Business and Management INK

Chopping Away at the Myths Attached to Management Theory

February 25, 2021 3212

Today we bring you the story behind A very short, fairly interesting and reasonably cheap book about management theory, a new book by Todd Bridgman and Stephen Cummings and put out by SAGE Publishing, the parent of Business & Management INK and Social Science Space. Bridgman, an associate professor in the School of Management at New Zealand’s Victoria University Wellington, and co-editor in chief of the journal Management Learning, and Cummings, professor of strategy and innovation and co-director of The Atom Innovation Space at Victoria University, explain how seeing the development of management theories routinely misrepresented in the classroom motivated them to write this book.


Todd Bridgman, left, and Stephen Cummings

There’s a game you might have played called ‘telephone’. Players form a line and the first person whispers a message in the ear of the second person, who repeats the message to the next person, and so on. The final person announces the message to the group. Typically, the message at the end is very different from that at the beginning.

In our research, we’ve found that there’s a similar dynamic at play regarding how the foundational theories of management are represented in textbooks over time. The ideas the theorists originally developed and wrote about are often quite different to what students are presented with. For example, Abraham Maslow’s ideas about motivation are indelibly linked to the now famous Pyramid, even though Maslow never saw things this way (the Pyramid of Needs was created by a business consultant 17 years after Maslow developed his theory). The foundational model of managing change, Kurt Lewin’s “Unfreeze-Change-Refreeze,” was not presented this way by Lewin: it’s a simplification created by early textbook authors.

Our book uncovers these and other myths that have grown around management’s most popular theories. We argue that much of the misrepresentation is unintentional: textbook authors are required to condense and simplify theories for students, and as with any reduction elements of the original are left behind. But there have also been purposeful efforts to distort original messages in ways their creators would not have foreseen or agreed with. We explain how this happens and explore who gains and who loses from these distortions.

Our process of questioning how management theories are presented in textbooks is also a creative exercise. For example, we can come to see Maslow not as the architect of a flawed pyramid, but as someone who saw freedom of expression as a precondition for the satisfaction of human needs. And by challenging the conventional histories of management ideas we are freer to create new histories that shine a light on people, places and ideas that have been ignored or forgotten by conventional management theories, such as indigenous and pre-colonial peoples, minority populations, and more gender-diverse perspectives. So, while the focus of this book is on management theory, we don’t see this as just an academic exercise. If we can think about theory differently, we should be encouraged to act differently too. Consequently, the book’s ultimate aim, its manifesto if you like, is to encourage people to manage differently – because the narrow way management is currently practiced needs to change.

While we think these are important ideas for anybody interested in the future of management, we’ve written the book to be used as a teaching resource for advanced undergraduate level students and those on postgraduate programmes who have studied an introduction to management course. The book is structured around 20 insights on management theory and there are animations about each at the SAGEStudents’ YouTube channel. Here’s the link to the playlist and we’ve embedded the first video in our series of 21 videos, on “New Foundations of Management,” below.

Business and Management INK puts the spotlight on research published in our more than 100 management and business journals. We feature an inside view of the research that’s being published in top-tier SAGE journals by the authors themselves.

View all posts by Business & Management INK

Related Articles

From Isolation to Impact: Tackling the Emotional Toll of Ethnographic Research in Business and Society
Business and Management INK
April 22, 2025

From Isolation to Impact: Tackling the Emotional Toll of Ethnographic Research in Business and Society

Read Now
The Need for Speed vs. Reliable Science
Infrastructure
April 15, 2025

The Need for Speed vs. Reliable Science

Read Now
Harshad Keval on White Narcissism in the Academy
Insights
April 9, 2025

Harshad Keval on White Narcissism in the Academy

Read Now
“Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost.” –Nintendo “Quit Screen” Message
Business and Management INK
April 8, 2025

“Everything Not Saved Will Be Lost.” –Nintendo “Quit Screen” Message

Read Now
Author Reflections on Intraorganizational Developmental Networks

Author Reflections on Intraorganizational Developmental Networks

In this post, Andrew Dhaenens, a lecturer in the School of Management & Governance at the University of New South Wales Sydney, […]

Read Now
Changing the World or Changing Ourselves?

Changing the World or Changing Ourselves?

In this blog post, co-authors Catherine Brentnall and David Higgins reflect on their interest in how educators change themselves and their practice […]

Read Now
Generative AI Literacy: A Proposed Way Forward

Generative AI Literacy: A Proposed Way Forward

In this article, co-authors Stefanie Beninger, Alex Reppel, Julie Stanton and Forrest Watson reflect on the inspiration behind their research article, “Facilitating Generative AI […]

Read Now
5 3 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest


This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

0 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments