By IBTimes Staff Reporter
Based on responses from the reputed faculty researchers, we take a look
at five areas or trends which are emerging as the key influencers of business
and management in the 21st century and are also likely to spawn a good share of
research in the domain.
Globalization
The melting of barriers among
nations and their increasing interconnectedness, accelerated by technology, has
led to a change in the world order that has had a profound impact on global
business. The emergence of nations such as India and China has replaced the era
of unquestioned dominance of the Western countries or any one particular
region, paving the way for a flattened business arena where developments in one
part of the other are certain to have a spiraling impact. Perhaps the best evidence
of this is the recent financial crisis.
A recent 335-page study by the AACSB, the leading accreditation agency
for business schools around the world, highlights the implications of this and
asserts that rising expectations from business and society for graduates with
global competencies, coupled with the increasing complexity and global
connectedness of higher education, command the attention of business schools
around the world.
Technology
If the current wave of
globalization has been the driving force behind the most far-reaching and
powerful changes in business, then information technology has indisputably been
the facilitator. Drawing attention to the fact that four out of the top five
companies in Businessweek's annual list of most innovative companies are
technology-driven businesses, Professor Teresa Amabile writes in Working
Knowledge, Customers are courted and supply chains are managed via websites,
social media, and email; marketing, manufacturing, and distribution processes
are managed by sophisticated real-time information systems; colleagues working
12 time zones apart can see and hear each other as they work at their desks-or
in airport lounges on opposite sides of the planet.
Sustainability and Corporate Social Responsibility
For business to be sustainable,
and even profitable, our planet has to be sustainable - this realization has
hit businesses perhaps the hardest in recent times. HBS Dean Nitin Nohria feels
that in the coming decade, we are likely to see a lot of focus directed towards
applying management principles to solutions of complex social issues such as
environmental sustainability, energy security, access to healthcare etc. This
will also underline the need for increased interdisciplinary interaction and
influence on business management.
One evidence of this growing engagement with issues of society and
sustainability is the increase in number of companies who have intensified
their CSR focus and the innovative ways in which they have engaged themselves,
points out professor of marketing, Michael Norton. Shifting steadily from
corporate philanthropy to more direct and effective engagement, companies have
devised new models of extending a social footprint. Drawing attention to the
Pepsi Refresh project, Norton has highlighted how the company encouraged users
to submit projects with social impact-from cleaning up a river to saving
animals-and allowed other users to vote on which projects Pepsi should fund.
The Study of Psychology
Business Ecosystems
This has important implications for management because innovation in
business ecosystems has a character distinct from traditional, vertically
integrated firms. Every organization in the ecosystem has to be aware of the
bigger picture. As Professor Baldwin tells Working Knowledge, Innovation in
ecosystems requires collective action to both invent and appraise, efficient,
cross-organization knowledge flows, modular architectures, and good stewardship
of legacy systems. It rests on multiple, complementary platforms.
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