36 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Developing true schools of management., February 22, 2005
Mintzberg has a formidable reputation as an educator and writer on management. Unlike Drucker who is a pillar of the managerial establishment, Mintzberg is an iconoclast, turning a very sceptical pen on many of the most cherished tenets of management belief.
He chooses his targets carefully. His attacks are devastating in their accuracy and detail, but he always spends more time constructing the new than destroying the old. His solutions are notable for their common sense and the fact that they are grounded in experience of the real world, rather than in fashionable theory. Because his targets are ones that are dear to the establishment heart (what could be closer than the value of strategic planning and of the MBA as a qualification for high business office?) his books tend to be blockbusters, bringing together a formidable amount of evidence for his case from many sources. However, the central ideas are relatively simple and are expressed in colloquial and engaging terms, with more than a touch of humour.
His last major target was strategic planning, in his 1994 The Rise and Fall of Strategic Planning. This time his target is the practice of management itself and the, in his view, malign influence of management education in the form of the dominant MBA degree on managerial practice, business organizations and wider society.
Management education and the role of the MBA have been in Mintzberg's sights for a long time. For example, his 1989 Mintzberg on Management contains a major section, which could be seen as a precursor to the present book, while his career has been deeply concerned with the education of managers in the widest sense, rather than simply with teaching the MBA.
The book has two main audiences, those in educational institutions concerned with management education and those in business concerned with the selection and development of manager. There is also a third potential audience of those who are interested in their own development as managers. Each will find the book very useful, but the second and third audiences are likely to want to skip much of the detail.
In terms of the impact of the book, my only question is whether Mintzberg has not left the publication a bit late. While it is clear that the evils that he describes are widely present, there is also increasing evidence that the alternative approaches to management education that he advocates are being put into place more widely. This is true at least in many large corporations, even if it is less evident in the major business schools. However, even if the book might have had more impact if it had been published a few years ago, the careful analysis, detailed prescriptions - and even the somewhat dramatic presentation of these findings - ensure that the book will attract the notice that it deserves. It is to be hoped that it also stimulates further action.
The book is in two parts. Part One explores the requirements for effective practical management (including general management) and discusses the current focus of business education. An essential preliminary is to distinguish management education (provided by educational institutions) from management development (which is derived from a whole range of processes in which practical experience in specific contexts plays a crucial role). Throughout the book, there is careful definition and differentiation of terms to ensure that business is not confused with management or education with development.
Part Two is concerned with developing managers in practice, and compares various approaches to this end, their advantages and weaknesses. From this it seeks to identify a way - or rather the principles underlying a series of compatible ways - forward.
The key to his argument is found in a chart which distinguishes three 'zones' of management development and education:
* the educating zone, the key domain of Business Schools;
* the training zone, in which consultants and institutes figure prominently; and
* the practising zone, largely filled by corporations and the in-house academies.
The issue is how to combine these three perspectives on development most effectively and productively. After two initial chapters which discusses the principles, including 8 propositions for management education, there are five chapters which are in effect an extended case study of the program with which the author is closely concerned, the International Masters in Practicing Management. The book ends with a chapter on developing true schools of management - a title designed to distinguish these from the familiar 'business schools'.
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19 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Half Critique/Half Advertisement -- But well said, May 23, 2005
Mintzberg's reputation in the OD and Strategy world is stellar. His views are often debated but never rejected out-of-hand. He is always salient and grounded. This offering is no exception.
The first half of the book is a well-reasoned critique of the traditional MBA - and the schools that have offered them. His analysis of the dire consequences that has been wrought by the MBA may be a bit overblown but you cannot deny his logic and his reasoning and must, at least, take a careful look at the possible damages that an MBA (without requisite management skills) can do.
The second half of the book is where I was sadly disappointed. It is written as a means to offer a possible solution to the mess mad by traditional MBA's but it reads more like a 200 page advertisement for the IMPM program that he and other colleagues have been offering for the last few years. It is unfortunate that he appears to be offering a "prescription" (a concept he blasts in this very book) instead of offering his views for dialogue. This second half would have best been presented in academic journals for debate rather than in book form.
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39 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
To MBA or Not To MBA, that is the question., October 1, 2004
In short, Henry Mintzberg is critisizing the MBA education, which has a lot of truth inside. I am an entrepreneur strating up several small businesses and have been doing it for 17 years, and recently got my MBA education. This book is interesting and amusing. But here is my 2c: I honestly think MBA teaches a lot of great materials and is very useful in a lot of situation. We learn about the fundamentals of business in general way and not being "specialized" (that is what Phd for). After learning the basic fundamentals you start to see the business world in a more elevated way, most of my classmates think that they see the whole business with a much fesher perspective. Now, there is also a dangerous side of being an MBA, that we started to think we can solve all problems and get the best solution without deep understanding of the deeper side of the business. And a lot of people becoming more arogant ;-), demanding more salary, etc etc. MBA is also a great place for "switching points", moving from a specialized area to go to management. Tacit knowledge can not be taught in any type of education without real life experience, but i think MBA is the best next option to groom a "general manager" type of leader.
That said, i still enjoy deeply the book, henry has taught MBA for 15 years, so he know what he talked about. He wrote the great book "Rise and fall of Strategic Planning". He is always thought provoking and relentless in persuit of what he think is best for management. If you want to get an MBA education, read this book to balance your opinions. If you are an MBA, this one is a good book to reflect the right way you should approach doing business. I like this book very much and recommend anyone connected with MBA (hiring an MBA, wanting to get an MBA, etc) read this book and will immensly benefit from this.
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