P. Joshi, Maheshkumar and D. Sherman, Hugh and Schermerhorn, John R.
(2004)
Strategy Implementation Styles Of Malaysian,
Thai And Hungarian Middle Managers.
Asian Academy of Management Journal (AAMJ), 9 (2).
pp. 1-15.
ISSN 1394-2603
Abstract
There is a need for more comparative empirical research that examines middle manager
roles in strategic change. This paper reports a study of middle managers in two dynamic
settings: the Asia/Pacific region – Malaysia and Thailand; and Central/Eastern Europe –
Hungary. Results of 213 respondents across three countries indicate that middle managers
from all three tend toward use of authoritarian management styles even in proactive
strategic change situations. However, Hungarians are less likely to use these styles than Thai
and Malaysian middle managers. For all three countries, managers with less work
experience were found to have lower tendencies to use an authoritarian style of
implementation. When top managers exhibit an aggressive strategic posture, middlemanagers from all three countries are also less likely to use an authoritarian style.
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