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Professors Robert H. Hayes and William J. Abernathy have harsh words about a common, if not typical style of American management:
“…an overdependence on analytical detachment – what they call ”managerial remote control.”
They say it is an approach that exalts financial analysis, not line operations. It rewards executives who see their company primarily as a competing set of rates of return, who manage by numbers and computer printouts.
Further, they say, it is a seductive doctrine that promises the bright student a quick path to the top and that piles its rewards on executives who force through impressive short-term performance, at indeterminate cost to long-term health.
Fearing any dip in today's profits, American companies keep research and technology on short rations, skimping the investment critically needed to insure competitiveness tomorrow.”
These are warnings about:
Is that from a recent article that I've read? Yet another article about Boeing's troubles?
No. It's a 1982 article in the New York Times. Hat tip to Tom Ehrenfeld for sharing it with me.
By Mark Graban4.1
1515 ratings
Blog Post
Professors Robert H. Hayes and William J. Abernathy have harsh words about a common, if not typical style of American management:
“…an overdependence on analytical detachment – what they call ”managerial remote control.”
They say it is an approach that exalts financial analysis, not line operations. It rewards executives who see their company primarily as a competing set of rates of return, who manage by numbers and computer printouts.
Further, they say, it is a seductive doctrine that promises the bright student a quick path to the top and that piles its rewards on executives who force through impressive short-term performance, at indeterminate cost to long-term health.
Fearing any dip in today's profits, American companies keep research and technology on short rations, skimping the investment critically needed to insure competitiveness tomorrow.”
These are warnings about:
Is that from a recent article that I've read? Yet another article about Boeing's troubles?
No. It's a 1982 article in the New York Times. Hat tip to Tom Ehrenfeld for sharing it with me.

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