1st Edition

Mismanagement, “Jumpers,” and Morality Covertly Concealed Managerial Ignorance and Immoral Careerism in Industrial Organizations

By Reuven Shapira Copyright 2017
    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    248 Pages
    by Routledge

    Executives’ morality and ethics became major research topics following recent business scandals, but the research missed a major explanation of executives’ immorality: career advancement by "jumping" between firms that causes ignorance of job-pertinent tacit local knowledge, tempting "jumpers" to covertly conceal this ignorance. Generating distrust and ignorance cycles and mismanagement, this choice bars performance-based career advancement and encourages immoral careerism, advancing by immoral subterfuges. Such careerism is a known managerial malady, but explaining its emergence proved challenging as managerial ignorance is covertly concealed as a dark secret on organizations’ dark side by conspiracies of silence.

    Managerially educated and experienced, Dr. Shapira achieved a breakthrough by a 5-year semi-native anthropological study of five "jumper"-managed automatic processing plants and their parent firms. This book untangles common ignorance and immoral careerism, concealed as dark secrets by executives who "rode" on the successes of mid-level "jumpers" who high-morally risked their authority and power by admitting ignorance and trustfully learned local tacit knowledge. The opposite choice tendencies accorded power, authority, and status rankings, which made practicing immorality easier the higher one’s position, suggesting that the common "jumping" between managerial careers nurtures immoral executives similar to those exposed in the recent business scandals.

    1. Practicing Covertly Concealed Managerial Ignorance

    2. The Dark Secret of Immoral Careerism of "Jumper" Rotational CCMI User Executives

    3. The Concepts of Trust, Leadership, Culture, and Democratic Management

    4. Effective Innovative Northern Gin versus Four Mostly Mismanaged Plants

    5. Other Negative Processes of Low-Trust "Jumping" Cultures that Furthered Mismanagement

    6. Contextualizing Gin Plants’ Mismanagement in the Kibbutz and Israeli Fields

    7. Conclusions, Discussion, and Plausible Solutions

    Biography

    Reuven Shapira is a Senior Lecturer of Social Anthropology and Sociology in The Western Galilee Academic College in Acre, Israel.

    "Management is taught as a discipline, which can be applied in any organization, including those in which the employees are highly skilled and highly trained. In this context the ‘in-experienced’ manager’s tendency is to conceal his ignorance or to assume she has all the answers. This ethnography illustrates this all too frequent behavior but also shows how this difficult situation can be managed with ethics and aplomb. While the context of this study is a Kibbutz in Israel, the situation applies around the world in many different types of organization, from universities, to Information Technology, to health care and professional service firms like lawyers and accountants. This book is a must read for any Human Resources Manager filling such a position or any Manager taking up such a role and perhaps even more importantly, for any Professional managed by someone without your professional expertise."Roxanne Zolin, Queensland University of Technology, Australia