Asian Firms: History, Institutions and ManagementFrank Tipton's book is a comparative study of the management structures of Asian firms. As Asian economies continue to expand, the management of Asian firms becomes ever more important, whether they are suppliers, customers, partners, or rivals. As the author argues, Asian firms are very different from their Western counterparts, and these differences reflect the variations in national history and institutions within which they operate. Asian Firms compares Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Southeast Asian management structures and sets them in their historical and institutional context. Based on a wide range of interviews and material drawn from a variety of disciplines, the argument is framed by the sayings of the legendary strategist Sun Tzu and the renowned businessman Tao Zhu-gong. A series of case studies illustrate the strengths and weaknesses of the approaches of managers in each of the national traditions. Asian Firms asks in each case what Western managers can learn from Asian firms, and what Asian firms can learn from each other. With a multidisciplinary approach and emphasis on practical lessons and tools, the book will be of great use and interest for managers. It will also appeal to students and researchers of international business, postgraduate management students in courses with a comparative or Asian emphasis as well as academics and researchers of Asian studies. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 56 筆
The union officials have frequently been young company executives , or line supervisors about to be promoted to executive ... and the presence of many supervisors and executives in the union makes it very difficult for the union to ...
Samsung was one of first chaebol to adopt open competitive recruiting in 1957 , and only a few of its senior executives are members of the owner family . But in the 1980s the group included companies headed by two sons , two daughters ...
Senior executives from varying backgrounds do not have the corporate identity and sense of belonging that Japanese executives are supposed to have . And Korean executives particularly resent younger members of the owner family being ...
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內容
Managing horizontal information flows in Japan | 22 |
List of figures and tables | 32 |
Managing with charismatic leadership in Korea | 66 |
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