Spelling suggestions: "subject:"decentralized organizations"" "subject:"recentralized organizations""
1 |
Enforcing global strategies in subsidiaries of highly decentralized multinational corporations : the role of international sales managersSchill, Richard Bruno January 2013 (has links)
Resistance of subsidiaries of multinational corporations to global coordination efforts by their headquarters is an important contemporary research subject in the field of international business studies. This case study of sales and marketing organizations in five international subsidiaries of a highly divisionalized corporation illustrates how the capabilities and the willingness to adopt and pursue global strategies is strongly influenced by local situational and organizational factors. The defining business problem was different in each country organization, ranging from product related issues such as quick innovation cycles and price competition, to economic concerns like emerging market dynamics and economic crisis, and other problems related to cultural dissimilarity. A large degree of divisionalization seems to dilute central leadership, as central managers compete for the attention and the resources of the subsidiaries and local managers behave like independent distributors, picking and choosing the most favorable offerings. In order to establish successful leadership in the absence of hierarchical control, intermediate central sales and marketing managers need to first of all internally coordinate their activities towards their local counterparts. Top management needs to establish legitimate authority of intermediate managers by clear definitions of international matrix roles and management procedures. Central sales and marketing managers need to have enough international field experience to be able to correctly assess the different local situations, advance their initiatives in a diplomatic way on all local hierarchy levels and to become overall credible and accepted partners for the local teams. Directly engaging in field activities with local customers and sales teams seems to help achieving these objectives and thus to contribute to the successful enforcement of global strategies.
|
2 |
Enforcing Global Strategies in Subsidiaries of Highly Decentralized Multinational Corporations. The Role of International Sales ManagersSchill, Richard Bruno January 2013 (has links)
Resistance of subsidiaries of multinational corporations to global coordination efforts by their headquarters is an important contemporary research subject in the field of international business studies. This case study of sales and marketing organizations in five international subsidiaries of a highly divisionalized corporation illustrates how the capabilities and the willingness to adopt and pursue global strategies is strongly influenced by local situational and organizational factors. The defining business problem was different in each country organization, ranging from product related issues such as quick innovation cycles and price competition, to economic concerns like emerging market dynamics and economic crisis, and other problems related to cultural dissimilarity. A large degree of divisionalization seems to dilute central leadership, as central managers compete for the attention and the resources of the subsidiaries and local managers behave like independent distributors, picking and choosing the most favorable offerings. In order to establish successful leadership in the absence of hierarchical control, intermediate central sales and marketing managers need to first of all internally coordinate their activities towards their local counterparts. Top management needs to establish legitimate authority of intermediate managers by clear definitions of international matrix roles and management procedures. Central sales and marketing managers need to have enough international field experience to be able to correctly assess the different local situations, advance their initiatives in a diplomatic way on all local hierarchy levels and to become overall credible and accepted partners for the local teams. Directly engaging in field activities with local customers and sales teams seems to help achieving these objectives and thus to contribute to the successful enforcement of global strategies.
|
3 |
KOMMUNIKATIVT LEDARSKAP ett ledarskap för moderna organisationer : Kvalitativ studie med ansats att definiera begreppetAxäll, Jenny January 2004 (has links)
<p>AbstractTitle: Communicative leadership – a leadership for modern organizationsQualitative research attempting to define the concept.(Kommunikativt ledarskap – ett ledarskap för moderna organisationerKvalitativ studie med ansats att definiera begreppet.)Author: Jenny AxällAim: The aim of this essay is to try to find the essence of and a definition of the communicative leadership. Questions asked are: How can communicative leadership be described? How can it be practiced? What does it demand of those who practice it? What organizational conditions are required? And what results and performances can this leadership lead to?Method: Qualitative explorative research method. The study contains an academic lit-erature review of the science of leadership and communication in general and the more specific communicative leadership. It also includes two personal in-terviews. After analysing the interviews, the result is compared with the litera-ture and discussed in the last chapter. The essay concludes with a definition of communicative leadership.Main results: The following definition of communicative leadership was formulated after concluding the study: In communicative leadership communication is used as the main means of control in order to create joint action and thereby excellent company results. The leadership is based on a conscious and open communication that leads to understanding and participation among employees, as well as to sound and thoroughly founded decisions and well-informed business development. The leadership is constantly practised in formal and informal conversation and dialogue situations where true exchange of opinions and sense making is de-sired. For the communicative leader the employees are the most valuable re-sources in the organization. He or she assumes that employees want to suc-ceed, and will do so, if the right conditions are in place. The communicative leader wants to lead and inspire, emanates joy and comfort, and receives as manager the trust of being a leader.Number of pages: 63Course: Media and Communications Studies DUniversity: Division of Media and Communication, Department of Information Science, Uppsala UniversityDate of submission: 2005-01-17, autumn term of 2004Tutor: Professor Lowe HedmanKeywords: Communicative leadership, communicative competence, communicative fol-lowership, communicative processes, decentralized organizations, leadership, organizational culture, internal communication, definition of leadership.</p>
