ABSTRACT

The book looks at the corporate management system and how it affects company performance. The main theme revolves around the notion that when a company values its workers and their satisfaction, that company can achieve success. The book is unique in its quantitative perspective and analysis and examines whether a corporate management system can be regarded as a source of a firm's competitive advantage by creating a sustainable competitive advantage and firm performance. The book examines how, in the context of Japanese multinational corporations (MNCs), corporate management can be part of an MNC's strategy in enhancing its capabilities, both in the home and abroad, in Japan and in Thailand. Also, it analyses the reason for the demise of two major Indian companies, Dunlop and Hindustan Motors in terms of their unsympathetic management systems.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|31 pages

Personality and person-organization fit

chapter 2|57 pages

Organizational strategy and design

chapter 3|36 pages

Leadership and decisions

chapter 4|17 pages

Person-organization fit in Japan

chapter 6|5 pages

Corporate management in India

chapter 7|12 pages

Failure of Dunlop in India

chapter 8|12 pages

Failure of Hindustan Motors in India

chapter 9|2 pages

Conclusion