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Amoeba Management: Why it Works at Kyocera and which other Firms Could Benefit from its Adoption - Part 1

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dc.contributor.author Adler, Ralph W
dc.contributor.author Hiromoto, Toshiro
dc.contributor.editor Stringer, Carolyn
dc.date.copyright 2010
dc.identifier.citation Adler, R. W., & Hiromoto, T. (2010). Amoeba Management: Why it Works at Kyocera and which other Firms Could Benefit from its Adoption - Part 1 (Accountancy Working Paper Series No. 2010 - 4). (C. Stringer, Ed.). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2431 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10523/2431
dc.description.abstract This paper is the first of two articles that explores the workings of amoeba management. Kyocera, a Japanese manufacturer of ceramics and printing-related devices, first introduced amoeba management in the 1960s. On the surface, amoeba management appears very similar to a company’s widespread use of profit centers / pseudo profit centers. Researchers, or at least those who publish in English-language business journals, invariably focus on the issue of organizational structuring, typically relying on highly descriptive business case studies to showcase the use of amoeba management at Kyocera. Missing from the literature has been any attempt to draw upon business theory to help understand how and why amoeba management’s success is achieved. This first paper, which is Part 1 of a two-part series, draws on the fields of organizational sociology and organizational psychology to uncover and identify the implicit set of unifying and coordinating mechanisms that enables Kyocera’s use of a highly, and what some might even call radically, decentralized organizational structure to succeed. The second paper explores which firms are most likely to benefit from amoeba management adoption and identifies the internal and external factors that are likely to promote or prevent its successful adoption. en_NZ
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.relation.ispartofseries Accountancy Working Paper Series en_NZ
dc.rights CC0 1.0 Universal *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ *
dc.subject Amoeba management, contingency theory, decentralized structures, organizational culture en_NZ
dc.title Amoeba Management: Why it Works at Kyocera and which other Firms Could Benefit from its Adoption - Part 1 en_NZ
dc.type Working Paper
otago.school Accountancy & Finance Department en_NZ
otago.openaccess Open
dc.rights.statement Please do not cite or quote without the expressed permission of the authors. en_NZ
otago.relation.number 2010 - 4 en_NZ

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