DSpace About DSpace Software     MIT Libraries    
 

DSpace at MIT >
Center for Innovation in Product Development (CIPD) >
Implementation Dynamics (ID) >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/3962

Title: Drive Out Fear (Unless You Can Drive It In):The role of agency and job security in process improvement
Authors: Repenning, Nelson
Keywords: TQM
process improvement
management science
sustained benefits
lay-offs
Fear
agency
Issue Date: Nov-1998
Abstract: Understanding the wide range of outcomes achieved by firms trying to implement TQM and similar process improvement initiatives presents a challenge to management science and organization theory: a few firms reap sustained benefits from their programs, but most efforts fail and are abandoned. A defining feature of such techniques is the reliance on the front-line workforce to do the work of improvement, thus creating the possibility of agency problems; different incentives facing managers and workers. Specifically, successfully improving productivity can lead to lay-offs. The literature provides two opposing theories of how agency interacts with the ability of quality-oriented improvement techniques to dramaticlly increase productivity. The 'Drive Out Fear' school argues that firms must commit to job security, while the 'Drive In Fear' school emphasizes the positive role that insecurity plays in motivating change. In this study a contract theoretic model is developed to analyze the role of agency in process improvement. The main insight of the study is that there are two types of job security, internal and external, that have opposite impacts on the firm's abilty to implement improvement initiatives. The distinction is useful in explaining the results of different case studies and can reconcile the two change theories.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/3962
Appears in Collections:Implementation Dynamics (ID)

Files in This Item:

File Description SizeFormat
Drive_in_Fear.pdf84KbAdobe PDFView/Open


This item is protected by original copyright

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

invent @ MIT: The HP-MIT Alliance Copyright © 2002 MIT and  Hewlett-Packard - Feedback