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Corporate Life Cycles and the Evolution of Management — Part I

Scott S. Cowen (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio)
J. Kendall Middaugh II (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio)
Kevin McCarthy (Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio)

Management Decision

ISSN: 0025-1747

Article publication date: 1 February 1984

340

Abstract

Corporations, like products, go through various stages of development from birth to maturity to decline. Although there is conceptual agreement among management theoreticians and practitioners that corporations go through life cycles, there is little agreement as to the nature and characteristics of the cycles. Researchers such as Chandler, Scott, Thain, Lippett and Schmidt, and Greiner have proposed models of corporate development describing the changes an organisation faces as it evolves, what the changes mean, and the implications of these changes for management philosophy, planning and control systems. These models are different in their conceptualisations of the corporate life cycle but they all communicate the same theme: to be successful, organisations must be able to adapt rapidly to significant environmental changes. The critical relationships among corporate life cycles, management style, and planning and control systems are a logical extension of this theme. A corporation's business strategy, structure, goals and methods of operating usually differ markedly in each stage of the cycle; the organisation must be managed by executives with the skills to cope with the demands of each stage of corporate development.

Citation

Cowen, S.S., Kendall Middaugh, J. and McCarthy, K. (1984), "Corporate Life Cycles and the Evolution of Management — Part I", Management Decision, Vol. 22 No. 2, pp. 3-11. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb001340

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1984, MCB UP Limited

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