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Corporate Failure by Design Why Organizations Are Built to Fail
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Jonathan I. Klein
ISBN: 1-56720-297-7
ISBN-13: 978-1-56720-297-7
328 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 5/30/2000
List Price: $119.95 (UK Sterling Price: £82.95)
Availability: Print on demand
Media Type: Hardcover
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Description: Based on data regarding corporate mortality, organizations are built to fail: a conclusion critical to managers, employees, stockholders, consultants, customers, vendors, competitors, and therefore all of us who transact with and depend on organizations. Yet, literature about organizational management tends to focus on education and inspiration, and to bristle with optimism about the potential success of applying its wares. Ignored, in virtually all of this literature is the reality that personnel may or may not be inherently self-interested, but certainly join business organizations in order to serve individual rather than organizational interests.

Individual self-interest is advanced through control of various processes in order to rationalize that self-interest as a productive, organizational purpose, which not simply suppresses opposition but also conceals or even demonizes that opposition. These processes include such familiar organizational functions as individual and organizational goal-setting, job and organizational design, leadership, hiring, performance appraisal, compensation, promotion, communication, corporate culture, and change.

At all levels, therefore, the organization's long-term interest is undermined by the goals of the very members of whom it is comprised—it is built to fail. And through control of its various internal processes and elimination of opposition, the organization pursues self-destructive goals without knowing it.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
    Introduction
    Failure in Purpose
    The Corporate Suicide Mission: The Emergence of Organizational Purpose
    The Structure and Content of Failure
    The Enemy Within: Organizational Members and Their Jobs
    Dressed for Success, Qualified to Fail: Staffing the Organization
    Failure in Methods and Function
    The Psychopathology of Leadership
    The Training and Evaluation of Incompetence
    Failure as Its Own Reward
    The Process of Failure
    Together We Fall
    Partners in Crime
    The Company of Strangers: Organizational Communication and the Lack of It
    The Outcome of Failure
    The Smoking Gun: Life Inside the Monopoly
    The Ritual of Change
    The Blind Leading the Blind: Learning How to Fail
    The Agony of Defeat: The Hidden Costs of Organizational Failure
    Beyond Failure
    Learning from Failure: Saving Organizations from Themselves
    The End of Organization as We Know It: Survival in the Postorganizational World
    Epilogue
    Appendices
    Further Reading
    Index
About the Author: JONATHAN I. KLEIN has served on the faculty at the Graduate School of Management at Rutgers University, where he won the Horace de Podwin Award for research excellence, at Pepperdine University, and at California State University, Los Angeles. Klein currently teaches at the University of Southern California, the California School of Professional Psychology, and at California Lutheran University. In addition, he serves as Director of the Doctorate in Business Administration program at American International University in Los Angeles, and as a consultant to corporate management.
LCC Class: 658
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