Organizational strategy

A Theory of the Firm l Michael Jensen

This collection examines the forces, both external and internal, that lead corporations to behave efficiently and to create wealth. Corporations vest control rights in shareholders, the author argues, because they are the constituency that bear business risk and therefore have the appropriate incentives to maximize corporate value. Assigning control to any other group would be tantamount to allowing that group to play poker with someone else's money, and would create inefficiencies. The implicit denial of this proposition is the fallacy of the so–called stakeholder theory of the corporation, which argues that corporations should be run in the interests of all stakeholders. This theory offers no account of how conflicts between different stakeholders are to be resolved, and gives managers no principle on which to base decisions, except to follow their own preferences. In practice, shareholders delegate their control rights to a board of directors, who hire, fire, and set the compensation of the chief officers of the firm. However, because agents have different incentives than the principals they represent, they can destroy corporate value unless closely monitored.

Foundations of Organizational Strategy l Michael Jensen

In this volume, Michael Jensen and his collaborators present the foundations of an integrated theory of organizations. The theory assumes that organizations are equilibrium systems that, like markets, can be influenced, but cannot be told what to do; that human beings are rational and self–interested for the most part; and that information is costly to produce and transfer among agents. The theory also treats business organizations as entities existing in a system of markets (including financial, product, labor, and materials markets) that must be considered in the formulation of organizational strategy. Jensen argues that three critical systems, which he calls the organizational rules of the game, are necessary to substitute for alienability in organizations: (1) a system for allocating decision rights among agents in the firm, (2) a system for measuring and evaluating performance in the firm, and (3) a system for rewarding and punishing individuals for their performance.

  • 프라이싱전략
  • 경쟁전략입문
  • COMPETITIVE STRATEGY
  • COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE
  • ON COMPETITION
  • The Art of the Long View
  • Co–opetition
  • On Organizational Learning
  • Overcoming Organizational Defenses
  • Flaw Advice and the Management Trap
  • Knowledge for Action
  • A Theory of the Firm
  • Foundations of Organizational Strategy
  • The Competitive Advantage of Nations
  • Plowing the Sea
  • Can Japan Compete?
  • Valuation
  • Real Options
  • e–Commerce
  • Cases in e–Commerce
  • Introduction to e–Commerce
  • Internet Marketing
  • The Slow Pace of Fast Change
  • Inevitable Surprises
  • What's Next? 2015
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