A fresh approach to managing organizational change by looking at it as complex, dynamic and messy as opposed to a series of neat, linear stages and processes leading to success.
Key to the approach is the idea that change, creativity and innovation all overlap and interconnect rather than being three separate areas of study and that managing the three together is central to organizations having the competitive edge in developing new technologies and techniques, products and services. The book continues to offer practical guidelines as well as a theoretical understanding of change, creativity and innovation. It delivers an equal balance of critical perspectives and sound ideas for organizational change and development and presents the idea that change can be proactive, driven by creativity and innovation.
The new edition includes additional change management content including learning, personal change, managing the self, employability, developments in conventional Organizational Development and new emergent forms including appreciative inquiry. Along with a series of rich international case studies, including TNT Australia, Amazon, Leeds Rhinos, Jerusalem Paints, Alpha Pro Pump and KPMG.
It is supported by a range of learning and revision aids including reflective exercises, review and discussion questions and hands-on research tasks. All of which help students to reflect on the material covered and provide a source for more open group discussion and debate.
A companion website accompanies the book, with additional material including PowerPoint slides for lecturers and video links and access to SAGE journal articles for Students.
Suitable for upper-level undergraduates and postgraduate students.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Previous editions of this book have been widely praised and rightly so. In this new version significant updates and additions have been made to ensure critical engagement with key conceptual advances, contemporary debates and practical insight. As such Managing Change, Creativity and Innovation deserves to remain the source of choice for the thoughtful and reflective student of innovation or change practitioner. -- Ian McLoughlin * Professor of Management, Monash University, Australia and Visiting Professor, Warwick University, UK * Dawson & Andriopoulos' book makes a significant contribution to the scholarly literature on organizational change. This well-written and comprehensive book highlights the critical importance of analyzing interactions between individual, group, temporal, and environmental factors throughout the process of organizational change. Presented in an interesting and highly readable style, this book will be of considerable value to students, scholars and business practitioners alike. Highly recommended. -- Professor Kenneth McBey This book does a masterful job of promoting critical thinking to managing change and creativity. -- David M. Boje With each successive edition, this book just gets better and better. It is essential reading for anyone who has an interest in managing and changing organizations. -- Professor Bernard Burnes For students and practitioners, this is a benchmark text on the process of organizational change. Why do many planned changes fail to meet their goals? Change management is often presented as a reaction to business problems, but change can also be proactive, driven by entrepreneurship, leadership, creativity and innovation. Combining these perspectives in a processual framework, this text offers fresh explanations, beyond oversimplified guidelines and complex theories, with new case studies and updated material. The authors present a cross-disciplinary set of models and techniques in a style sensitive to corporate, managerial and individual concerns.
-- David A. Buchanan 'By adopting an explicitly processual and temporal stance, Dawson and Andriopoulos go beyond simple prescriptions to conceive change, innovation and creativity as continuously inter-weaving and co-emergent dynamics of social engagement. This novel perspective not only has potential to liberate students and researchers from the constraints of overly abstracted thinking, but it also resonates strongly with the lived experiences of practising managers.' -- Dr Barbara Simpson
Auflage
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Editions-Typ
Maße
Höhe: 232 mm
Breite: 186 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-4739-6428-0 (9781473964280)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Patrick Dawson is Emeritus Professor at the University of Aberdeen. He holds a PhD in Industrial Sociology from the University of Southampton and during his early career, worked at the University of Surrey and the University of Edinburgh.
Constantine Andriopoulos is Professor of Innovation and Entrepreneurship and the Associate Dean for MBA Programmes at Bayes Business School (formerly known as Cass), City, University of London. He holds a PhD in Marketing from the University of Strathclyde and has previously worked at the University of Strathclyde, the University of Aberdeen, Brunel University and Cardiff University.
PART ONE: Setting the Scene: The Changing Landscape of Business Organizations
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The Process of Change, Creativity and Innovation
Chapter 3: A Brief History of Management Thought in the Development of Concepts, Theories and Business Practice
PART TWO: Change and Innovation in Organizations
Chapter 4: Classifying Theories of Organizational Change
Chapter 5: Change Management Practice: Choice, Lessons Learned and Key Considerations
Chapter 6: Human Dimensions: Readiness, Time Perspectives, Communication, Power, Politics and Resistance
Chapter 7: Conventional Frameworks: Planning, Diagnostics and Sequence
Chapter 8: New Developments and Postmodern Ideas: Dialogue and Meaning
Chapter 9: The Processual Turn: Politics, Context and Time
PART THREE: Creativity, Innovation and Change in Organizations
Chapter 10: Creative Industries, Innovative Cities and Changing Worlds
Chapter 11: The Individual: Promoting Critical Thinking
Chapter 12: The Group: Nurturing Teamwork
Chapter 13: The Leader: Promoting New Ideas at Work
Chapter 14: The Internal Environment: Orchestrating Structure, Systems and Resources
Chapter 15: Culture: Enabling and Constraining Creative Processes at Work
Chapter 16: Conclusion