
Companies across all industries are engaging in digital transformation to harness the power of advanced information technologies. Building on interviews and diverse case studies, this book provides an in-depth look at how data and algorithms are reshaping management practices, organizational structures, corporate culture, and work roles. Henri Schildt develops a broad framework for understanding digitalization not as a technological change but as a new normative mind-set, here called 'the data imperative'. It describes the new managerial ideals that compel companies to pursue digital omniscience and omnipotence-abilities to represent and understand the world through real-time data flow and to control customer experiences, physical equipment, and workers with software. The efforts to complement and replace human expertise with data and smart algorithms are associated with shifts in strategic priorities, adoption of powerful modular architectures, new organizational structures, and the introduction of artificial intelligence into diverse work roles. Surveying the developments in management and the workplace, this book offers an integrative and balanced account of the on-going changes that will continue to affect everyone from executives and professionals to front-line workers.
This book investigates how the shift toward digital transformation functions as a new normative mindset, termed the 'data imperative,' which fundamentally alters management, organizational structures, and the nature of work. Henri Schildt, an expert in management and organizational studies, synthesizes extensive interview data and diverse corporate case studies to construct a framework for understanding digitalization. He argues that companies are increasingly driven by a desire for digital omniscience and omnipotence, seeking to replace or augment human expertise with algorithmic control and real-time data flows.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and scholars in organizational theory recognize this work as a comprehensive analysis of the sociological and structural shifts caused by digitalization. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a balanced and integrative view of how data-driven management affects all levels of the corporate hierarchy.
Page Count:
230
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192577514
ISBN-13:
9780192577511
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