ABSTRACT

Architects and engineers can build models to test their ideas - why not managers? In Game Theory in Management: Modelling Business Decisions and Their Consequences, author Michael Hatfield presents a series of mathematically structured analogies to real-life business and economic interaction scenarios, and then, using modern game theory, he shows how to test common managerial technical approaches for their effectiveness. His results are astonishing: if game theory is correct then many commonly-held and taught management approaches and techniques are not only less effective than thought, they are actually detrimental in many areas where they are held to be beneficial. Game Theory in Management also examines managerial implications from network theory, cartage schemes, risk management theory, management information system epistemology, and other areas where the quantification and testing of business decisions can be employed to identify winning and losing stratagems.

part 1|65 pages

Win Using the Rules of the Game

chapter 1|10 pages

Chess Openings and Risk Management

chapter 3|14 pages

Game Theory and Cartage Schemes

chapter 4|11 pages

Network Theory and Games

chapter 5|11 pages

Win Using the Rules of the Game

part 2|51 pages

The Upper Limit

chapter 6|12 pages

Deconstructing Game Theory

chapter 7|12 pages

The Pieces Move Like This …

chapter 8|11 pages

Deconstructing Risk Management

part 3|75 pages

The Structured Solution

chapter 10|23 pages

Managing to the Corner Cube

chapter 11|24 pages

Corner Cubes and Robustness

chapter 13|13 pages

Life, the Universe, and Everything 1