英文阅读,求原文和答案
题目
英文阅读,求原文和答案
stars without the stripes
用yes,no或 Not given 回答
1.attempts by britain and mainland european firms to work together often fail.
2.project management principles diocourage consideration of long_term issues.
3.thre are good opportunities for promotion within segmented compainies .
4.the european model gives more freedom of action to junior managers.
5:working conditions in mainland europe are in practice more likely to be _____.
6.UK manager working to tight deadlines probably give up some of their_______.
答案
1.Yes
2.Yes
3.Yes
4.No
5.family-friendly
6.personal time?
Stars without the stripes
A US-style project-led model means long hours and burn-out.Why we can't be more like Europe,asks Richard Scase
Managing cultural diversity is a core component of most MBA programmes these days.The growth of Japanese corporations in the Sixties and Seventies reminded us that there were other models of business than those taught by Harvard professors and US-based management consultants.And the cultural limits to the American model have more recently been underlined by developments in Russia and central Europe over the past decade.
Yet in Britain,we are still more ready to accept the American model of management than most other European countries.As a result,UK managers often fail to understand how business practices are fundamentally different on the Continent.One outcome is that many mergers and acquisitions,strategic alliances and joint ventures between British and European companies do not achieve their objectives and end in tears.The tribulations of Marks & Spencer in France are a case in point.
Alternatively,managers may avoid a merger or joint venture which makes sense from a hard-nosed strategic point of view because they fear that different working practices will prevent their goals from being achieved.
Essentially,Anglo-Saxon companies are structured on the principles of project management.In the Eighties,companies were downsized,with tiers of management eliminated.In the Nineties,management fashion embraced the ideas of business process re-engineering,so organisations were broken down into customer-focused trading units.Sometimes these were established as subsidiary companies,at other times as profit-and-loss or cost centres.
Over the past 10 years,these principles have been applied as vigorously to the UK public sector as to private-sector corporations.Hospitals,schools,universities,social services departments,as well as large areas of national government,now operate on project management principles - all with built-in operational targets,key success factors and performance-related reward systems.
The underlying objectives for this widespread process of organisational restructuring have been to increase the transparency of operations,encourage personal accountability,become more efficient at delivering service to customer and directly relate rewards to performance.
The result is a management culture which is entrepreneurially oriented and focused almost entirely on the short term,and highly segmented organisational structures - since employee incentives and rewards are geared to the activities of their own particular unit.
This business model has also required development of new personal skills.We are now encouraged to lead,rather than to manage by setting goals and incentive systems for staff.We have to be co-operative team members rather than work on our own.We have to accept that,in flattened and decentralised organisations,there are very limited career prospects.We are to be motivated by target-related rewards rather than a longer-term commitment to our employing organisation.
This is in sharp contrast to the model of management that applies elsewhere in Europe.The principles of business process re-engineering have never been fully accepted in France,Germany and the other major economies; while in Russia,the attempt to apply them in the Nineties brought the economy virtually to its knees,and created huge opportunities for corrupt middle managers and Mafia-led ventures.
Instead,continental European companies have stuck to the bureaucratic model which delivered economic growth for them throughout the twentieth century.European corporations continue to be structured hierarchically,with clearly defined job descriptions and explicit channels of reporting.Decision making,although incorporating consultative processes,remains essentially top-down.
Which of these two models is preferable?Certainly,the downside of the Anglo-American model is now becoming evident,not least in the long-hours working culture that the application of the decentralised project management model inevitably generates.
Whether in a hospital,a software start-up or a factory,the breakdown of work processes into project-driven targets leads to overoptimistic goals and underestimates of the resources needed.The result is that the success of projects often demands excessively long working hours if the targets are to be achieved.
Further,the success criteria,as calibrated in performance targets,are inevitably arbitrary,and the source of ongoing dispute.Witness the objections of teachers and medics to the performance measures applied to them by successive governments.This is not surprising:in a factory producing cars the output of individuals is directly measurable.But what criteria can be used to measure output and performance in knowledge-based activities such as R&D labs,government offices and even the marketing departments of large corporations?
The demands and stresses of operating according to the Anglo-American model seem to be leading to increasing rates of personnel burn-out.It is not surprising that managers queue for early retirement (in a recent survey,just a fifth said they would work to 65).This could be why labour market participation rates have declined so dramatically for British 50-year-olds in the past 20 years.
By contrast,the European management model allows for family-friendly employment policies and working hours directives to be implemented.It encourages staff to have a long-term psychological commitment to their employing organisations.
Of course,companies operating on target-focused project management principles may be committed to family-friendly employment policies in theory.But,if the business plan has to be finished by the end of the month,the advertising campaign completed by the end of next week,and patients pushed through the system to achieve measurable targets,are we really going to let down our 'team' by clocking out at 5pm and taking our full entitlement of annual leave?
Perhaps this is why we admire the French for their quality of life.
Richard Scase is professor of Organisational Behaviour at the University of Kent and author of Britain in 2010:the changing business landscape (Capstone,£9.99).
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