The biology of business : decoding the natural laws of enterprise.
Contributor(s): III, John Henry Clippinger
Material type: TextPublisher: San Fransisco : Jossey-Bass, 1999Edition: 1st edDescription: 287 p. ; 24 cmISBN: 078794324X; 9780787943240Subject(s): Organizational change | Organization Theory | Complex organizationsDDC classification: 302.35 LOC classification: HD 58.8 .B56 1999Online resources: Amazon.com | Amazon customer reviews Summary: Increasingly interconnected, volatile, and complex, today's organizations cannot be controlled by any conventional approach to management. Indeed, an entirely new definition of what it means to manage is called for. In The Biology of Business, John Clippinger and nine outstanding contributors introduce managers to the Complex Adaptive System (CAS) of management, a system that takes into account all of the variables that impact modern enterprises and allows managers to take control from the bottom up. Here, the authors show how McKinsey & Co., Capital One, and Optimark have employed CAS to achieve specific business goals and improve overall corporate fitness. And they bridge theory and practice to provide managers with proven tools and techniques they can use to transform their enterprises into self-renewing, self-organizing systems that are maximally responsive to changing market conditions and opportunities.Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | The MUA Library South C campus - Open Collection | STACK 2 | HD 58.8 .B56 1999 (Browse shelf) | 1 | Available | 2003-1468 |
Paperback.
Increasingly interconnected, volatile, and complex, today's organizations cannot be controlled by any conventional approach to management. Indeed, an entirely new definition of what it means to manage is called for. In The Biology of Business, John Clippinger and nine outstanding contributors introduce managers to the Complex Adaptive System (CAS) of management, a system that takes into account all of the variables that impact modern enterprises and allows managers to take control from the bottom up. Here, the authors show how McKinsey & Co., Capital One, and Optimark have employed CAS to achieve specific business goals and improve overall corporate fitness. And they bridge theory and practice to provide managers with proven tools and techniques they can use to transform their enterprises into self-renewing, self-organizing systems that are maximally responsive to changing market conditions and opportunities.
There are no comments on this title.