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How to Take Action for Successful Performance Management

Autor Falconer Mitchell, Hanne Nørreklit
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 26 aug 2019
This book is intended for practitioners, students, and researchers who are interested in designing, using, assessing, and researching performance management systems. Managerial personnel involved in such activity will hold many beliefs about how their organization functions. This text uses the philosophy of pragmatic constructivism to show how managerial beliefs that underlie action can be made explicit and so facilitate their assessment and improvement. This involves recognizing and integrating the four dimensions (facts, possibilities, values, and communication) that represent how managers relate to the reality in which they operate. When managerial beliefs are based on an accurate representation of reality, they are more likely to be successful. Problems occur where reality is misrepresented in managerial beliefs. This is especially so in performance management, as the book illustrates using real-world examples. Specific topics addressed include planning and decision making, performance management of investment center managers, strategic performance management, and operational performance management.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781631578359
ISBN-10: 1631578359
Pagini: 124
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 7 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: Business Expert Press

Notă biografică

Falconer Mitchell, Bcom, CA, is professor of management accounting at the University of Edinburgh. He has been the chairman of CIMA's research board. His research interests lie in the area of managerial accounting change processes. He is also heavily involved in developing pragmatic constructivism within the accounting field.

Descriere

Uses the philosophy of pragmatic constructivism to show how managerial beliefs that underlie action can be made explicit and so facilitate their assessment and improvement. This involves integrating the four dimensions (facts, possibilities, values, communication) that represent how managers relate to the reality in which they operate.