Participatory Management - Semco: Difference between revisions
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'''A successful corporate adoption of the participatory model?''' the SEMCO case | '''A successful corporate adoption of the participatory model?''' the SEMCO case | ||
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" * Give up control (e.g., no organization charts, dress code, fixed offices or policies; complete flex-time for all workers, including those on assembly lines). | " * Give up control (e.g., no organization charts, dress code, fixed offices or policies; complete flex-time for all workers, including those on assembly lines). | ||
* Share information (e.g., make all salaries public and invite everyone to attend board meetings; Semler even shares profit calculations with customers). | |||
* Encourage self-management (i.e., force people to think independently, question everything, and solve their own problems; manage by doing nothing yourself when problems arise). | |||
* Discourage uniformity (e.g., rotate jobs, allow extreme flexibility in work and pay)." | |||
(source: from the review: | (source: from the review: | ||
Revision as of 10:54, 21 December 2005
A successful corporate adoption of the participatory model? the SEMCO case
In the book,The Seven-Day Weekend: Changing the Way Work Works, CEO Ricardo Semler explains the counter-intuitive m measures he took to make his company succesfull, by relying on the self-organisation skills of his workers. A paradoxical top-down implementation of the hacker culture:
" * Give up control (e.g., no organization charts, dress code, fixed offices or policies; complete flex-time for all workers, including those on assembly lines).
- Share information (e.g., make all salaries public and invite everyone to attend board meetings; Semler even shares profit calculations with customers).
- Encourage self-management (i.e., force people to think independently, question everything, and solve their own problems; manage by doing nothing yourself when problems arise).
- Discourage uniformity (e.g., rotate jobs, allow extreme flexibility in work and pay)."
(source: from the review: