Title: Collusion and technological determinism: the manager, his consultant's method and information technology
Authors: Stuart MacDonald
Addresses: University of Sheffield, UK
Abstract: The paper combines two basic arguments. The first is that collusion cements the relationship between management consultant and hiring manager, often to the cost of the organisation that pays them both. One consequence is a developing dependency of the hiring manager on the management consultant and on the management method he offers. The second argument is that many of the management methods most popular over the last two decades have been determined by the exigencies of information technology rather than by the requirements of management. When the two arguments are put together, it is possible to associate the rise of IT with the decline in the ability of managers to manage. The paper explores this association and its implications.
Keywords: information technology; management consultants; management practice; technological determinism.
DOI: 10.1504/JIBED.2004.007853
Journal for International Business and Entrepreneurship Development, 2004 Vol.2 No.2, pp.54 - 63
Published online: 27 Sep 2005 *
Full-text access for editors Full-text access for subscribers Purchase this article Comment on this article