Competitive advantage in today's complex and global marketplace is no longer created by the internal resources of a single organization or organizational group. Businesses must reach beyond the traditional boundaries of their organization, industry and market to form diverse networks that can create truly unique value.Japan is now in its longest recession of the post-World War II period. This failure stems from macroeconomic malfunctioning and—more important—from the country's cultural environment, which has been inhibiting domestic corporations' abilities to respond to dire socio-economic issues. As all traditional attempts to revitalize the economy have failed, creative ideas and purposeful interventions are necessary for survival. Past business assumptions must be discarded, the most important of which is the emphasis on insular business practices that focus on the internal environment of a single organization or corporate group. Unique value can no longer by created in a static and limited manner.To create unique value in the increasingly sophisticated, advanced and fragmented environment of the global marketplace, corporations are forming partnerships that cross all societal boundaries. The authors coin the term meso-organizations for such networks that go beyond the scope of traditional businesses and bring in individuals, organizations from different industries and not-for-profit organizations into their business processes, and that view their environments as extensions of themselves. This book pulls together and expands on various theories of networks and knowledge creation to present a framework that captures the complex nature of today's business domain and processes, and offers suggestions for wide-ranging collaboration.
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The authors coin the term meso-organizations for such networks that go beyond the scope of traditional businesses and bring in individuals, organizations from different industries and not-for-profit organizations into their business processes, and that view their environments as extensions of themselves.
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Preface by Ikujiro Nonaka
Introduction: The Rise of Meso-Organizations by Caroline Benton, Frank-Jürgen Richter and Tohru Takai
Creating Knowledge-base Organizations
Entrepreneurship as Knowledge and Social Capital Creation: Theoretical Analysis of the Startup Stage of Firms by Jin-ichiro Yamada
Composite Knowledge for High-tech Corporations by Syuichi Ishida
Creating Social Knowledge with Business Tricksters by Aki Nakanishi
Catalyzing Knowledge Exchange among Individuals and Organizations
Information dissemination and Learning through Social Networks - The Changing Role of Personal Ties in Economic Relations in Japan by Andreas Moerke
Individual Networking for Internalizing Diverse Knowledge - A Case Study of Technology-based Academic Societies by Kiyoshi Nosu
Open Sourcing as a Corporate Strategy - A Study of the Open Source Community from an Organizational Theoretic Perspective and of the Development of R&D with External Resources by Midori Kato
Linking Knowledge among Organizations
Promoting Competence and Reform with Global Groups by Caroline Benton
Knowledge Networks and the Restructuring of Competitive Superiority by Toru Takai
Exploration and Exploitation in Federated Networks by Tomoyuki Nishimura
Engaging Knowledge Globally
The Talkative Company by John B. Kidd and Frank-Jürgen Richter
Cross-cultural Co-opetition among Organizations by Rasoava Rijamampianina and Claire Gordon-Brown
The Metastrategy - A Systematic View of the Theory of Corporate Internationalization Strategies by René Haak
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781567206135
Publisert
2004-03-30
Utgiver
Vendor
Praeger Publishers Inc
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
336
Om bidragsyterne
CAROLINE F. BENTON is Professor of Organizational Behavior at the MBA Programme validated by the University of Wales in Japan.
FRANK-JÜRGEN RICHTER is Director, Asia, of the World Economic Forum, Geneva. He is the author of Redesigning Asian Business: In the Aftermath of Crisis (Quorum Books, 2002).
TORU TAKAI is Professor of Strategic Management at the Faculty of Commerce, Nihon University.