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How Behavioral Economics Influences Management Decision-Making
A New Paradigm
Examines and explains the real-world behaviors of employees, helping decision-makers in the creation and development of intellectual capital within an organization
Kelly Monahan (Author)
9780128135310, Elsevier Science
Paperback, published 25 July 2018
278 pages
22.9 x 15.1 x 1.8 cm, 0.39 kg
How Behavioral Economics Influences Management Decision-Making: A New Paradigm critically reexamines the management function in 21st century workplaces. The book seeks to examine and explain the real-world behaviors of employees and acknowledge the human nature that binds us all together and how to appeal to these characteristics in order to help organizations prosper. It explores well-observed but rarely understood features of employee cognition and irrationality, challenging the dominant discourse and offering an alternative to gain greater competitive advantage in today's complex markets. It also provides an effective new framework on the best ways to develop relevant management skills as they pertain to hiring, performance management, change management, employee engagement, and goal setting. As the knowledge economy continues to grow, the social bonds within companies will prove to be a key differentiation to deliver on the next big idea. Developing productive decisions with staff in the talent-driven global economy increasingly requires the development of "intrinsic" meaning in work, a human-centered work-place culture, and human-focused working practices. This book tackles these topics in comprehensive and efficient detail.
Preface 1. The Changing Nature of Work: Macro-Level Considerations for Managers 2. Rational Economics and the Administrative Theory of Management 3. Exploring Management Alternatives With a Behavioral Economice Lens 4. The Manager's Evolving Role 5. Connecting: Bridging Across Networks to Attract New Talent Under Shared Objectives 6. Coaching With and Toward the Development of Expertise 7. Empowering: Building Reciprocity and Trust 8. Adapting: Building Trust During Change Management Afterword
Subject Areas: Microeconomics [KCC]