up are
highly conditioned by the extent to which women are committed to
traditionally prescribed roles and to profitability. The findings
of this book will have important implications for the formulation
of small business policies. It will also be of particular value to
those interested in women's studies and small business management.
The changing character of the economies in Eastern and Western
Europe are leading more people to start their own businesses. This
volume, first published in 1987, highlights the trends developing
over the closing decades of the twentieth century. Although
business start-up requires financial and marketing skills, it also
demands important physchological and sociological inputs. On the
basis of detailed accounts of the relevant social processes, this
volume describes the varied experiences of entrepreneurship as they
are emerging among various groups in both Eastern and Western
Europe including the unemployed, women, ethnic minorities and
others. This book will be of interest to students of business
studies and sociology.
This book, first published in 1982, is a study of the processes
that shape the reproduction of the entrepreneurial middle class. It
identifies the major dynamics surrounding stages of business
growth. More particularly, it focuses upon obstacles and cleavages
inherent within the process of small-scale capital accumulation.
This book is ideal for students of business and economics.
'The manager' is a crucial figure in debates about the future of
the British economy in general and the working practices of private
and public organizations in particular. He or she is to be
encouraged, cajoled, exhorted or at worst obliged to pursue
organizational goals of greater economy, efficiency and
effectiveness. Richard Scase and Robert Goffee examine the lives of
managers in this study, first published in 1989. The information in
the book comes from in-depth interviews with men and women in both
private and public sector organizations. The authors also explore
managers' feelings towards their work and home lives, and where
their strongest alliances lie. The book reveals that, under
increasing pressures at work and changing expectations at home,
managers are fundamentally reluctant to fulfil the committed
entrepreneurial roles that many optimistically have been allocating
to them. This book is ideal for students of business and
management.
Corporate Realities, first published in 1995, provides a concise
but comprehensive review of the management issues relating to
different types of organisation. Avoiding academic jargon, it
describes the characteristics of administrative, manufacturing,
service and professional organisations. It explores the features of
both small and large businesses. The authors demonstrate how the
transition from small to large scale can be achieved, as well as
reviewing recent attempts to recreate entrepreneurial forms of
organisation in the context of larger, more complex ones. Most
importantly, it identifies future trends and the skills that will
be needed to manage corporations at the turn of the century. This
book will be of interest to students of business studies.
Small businessmen and entrepreneurs came firmly back in fashion
when this book was first published in 1980. As the Western
economies moved into recession, many governments, particularly Mrs
Thatcher's administration, looked to the entrepreneurial spirit of
the small businessman to rejuvenate and revitalise Western society.
Stripping away the political rhetoric, this book provides a serious
social portrait of the small businessman in the economy at the time
in which this book was written. Based upon extensive original
research, the detailed analyses focus on the key issues in the
small businessmen's life. At a time when there was much argument
about the motivation and will to work of Western society, this
study of the traditional custodians of capitalism is particularly
relevant. Above all it shows how the historical values of the small
businessman have survived in the changed circumstances of the
advanced economies.
'The manager' is a crucial figure in debates about the future of
the British economy in general and the working practices of private
and public organizations in particular. He or she is to be
encouraged, cajoled, exhorted or at worst obliged to pursue
organizational goals of greater economy, efficiency and
effectiveness. Richard Scase and Robert Goffee examine the lives of
managers in this study, first published in 1989. The information in
the book comes from in-depth interviews with men and women in both
private and public sector organizations. The authors also explore
managers' feelings towards their work and home lives, and where
their strongest alliances lie. The book reveals that, under
increasing pressures at work and changing expectations at home,
managers are fundamentally reluctant to fulfil the committed
entrepreneurial roles that many optimistically have been allocating
to them. This book is ideal for students of business and
management.
Small businessmen and entrepreneurs came firmly back in fashion
when this book was first published in 1980. As the Western
economies moved into recession, many governments, particularly Mrs
Thatcher's administration, looked to the entrepreneurial spirit of
the small businessman to rejuvenate and revitalise Western society.
Stripping away the political rhetoric, this book provides a serious
social portrait of the small businessman in the economy at the time
in which this book was written. Based upon extensive original
research, the detailed analyses focus on the key issues in the
small businessmen's life. At a time when there was much argument
about the motivation and will to work of Western society, this
study of the traditional custodians of capitalism is particularly
relevant. Above all it shows how the historical values of the small
businessman have survived in the changed circumstances of the
advanced economies.
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