We all believe in market economics for the most part. Sure, there are limitations. And we know that markets don't work without some governance. Nonetheless, market economics is by far the most effective way to channel a society's scarce resources to the purposes that need them the most.
Why, then, do we drop our common sense when we walk in the office door?
This book explains how to implement market economics inside of organizations. Don't worry. . . . It doesn't require chargebacks. It doesn't lead to arm's-length relationships without any commitment to the enterprise, or undermine enterprise policies and strategies. And it doesn't lead to open internal competition which results in redundancies and lost synergies. Market economics simply provides the guiding principles for the design of highly efficient, effective, and agile internal resource-governance processes.
This book offers a fresh vision of empowered, entrepreneurial organizations, and practical solutions to a host of pressing financial and management challenges.
...essential reading for executives interested in maximizing shareholder value or in running effective shared-services organizations. Don Tapscott
Dean Meyer is one of the original proponents of running shared-services organizations within companies as businesses within a business, where every managerial group is an entrepreneurship funded to produce products and services for customers. He has implemented this philosophy in corporate , government, and non-profit organizations through the careful design of culture, organizational structure, and internal market economics.
Dean is the author of eight books, numerous monographs, countless articles, as well as the Full-cost Maturity Model. He invented FullCost, a business and budgetplanning process and a product/service costing tool. He researched the science of organizational structure, captured in his Structural Cybernetics framework and reorganization process. And he developed an approach to corporate culture that leads to meaningful change in less than a year. Dean coaches executives on organizational and political issues, and personally facilitates transformation processes.
Dean is a native of San Francisco and lives in Connecticut. He earned a BS from the University of California at Berkeley, and an MBA from Stanford.