Intangible Management (eBook)
261 Seiten
Elsevier Science (Verlag)
978-0-08-050886-3 (ISBN)
Intention, context, emotional intelligence, escalation, and sustainability are words that are generally absent from the operational management techniques of managers worldwide. They form, however, the basis of skills required to manage organizations in today's knowledge-based economy. The authors investigate the ways that intangible values can be identified, measured, and managed. Their revolutionary and innovative taxonomy not only reveals fundamental differences between a manufacturing economy and one which creates value through knowledge, relationships, and time. By using case studies, a compelling mixture of theory and applications, and a set of accounting tools, the authors demonstrates how a new value framework can protect investors while giving companies the ability to generate long-term growth.
*Shows how intangible values can be identified, measured, and managed
*Presents a revolutionary and innovative taxonomy with a new set of accounting tools
*Demonstrates with case studies how a new value framework can protect investors while enabling companies to generate long-term growth
For the recorded history of management, the world has managed value creation according to what can be seen, touched and proven. In today's knowledge-based economy, value creation is derived primarily from how well firms manage intangibles (knowledge, service, expectations, response time, innovation, change management, etc). The large capital outlays that signified the manufacturing economy are no longer required. In fact, such 'tangibles' now explain less than 20% of the value of most publicly listed firms. For example, Time Warner has only 6.49% of its value attributable to tangibles. As such, for every $1 of true value, only $0.065 cents is being measured and managed by conventional management practices. For Oracle Corporation, tangibles account for only 4% of its value. For General Electric (worth over US$450 billion), tangibles account for less than 11% of its value. Intention, context, emotional intelligence, escalation, and sustainability are words that are generally absent from the operational management techniques of managers worldwide. They form, however, the basis of skills required to manage organizations in today's knowledge-based economy. The authors investigate the ways that intangible values can be identified, measured, and managed. Their revolutionary and innovative taxonomy not only reveals fundamental differences between a manufacturing economy and one which creates value through knowledge, relationships, and time. By using case studies, a compelling mixture of theory and applications, and a set of accounting tools, the authors demonstrates how a new value framework can protect investors while giving companies the ability to generate long-term growth. - Shows how intangible values can be identified, measured, and managed- Presents a revolutionary and innovative taxonomy with a new set of accounting tools- Demonstrates with case studies how a new value framework can protect investors while enabling companies to generate long-term growth
Front Cover 1
Intangible Management: Tools for Solving the Accounting and Management Crisis 4
Copyright Page 5
Contents 8
Preface 20
Chapter 1. Introduction 24
Intangible Standards 25
Decoding Intangible Standards 25
Intangible Qualifications 28
Chapter 2. The Failings of Conventional Management 30
Changing Economic Systems 30
Why Conventional Management is Failing 33
Why is Intangible Value Being Ignored? 40
Twenty-First-Century Value Management 51
Chapter 3. What Knowledge Managers Need to Know 60
Contrarian Management 62
What Went Wrong? 63
The Knowledge-Based Economy 64
Changing Employment Conditions 66
Resource Types and Economic Systems 67
Intangible Management 68
Intangible Characteristics 68
The Solution 70
Intangible Value 71
Understanding Intangibles 71
Making it Practical 78
Linking Intangible Transactions to Financial Performance 80
The IIS5001 Model 85
Chapter 4. Intangible Operating Structures 90
Application of Intangible Standards 91
Operating Structures 93
Intangible Resources 94
Intangible Laws 99
Chapter 5. The Asset versus Expense Debate 104
Anomalies and Exception Classes 104
The Problems with Accounting 105
Beyond Conventional Strategy 107
Uncovering Financial Health 114
Potential Economic Destabilization 115
Conclusion 116
Chapter 6. Intangible Accounting 118
Bookkeepers and Accountants 118
New Basis of Measurement 120
Chapter 7. Intangible Bookkeeping 128
Intangible Accounting Reports 129
Intangible T-Accounts 129
Tangible Double-Entry Bookkeeping 133
Intangible Bookkeeping 136
Chapter 8. Foundations of Intangible Management 142
What this Really Means 143
How to Implement Intangible Management 144
The Law of Time Accumulation 157
The Law of Organizational Time Determination 158
The Law of Time Valuation 159
Chapter 9. Intangible Cost Management 164
Managing Intangible Costs 164
Measuring Intangible Costs 170
Time Management Cannot Measure the Currency of Time 171
Emotion and Time Studies 171
Chapter 10. Emotion and Time Studies 174
Benchmarking Staff Productivity 175
How Productive Is Your Staff? 178
Assessing Organizational Nonproductivity 179
Assessing Organizational Potential 181
Reducing Intangible Costs 186
Chapter 11. Identifying Nonproductive Time 188
Information Costs 188
IIS21001 Knowledge Reengineering Standard 191
Once Activities have been Audited 194
Chapter 12. Knowledge Application Costs 196
Estimating Computing Knowledge Costs 197
Benchmarking Software Costs 197
Determining Intangible Break-Even Budgets 200
Chapter 13. Intangible Information Management 204
Information Dependency 204
Managing Corporate Information Flows 205
Information Flow Management 205
Adjusting the Corporate Information Culture 205
Ever Increasing Negative Conversion 207
Information Deskilling 210
Knowledge Reengineering 211
Chapter 14. IIS21001 Knowledge Reengineering Standard 218
Core Characteristic 218
IIS21001 Applied to Information 219
1IS21001 Knowledge Reengineering Methods 221
Chapter 15. Examples of IIS2 100 1 Knowledge Reengineering 228
Example 1: 73% Compression and Reengineering 228
Example 2: 58% Compression and Reengineering 230
Example 3: 91% Compression and Reengineering 231
Example 4: 86% Compression and Reengineering 232
Chapter 16. Intangible Cost Structures 234
Putting Intangibles in Context 234
The Wage-Revenue Nexus 240
Intangible Cost Analysis 247
IIS4002 Intangible Cost Management Standard 247
A Complementary Skill: Cost Quality 248
The Management Ramifications of Cost Quality 256
Intangible Strategic Management 263
Appendix. The Traditional Economic Approach to Measuring Economic Profit 270
The Theoretical Specification of Economic Profits 271
The Empirical Measurement of Economic Profits 275
Index 280
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 30.7.2002 |
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Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Beruf / Finanzen / Recht / Wirtschaft ► Geld / Bank / Börse |
Recht / Steuern ► Wirtschaftsrecht | |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Controlling / Kostenrechnung | |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Finanzierung | |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Unternehmensführung / Management | |
Wirtschaft ► Betriebswirtschaft / Management ► Wirtschaftsinformatik | |
Wirtschaft ► Volkswirtschaftslehre | |
ISBN-10 | 0-08-050886-3 / 0080508863 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-08-050886-3 / 9780080508863 |
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