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Management ideas, and their associated applications, have become a
prevalent feature of our working lives. While their focus is
familiar, such as efficiency, motivation, and improvement, they
range from specific notions such as activity-based costing, to
broad movements like corporate social responsibility. This Handbook
brings together some of the latest research from leading
international scholars on how management ideas are produced,
promoted, and adapted, and their effects on business and working
practices and society at large. Rather than focusing on specific
management ideas, this volume explores their key socio-political
contexts and channels of dissemination, and is organized around
four core overlapping themes. The first section sets out the
research field in general, in terms of both an overall system and
of different perspectives and research methods. The second section
explores the role of different actors and channels of diffusion,
including the consumers and producers of management ideas and 'new'
media, as well as traditional players in the management ideas field
such as consultancies and business schools. The third section
focuses on specific features or dynamics of the management ideas
system, such as their adoption, evolution, institutionalisation,
and resurgence, while in the final section, critical and new
perspectives on management ideas are examined, highlighting
specific socio-political contexts and the possibility of
alternative ideas and forms of critique. With a broad range of
perspectives represented, this Handbook provides a comprehensive,
authoritative, and enduring resource for those studying management,
innovation, and organizational change, as well as for those working
in the management ideas industry.
Although there has traditionally been considerable field-level
attention on how consultants market their ideas and practices,
there is still a lack of research that discusses the earlier
intra-organizational phases in the development process. While the
present literature provides important insights that enhance our
understanding of consulting, the consultancy industry, and the way
that consultants present their ideas and services on the market for
management solutions, we know relatively little about the way
knowledge-based innovations develop within consultancy firms and
the mechanisms that shape the intra-organizational evolution of
these ideas and practices. This book seeks to address this gap by
revealing how the development of new ideas and practices takes
shape in consultancies. The work addresses questions such as: In
which way do consultancies sense the contemporary market needs? How
do new ideas and practices become established within a consultancy?
How do consultancies seek to maintain their repertoire? And what
role do these new ideas and practices play in their assignments? To
provide more insight into these different aspects of
knowledge-based innovation in consultancies, the book draws on and
integrates literature from diverse relevant fields such as product
innovation and market orientation, but also uses institutional and
practice-based perspectives. The research presented in this book
can be seen in the light of emerging research into 'knowledge-based
innovation' and 'new concept development' that concentrate on
empirically studying how knowledge entrepreneurs seek to develop
commercially viable ideas and practices that have the potential to
have a significant impact on management and organizational praxis.
Although there has traditionally been considerable field-level
attention on how consultants market their ideas and practices,
there is still a lack of research that discusses the earlier
intra-organizational phases in the development process. While the
present literature provides important insights that enhance our
understanding of consulting, the consultancy industry, and the way
that consultants present their ideas and services on the market for
management solutions, we know relatively little about the way
knowledge-based innovations develop within consultancy firms and
the mechanisms that shape the intra-organizational evolution of
these ideas and practices. This book seeks to address this gap by
revealing how the development of new ideas and practices takes
shape in consultancies. The work addresses questions such as: In
which way do consultancies sense the contemporary market needs? How
do new ideas and practices become established within a consultancy?
How do consultancies seek to maintain their repertoire? And what
role do these new ideas and practices play in their assignments? To
provide more insight into these different aspects of
knowledge-based innovation in consultancies, the book draws on and
integrates literature from diverse relevant fields such as product
innovation and market orientation, but also uses institutional and
practice-based perspectives. The research presented in this book
can be seen in the light of emerging research into 'knowledge-based
innovation' and 'new concept development' that concentrate on
empirically studying how knowledge entrepreneurs seek to develop
commercially viable ideas and practices that have the potential to
have a significant impact on management and organizational praxis.
The widespread promotion of management ideas, their regular
inclusion in textbooks and business school curricula and their use
in organizational change programs has engendered debates about the
impact of these ideas on management and organizational practice.
Based on analyses of managerial audience members' activities and
related meaning-making prior to, during and after guru events with
leading management thinkers, this book sheds new light on how
management practitioners come to use management ideas in the
different relevant contexts of their working lives. The authors
argue that a broader, more differentiated and more dynamic view of
managerial audiences is essential in understanding the impact of
management ideas as well as the nature of contemporary managerial
work. For scholars and students in organisation studies, knowledge
management and management consultancy, as well as reflective
management practitioners.
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