History and strategy
Material type:
- 9781781900246
- 658.4012 H4
Item type | Current library | Item location | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Vikram Sarabhai Library | Rack 38-A / Slot 2096 (2nd Floor, East Wing) | Non-fiction | General Stacks | 658.4012 H4 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 194121 |
Table of Contents:
Part I: History, Strategy, and Innovation
1. Economic Experiments and the Development of Wi-Fi
2. Platforms versus Products: Observations from the Literature and History
3. Patent Pools: Licensing Strategies in the Absence of Regulation
Part II: History and Industry Evolution: Convergence, Divergence, and Institutional Background
4. Marrying History and Social Science in Strategy Research
5. The evolution of alternative business models and the Legitimization of Universal Credit Card Industry: Exploring the contested terrain where history and strategy meet
6. Strategy Followed Structure: Management Consulting and the Creation of a Market for 'Strategy,' 1950-2000
7. Strategy, Ideology and Structure: The political processes of introducing the M-form in two Dutch banks
Part III: Analytic Narratives: Historical Narrative meets Economic and Sociological Theory
8. History in Strategy Research: What, Why, and How?
9. Audience Structure and the Failure of Institutional Entrepreneurship
10. Orphaned Jazz: Short-Lived Startups and the Long-Run Success of Depression-Era Cultural Products
Business historians and economic historians frequently contribute to our understanding of strategic management, and strategy scholars often rely on a deep understanding of historical context to make sense of classic strategy issues. Historically, the two sets of scholars have not always communicated with each other as effectively as one might hope. They also have different approaches to methodology and assessment of validity of results, which adds to this 'two solitudes'. In this volume, strategy scholars, business historians, and economic historians are brought together to develop a volume that explores the complementarities of approaches.
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