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OverviewBased on studies of the use of management consulting, financial consulting, legal services, and IT services, this book sheds light on how needs in organisations for management advice services are constructed and why certain service suppliers are given trust to deliver. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Steffan Furusten , Andreas WerrPublisher: Copenhagen Business School Press Imprint: Copenhagen Business School Press Weight: 0.478kg ISBN: 9788763001465ISBN 10: 8763001462 Pages: 279 Publication Date: 22 July 2005 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsBringing in Managerial Expertise from External Markets New Professionalism Purchasing as Supply Management Selling Business Law Services Properties of Expertise Taking Control of Need Construction The Organization of Expertise Needs and Interaction Doing Deals Despite Distrust Breaking Laws - Making Deals Breaking the Personal Tie Dealing with Values The Three-Dimensional Construction of Management Advise Services Arena MechanismsReviewsToday's organizations are - or think they are - becoming increasingly dependent on external expertise. Procuring this expertise, however, presupposes trust. Creating trust for providers of intangible goods like expertise is to a large extent subject to social construction. Based on empirical study of management consulting, including also legal and financial advice and auditing services, the articles in this book come together to present a concise, fascinating and often unexpected analysis of the dynamic interplay between the construction of the need for expertise, trust in those who supply it, and evaluation of the quality of services received. Alfred Kieser, Professor of Organizational Behavior, Mannheim University, Germany This book offers a very systematic examination of the linkages between firms and the providers of management advisory services and stands out for both the range and comprehensiveness with which it covers its chosen subject matter. The approach to MAS is conceptually highly aware, but does not thrust its theoretical sophistication on the attention of the reader. A constructionist approach to MAS is deployed in highly sophisticated ways, and in this respect, it could well be studied with profit by other analysts. Dealing with Confidence is wide in its scope, not only putting the position of professional groups and how they go about their business under the scrutiny, but also, at the same time, taking the reader to the heart of the mechanisms that now regulate economic exchanges. The result is a highly detailed yet also an integrated and almost synthetic account of the ways in which MAS work. Comprehensive, thorough and systematic, this is a very welcome addition to the literature. Its value is not only in what it has to say about MAS as such, but also for what it says about the ways that MAS contribute to the new economic world we now all of us inhabit Stephen Ackroyd, Professor of Organisational Analysis, Lancaster University Management School, United Kingdom Author InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |