The future of work : how the new order of business will shape your organization, your management style, and your life
著者
書誌事項
The future of work : how the new order of business will shape your organization, your management style, and your life
Harvard Business School Press, c2004
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注記
Includes index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
For more than a decade, business thinkers have theorized about how technology will change the shape of organizations. In this landmark book, renowned organizational theorist Thomas Malone, codirector of MIT's "Inventing the Organizations of the 21st Century" initiative, provides the first credible model for actually designing the company of the future. Based on 20 years of groundbreaking research, The Future of Work foresees a workplace revolution that will dramatically change organizational structures and the roles employees play in them. Technological and economic forces make "command and control" management increasingly less useful. In its place will be a more flexible "coordinate and cultivate" approach that will spawn new types of decentralized organizations--from internal markets to democracies to loose hierarchies. These future structures will reap the scale and knowledge efficiencies of large organizations while enabling the freedom, flexibility, and human values that drive smaller firms. This book explores the skills managers will need in a workplace in which the power to decide belongs to everyone.
目次
Preface Acknowledgements PART ONE: THE COMING REVOLUTION Chapter 1. A Time to Choose Chapter 2 An Amazing Pattern Chapter 3 The Amazing Pattern in Business PART TWO: HOW MANY PEOPLE CAN FIT AT THE CENTER OF AN ORGANIZATION? Chapter 4 Loosening the Hierarchy Chapter 5 Harnessing Democracy Chapter 6 Unleashing Markets Chapter 7 Bringing Markets Inside Chapter 8 When Should You Decentralize? PART THREE: FROM "COMMAND AND CONTROL" TO "COORDINATE AND CULTIVATE" Chapter 9. Coordinating Activities Chapter 10. Cultivating People Chapter 11. Putting Human Values at the Center of Business Conclusion Appendix How Do Communication Costs Affect Centralization? A Simple Model
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