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B200 TUTORIAL WEEK FIVE

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Title: B200 TUTORIAL WEEK FIVE


1
B200TUTORIAL WEEK FIVE
2
By the end of the Environments module you should
be able to
  • recognise key phenomena in business environments
  • use appropriate models and concepts to analyse
    them
  • recognise and interpret the values underlying
    different analyses of business environments
  • understand the complex relationship between the
    behaviour of businesses and their environments
  • identify some of the methods businesses adopt for
    dealing with their environment.

3
The System? Technology, Ecology and Globalisation
  • This area of environments is covered by your
    study of Chapters 22, 23, 24, 26 and 27.
  • The word system can be used as an overarching
    phrase to describe the world of business
    encompassing the three previously examined
    environments.

4
Chapter 22 Creating the Corporate Future by
Ackoff
  • Ackoff asserts that the starting point for
    systems thinking or synthesis is the
    identification of a containing whole (system) of
    which the thing to be explained is a part.

5
Analysis
  • Analysis is a three stage process
  • Taking apart the thing to be understood
  • Trying to understand the behavior of the parts
    taken separately
  • Trying to assemble this understanding into an
    understanding of the whole.

6
Reductionism
  • Given the commitment to the analytical method,
    unless there are ultimate parts, elements, a
    complete understanding of the universe would be
    impossible.
  • If there are such indivisible parts and we come
    to understand them and their behaviour, then a
    complete understanding of the world is possible,
    at least in principle. Therefore, the belief in
    elements is a fundamental underpinning of the
    Machine-Age view of the world. The doctrine that
    asserts this belief is called Reductionism, all
    reality and our experience of it can be reduced
    to ultimate indivisible elements.

7
Determinism
  • Is everything in the universe the effect of a
    cause? The answer to this question was dictated
    by the prevailing belief in the possibility of
    understanding the universe completely. Everything
    had to be taken as the effect of some cause
    (doctrine of determinism).
  • The first cause was postulated and taken to be
    GOD.
  • How can we explain free will, choice and purpose
    in a determining universe? Free will or choice
    does not need to be explained because it is a
    natural phenomenon.
  • A cause was taken to explain its effect
    completely. Nothing else was required to explain
    it, not even the environment. Therefore, Machine
    Age thinking was, to a large extent environment
    free. The orientation of the Machine-Age science
    is the nature of the place in which its inquiry
    was usually conducted, the laboratory.

8
Mechanism
  • The concept of the universe that derives from the
    exclusive use of analysis and the doctrines of
    reductionism and determinism is mechanism.

9
Industrial revolution
  • The replacement of man by man-made machine as a
    source of work. Its two central concepts were
    work machine.
  • The mechanization of work was greatly facilitated
    by reducing it to a set of simple tasks.
    Therefore work was analyzed to reduce it to its
    elements.
  • There were many benefits from the industrial
    revolution however there is one cost Small
    tasks have become repetitive as if we are reduced
    to behaving like machines.
  • Mechanization of work took the work process and
    reduced it to its elements (tasks), eg.
    Taylorism.

10
The System Age
  • The emergence of dilemmas took the scientists out
    of their laboratories into the real world.
    Scientists discovered that interactions of the
    solutions of disassembled parts were of greater
    importance than the solutions considered
    separately.
  • This led to the formation of interdisciplinary
    efforts. By the mid 1950's it was generally
    recognized that the source of similarities of the
    interdisciplines was their shared preoccupation
    with the behavior of Systems.

11
A System
  • A system is a set of two or more elements that
    satisfies the following conditions
  • The behaviour of each effect has an effect on the
    behavior of the whole
  • The behaviour of the elements and their effects
    on the whole are interdependent
  • However subgroups of the element are formed, each
    has an effect on the behaviour of the whole and
    none has an independent effect on it. A system,
    therefore, is a whole that cannot be divided into
    independent parts. And thus cannot be understood
    by analysis.
  • A system, therefore, is a whole that cannot be
    divided into independent parts and so cannot be
    understood by analysis. Realizing this fact is
    the primary source of intellectual revolution
    that is bringing about a change of age.

12
Systems Thinking
  • Synthesis is the key to systems thinking just as
    analysis was the key to Machine Age thinking.
    Synthesis and analysis are complementary
    processes. Systems thinking combine the two
    together.
  • In the systems approach there are three steps
  • Identify a containing whole (system) of which the
    thing to be explained is a part
  • Explain the behaviour or properties of the
    containing whole
  • Then explain the behaviour or properties of the
    thing to be explained in terms of its role or
    function within its containing whole.
  • Synthesis precedes analysis.
  • Analysis focuses on Structure, it reveals how
    things work. Synthesis focuses on function it
    reveals why things operate as they do. Therefore,
    analysis yields knowledge and synthesis yields
    understanding.

