282 avsnitt

Talking About Organizations is a conversational podcast where we talk about one book, journal article or idea per episode and try to understand it, its purpose and its impact. By joining us as we collectively tackle classic readings on organization theory, management science, organizational behavior, industrial psychology, organizational learning, culture, climate, leadership, public administration, and so many more! Subscribe to our feed and begin Talking About Organizations as we take on great management thinkers of past and present!

Talking About Organizations Podcast Tom Galvin | Pedro Monteiro | Rohin Borpujari | Greetje Corporaal | Catherine Jackson | Miranda Lewis | Leonardo Melo Lins | Samantha Ortiz-Casillas | Sarah Otner | Ralph Soule | Frithjof Wegener

    • Näringsliv
    • 4,3 • 3 betyg

Talking About Organizations is a conversational podcast where we talk about one book, journal article or idea per episode and try to understand it, its purpose and its impact. By joining us as we collectively tackle classic readings on organization theory, management science, organizational behavior, industrial psychology, organizational learning, culture, climate, leadership, public administration, and so many more! Subscribe to our feed and begin Talking About Organizations as we take on great management thinkers of past and present!

    Please buy us a coffee!

    Please buy us a coffee!

    Talking About Organizations has always been a free resource, available to students and scholars of organizations and management for almost 10 years now! Unfortunately, it is not free to produce, so we are turning to you, our listeners, to please help us keep the show on air, ad free, and without any paywalls!

    If you value the work that we do, please help us cover operating costs with the price of a coffee (or multiple coffees): https://www.buymeacoffee.com/taop

    Thank you so much!

    NB. If you'd like to support us in some other way, please don't hesitate to get in touch via our social media accounts!

    • 2 min
    112: Hierarchies & Promotion -- The "Peter Principle" (Part 2)

    112: Hierarchies & Promotion -- The "Peter Principle" (Part 2)

    We conclude our look at Lawrence Peter’s The Peter Principle by discussing why the Principle is timeless is its quality. Our contemporary experiences with hierarchies may have changed due to greater mobility of workers, but the Principle itself provokes our thinking about management. We also discuss how Peter used satire to present his points and why it seems to be so effective in this particular instance. Is satire a reasonable method to launch and disseminate ideas, and if so, how and when it is most suitable?

    • 46 min
    112: Hierarchies & Promotion -- The "Peter Principle" (Part 1)

    112: Hierarchies & Promotion -- The "Peter Principle" (Part 1)

    The diligent administrative assistant moves up to supervisor but fails. The assembly line worker is promoted to foreman but cannot do the job. A teacher earns a deputy principal position in a school but falls flat on their face. Why is that? Why does this seem to happen across organizations?
    In The Peter Principle, Lawrence J. Peter and Raymond Hull not only provides answers to these questions, they delve into all the possible implications. The Principle goes like this, “In a hierarchy, everyone rises to their level of incompetence.” How they derived this principle the subject of our conversation that explores one of the funniest but more insightful book on the perils of organizational life ever written. 

    • 47 min
    112: Hierarchies & Promotion -- The "Peter Principle" (Summary of Episode)

    112: Hierarchies & Promotion -- The "Peter Principle" (Summary of Episode)

    We will provide our take on The Peter Principle, the book that provided the old adage, “In a hierarchy, everyone rises to their level of incompetence.” While the book was written as satire, it touched a nerve of many people frustrated about organizational life. A fun episode!

    • 4 min
    111: Visible & Invisible Work -- Susan Leigh Star (Part 2)

    111: Visible & Invisible Work -- Susan Leigh Star (Part 2)

    We conclude the episode by looking to the present day and how the negotiations over work visibility has evolved since the turn of the 21st century. Have the emergence of social media, emergence of general computing platforms over the proprietary systems from the 1990s, and increased competitive pressures driving quests for efficiency challenged or reinforced the arguments that Star and Strauss made in the article? Reviews and reactions are decidedly mixed.

    • 41 min
    111: Visible & Invisible Work -- Susan Leigh Star (Part 1)

    111: Visible & Invisible Work -- Susan Leigh Star (Part 1)

    In this episode, we focus on the emerging discourse from the 1990s on how automated systems would potentially change the very meaning of work. The discussion is on a seminal work of Susan Leigh Star and co-author Anselm Strauss, “Layers of Silence, Arenas of Voice: The Ecology of Visible and Invisible Work,” published in CSCW’s flagship journal, Computer-Supported Cooperative Work, in 1999. The article focuses on the challenges and risks of automating work processes without due consideration of all the invisible work done in an organization that systems designers might overlook. Moreover, it addresses the unintended consequences of making invisible background work visible, such as making it easier for managers to monitor and control.

    • 47 min

Kundrecensioner

4,3 av 5
3 betyg

3 betyg

Mest populära poddar inom Näringsliv

Framgångspodden
Acast
Börsmagasinet
Börsmagasinet
Den hållbara hjärnan
Gabriella Svanberg och Annika Kvist
Börspodden
Johan Isaksson & John Skogman
Placerapodden
Placerapodden
Empower Her
Sanne Josefson

Du kanske också gillar

The Weeds
Vox
Freakonomics Radio
Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher
The Daily
The New York Times
The Ezra Klein Show
New York Times Opinion
Hidden Brain
Hidden Brain, Shankar Vedantam
HBR IdeaCast
Harvard Business Review