|
4 |
KOMMUNIKATIVT LEDARSKAP ett ledarskap för moderna organisationer : Kvalitativ studie med ansats att definiera begreppetAxäll, Jenny January 2004 (has links)
AbstractTitle: Communicative leadership – a leadership for modern organizationsQualitative research attempting to define the concept.(Kommunikativt ledarskap – ett ledarskap för moderna organisationerKvalitativ studie med ansats att definiera begreppet.)Author: Jenny AxällAim: The aim of this essay is to try to find the essence of and a definition of the communicative leadership. Questions asked are: How can communicative leadership be described? How can it be practiced? What does it demand of those who practice it? What organizational conditions are required? And what results and performances can this leadership lead to?Method: Qualitative explorative research method. The study contains an academic lit-erature review of the science of leadership and communication in general and the more specific communicative leadership. It also includes two personal in-terviews. After analysing the interviews, the result is compared with the litera-ture and discussed in the last chapter. The essay concludes with a definition of communicative leadership.Main results: The following definition of communicative leadership was formulated after concluding the study: In communicative leadership communication is used as the main means of control in order to create joint action and thereby excellent company results. The leadership is based on a conscious and open communication that leads to understanding and participation among employees, as well as to sound and thoroughly founded decisions and well-informed business development. The leadership is constantly practised in formal and informal conversation and dialogue situations where true exchange of opinions and sense making is de-sired. For the communicative leader the employees are the most valuable re-sources in the organization. He or she assumes that employees want to suc-ceed, and will do so, if the right conditions are in place. The communicative leader wants to lead and inspire, emanates joy and comfort, and receives as manager the trust of being a leader.Number of pages: 63Course: Media and Communications Studies DUniversity: Division of Media and Communication, Department of Information Science, Uppsala UniversityDate of submission: 2005-01-17, autumn term of 2004Tutor: Professor Lowe HedmanKeywords: Communicative leadership, communicative competence, communicative fol-lowership, communicative processes, decentralized organizations, leadership, organizational culture, internal communication, definition of leadership.
|
5 |
Verksamhetsstyrning i utbildningssektorn : Ett möjliggörande och tvingande perspektiv / Performance Management in education sector : An enabeling and coercive perspectiveCombler, Johan, Kuylenstierna, Wilhelm, Alkour, Khaled January 2022 (has links)
Tidigare forskning inom verksamhetsstyrning har fokuserat mestadels på finansiell drivna företag med hierarkisk styrning. Där den grundläggande tanken till verksamhetsstyrningen kommer från David Otleys ramverk från 1999 men har senare utvecklas. Med bland annat mer tydlighet i kommunikation och styrning mellan ledning och anställda. Det teoretiska ramverket som har används är Borys & Adlers ramverk från 1996 om möjliggörande och tvingande kontroll och som innehåller fyra attribut: reparation, intern transparens, global transparens och flexibilitet. Den datan som samlades in är insamlad med hjälp av semistrukturerade intervjuer med lärare som jobbar på grundskolor eller gymnasieskolor i syfte att ge inblick i hur de upplever verksamhetsstyrning. Lärarna kände att de fick lösa mång problem som uppstår självständigt och endast ifall det var något större och som inte lärarna enskilt kunde lösa så kopplades andra resurser och chefer in som stöd. Lärarna var autonoma i deras egna arbete och tyckte att kompetensutveckling bidrog till kunskaper som gynnade dem i deras yrkesutövning och därmed den interna transparensen. Lärarna hade även en organisationskännedom i form av samspel med kollegor med till exempel planering av ämnesöverskridande uppgifter. Det fanns även en möjliggörande flexibilitet i lärarnas arbete. / Earlier research within Management Control systems had focused on mostly the financially controlled companies with typical hierarchical guidance. There the main research thought about this type of management control or performance control system is coming from David Otley´s framework from 1999 but the framework has been further developed by him and other researchers. With, among other things, more clarity in communication and control between management and employees. The theoretical framework that has been used under this thesis research is Borys & Adlers framework from 1996 about enable and coercive control which includes four different attributes which are: repair, internal transparency, global transparency, and flexibility. The data was collected in semi-structured interviews with teachers that work at primary or secondary schools with the purpose of achieving insight into how they feel about the performance management control. The teachers felt that they needed to solve many of the problems that appeared by themself and only if the problem was too big or complex for them alone did they take help of other resources or the school management at the schools for support. The teachers were autonomous in their work and thought that competence development contributed to the knowledge that benefited them in their professional practice and therefore contributed to internal transparency. The teachers also had organizational knowledge in terms of interaction with their colleagues with, for example, the planning of cross-disciplinary courses. There was also enabling flexibility in the teachers' work. / <p>Arbetet skickades in till examinator 13/1-2022.</p><p></p>
|
Page generated in 0.1294 seconds