Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy
Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy provides the first comprehensive view of how the careers of managers in organizations are changing. Broken Ladders reports on the employment security, advancement prospects, skills, and wages of managers in a wide range of firms and industries. These cases show that one myth--that the number of managers is declining--is wrong. But the job tenure of middle managers is more precarious. They can no longer expect steady promotions up the ladder, nor can they expect life-time employment with the same firm. New organizational designs demand new skills from managers and Broken Ladders describes what these are. On another front, managerial pay has not declined at the same rate as other workers. However, the pay gap between senior and middle managers has widened. Given job insecurity and growing pay inequality firms confront a difficult dilemma: how to maintain the commitment of their managers at the same time that the employers are reducing their commitment to their employees. Broken Ladders will be of interest to scholars and students in the fields of human resources, labor economics, career development, and organizational behavior. It will also be important reading for managers and strategic planners who have to take account of the changing nature of employment.
1123739978
Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy
Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy provides the first comprehensive view of how the careers of managers in organizations are changing. Broken Ladders reports on the employment security, advancement prospects, skills, and wages of managers in a wide range of firms and industries. These cases show that one myth--that the number of managers is declining--is wrong. But the job tenure of middle managers is more precarious. They can no longer expect steady promotions up the ladder, nor can they expect life-time employment with the same firm. New organizational designs demand new skills from managers and Broken Ladders describes what these are. On another front, managerial pay has not declined at the same rate as other workers. However, the pay gap between senior and middle managers has widened. Given job insecurity and growing pay inequality firms confront a difficult dilemma: how to maintain the commitment of their managers at the same time that the employers are reducing their commitment to their employees. Broken Ladders will be of interest to scholars and students in the fields of human resources, labor economics, career development, and organizational behavior. It will also be important reading for managers and strategic planners who have to take account of the changing nature of employment.
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Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy

Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy

Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy

Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy

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Overview

Broken Ladders: Managerial Careers in the New Economy provides the first comprehensive view of how the careers of managers in organizations are changing. Broken Ladders reports on the employment security, advancement prospects, skills, and wages of managers in a wide range of firms and industries. These cases show that one myth--that the number of managers is declining--is wrong. But the job tenure of middle managers is more precarious. They can no longer expect steady promotions up the ladder, nor can they expect life-time employment with the same firm. New organizational designs demand new skills from managers and Broken Ladders describes what these are. On another front, managerial pay has not declined at the same rate as other workers. However, the pay gap between senior and middle managers has widened. Given job insecurity and growing pay inequality firms confront a difficult dilemma: how to maintain the commitment of their managers at the same time that the employers are reducing their commitment to their employees. Broken Ladders will be of interest to scholars and students in the fields of human resources, labor economics, career development, and organizational behavior. It will also be important reading for managers and strategic planners who have to take account of the changing nature of employment.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780198025375
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 09/05/1996
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Table of Contents

About the Authors1. Introduction, Paul Osterman2. Corporate Restructuring and the Restructured World of Senior Management, Michael Useem3. From Bureaucracy to Enterprise? The Changing Jobs and Careers of Managers in Telecommunications Service, Rosemary Batt4. Automotive White-Collar: The Changing Status and Roles of Salaried Employees in the North American Auto Industry, John Paul MacDuffie5. Management Jobs in the Insurance Industry: Organizational Deskilling and Rising Pay Inequity, Elizabeth D. Scott, K. C. O'Shaughnessy, Peter Cappelli6. Evolution of Management Roles in a Networked Organization: An Insider's View of the Hewlett-Packard Company, Sara L. Beckman7. Redefining Success: Ethnographic Observations on the Careers of Technicians, Stacia E. Zabusky, Stephen R. Barley8. Human Resources Practices and the Demographic Transformation of Professional Labor Markets, Renée M. Landers, James B. Rebitzer, Lowell J. TaylorIndex
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