13
Systems Thinking
  • If each part of a system, considered separately,
    is made to operate as efficiently as possible,
    the system as a whole will not operate as
    effectively as possible.
  • This is because the performance of a system
    depends more on how parts interact than on how
    they act independently of each other.

14
Expansionism
  • In system thinking, increases in understanding
    are believed to be obtainable by expanding the
    systems to be understood, not by reducing them to
    their elements.

15
Producer-Product
  • Singer asked what the universe would look like if
    producer-product is applied to it rather than
    cause-effect.
  • The use of the producer-product relationship
    requires the environment to explain everything
    whereas use of cause-effect requires the
    environment to explain nothing.

16
Teleology
  • Meaning the study of evidence of design in
    nature.
  • An approach that explains a phenomena by final
    results.
  • A system's ends goals, objectives, and ideals
    could be established as objectively as the number
    of elements it contained. This made it possible
    to look at systems teleologically, in an
    output-oriented way, rather than
    deterministically, in an input-oriented way.

17
Postindustrial Revolution
  • Automation (techniques of making a system
    operate) has to do with replacement of mind
  • Automation is to Postindustrial revolution what
    mechanization was to the industrial revolution.

18
Chapter 23 Daniel Bell and the Information
Society by Mackay, Heap and Thomas.
  • Daniel Bell identified 3 stages of economic
    progress
  • The pre-industrial (agricultural)
  • The industrial (manufacturing)
  • The post industrial (service sector)
  • In his work on the 'information society', Bell
    refers to knowledge having replaced labour as the
    source of value information has become more than
    merely a source, it s a commodity which can be
    bought and sold and the information-processing
    occupations are becoming increasingly central.

19
Criticism of the Information Society
  • IT as central to contemporary society as is
    suggested? No since preceding technologies (TV
    and radio) were seen as media which will expose
    everyone to the spoken word
  • The criticism that it is not a march of progress
    from the primary, through the secondary to the
    tertiary sector. Rather, much of the service
    (tertiary) sector has grown because of a growth
    in manufacturing, rather than as a replacement
    for it.

20
Criticism Ctd
  • The empirical evidence about us moving towards a
    leisure society with automated manufacturing,
    political participation and an emphasis on the
    quality of life. While automation of work has
    made a few jobs more skilled, many routine,
    semi-skilled and unskilled, jobs remain- in deed,
    they are found in abundance in the burgeoning
    service sector.
  • The IT managers have little chance to achieve
    boards of corporations
  • Dealing with information does not itself infer
    power. However the information society is here,
    in advanced industrial societies-whether we like
    it or not, or agree with it or not in that it
    is undoubtedly pervasive and important in our
    daily lives.

21
Chapter 24 Global Information Infrastructure
Eliminating the Distance Barrier by Hudson.
  • Hudson examines the role of information and
    communication technologies in globalisation.

22
Hudsons views
  • She says that States need to establish links both
    internationally and between different information
    and communication media.
  • She calls on Governments to harmonise their
    regulatory frameworks on telecommunications and
    allow private business providers to invest in the
    technology development.
  • She recommends education as a way of developing a
    common understanding of the system and its
    objectives.

23
Chapter 26 A road map for Natural Capitalism
by Lovins, Lovins and Hawken.
  • This article puts forward a new approach not only
    for protecting biosphere but also for improving
    profits and competitiveness. This approach is
    called natural capitalism because it's what
    capitalism might become if its largest category
    of capital the "natural capital" of ecosystem
    services- were properly valued.
  • The journey to natural capitalism involves four
    major shifts in business practices, all virtually
    interlinked
  • Dramatically increase the productivity of natural
    resources
  • Shifts to biologically inspired production
    modules
  • Move to solutions based model
  • Reinvest in natural capital

24
Discussion
  • How persuasive do you find the case in this
    chapter for the development of natural
    capitalism?
  • Your tutor will lead the discussion.

25
Chapter 27 Reflections on the politics linking
science, environment and innovation by
Boehmer-Christiansen.
  • Boehmer-Christiansen asserts that technology and
    its development is a political process.
  • She identifies a number of stakeholders, all
    exerting their power and influence to shape
    technology and public perceptions of it for their
    own ends.

26
Summary
  • She argues that businesses and Governments have
    adopted environmental sustainability.
  • They are now using it to develop technologies
    which protect their own interests against the the
    competitive incursions of developing economies.
  • They are aided in this by a scientific community
    anxious to invigorate its influence in political
    circles after some decades of waning.

27
Activities
  • Activity 11 (page 44 of the Study Guide)
  • Activity 12 (page 45 of the Study Guide)

28
READING TO BE COMPLETED BY NEXT WEEK
  • Please read pages 43 - 51 of the study guide to
    refresh your study of Chapters (dont read
    Chapter 25 as it is optional).
  • Please read Chapters 3 and 4 of the Markets Text
    book (the red one) before the next tutorial (NB
    you do not need to read Chapters 1 and 2 as this
    is optional reading).
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