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L I B R A R Y


Theory X and Theory Y: Explaining Two Views of Workers Through Control, Trust, and Motivation
Theory X and Theory Y are among the most useful ideas for students who want to understand how managers think about workers, motivation, and organizational life. Developed by Douglas McGregor in the 1960s, the theory explains two different assumptions about people at work. #Theory_X views workers as people who usually dislike work, avoid responsibility, need close supervision, and must be controlled through rules, pressure, or punishment. #Theory_Y views workers as people who
10 hours ago23 min read


Bureaucratic Theory — Explaining Formal Organizations Through Hierarchy, Rules, Roles, and Procedures
#Bureaucratic_Theory is one of the most important classical theories in the study of #organizations, #management, and #public_administration. It explains how formal organizations operate through clear #hierarchy, written #rules, defined #roles, stable #procedures, and rational authority. The theory is strongly associated with Max Weber, who argued that modern societies need organized systems that can manage complex tasks in a predictable and fair way. For students, #bureaucra
10 hours ago22 min read


Scientific Management Theory: Explaining Efficiency, Task Design, and Productivity to Students
Scientific Management Theory is one of the earliest and most influential approaches in the study of #management, #work_design, and #organizational_efficiency. Developed mainly through the work of Frederick Winslow Taylor in the early twentieth century, the theory argues that work can be improved through careful observation, measurement, planning, standardization, and training. Its central idea is simple: if managers study tasks scientifically, they can design better work meth
10 hours ago16 min read


Resource-Based View: How Internal Resources Create Competitive Advantage
The #Resource_Based_View, often called RBV, is one of the most important theories in #strategic_management. It explains why some organizations perform better than others even when they operate in the same industry, face similar market conditions, and serve similar customers. While many strategy theories focus on external forces such as competition, regulation, market growth, or industry structure, RBV looks inside the organization. It argues that #competitive_advantage comes
6 days ago24 min read


Institutional Isomorphism: How Organizations Become Similar Through Pressure, Imitation, and Professional Standards
Institutional isomorphism is one of the most important ideas in #Institutional_Theory. It explains why organizations that appear different at the beginning often become similar over time. Schools, universities, hospitals, companies, charities, banks, and government agencies may operate in different fields, but they often copy similar structures, procedures, language, titles, rankings, quality systems, and management practices. This article explains #Institutional_Isomorphism
6 days ago21 min read


Contingency Theory: Why Good Management Depends on Context
#Contingency_Theory is one of the most practical ideas in #management_studies because it teaches students that there is no single best way to manage every organization, lead every team, or solve every problem. Instead, effective management depends on the relationship between an organization and its #context. This context may include the size of the organization, the level of uncertainty in the environment, the type of technology used, the skills of employees, the culture of t
6 days ago24 min read


Historical Development of Management and Leadership
The historical development of management and leadership shows how human societies learned to organize work, direct people, control resources, and respond to changing economic needs. Management did not appear suddenly as a modern business idea. It developed over centuries through trade, agriculture, military organization, religious institutions, factories, corporations, public administration, and global markets. Leadership also changed across time. In early societies, leadersh
May 1322 min read
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