000 03292nam a2200253Ia 4500
003 NULRC
005 20250520102737.0
008 250520s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9780415717359
040 _cNULRC
050 _aHD 62.4 .H37 2014
100 _aMoran, Robert T.
_eauthor
245 0 _aManaging cultural differences /
_cRobert T. Moran, Neil Remington Abramson, and Sarah V. Moran
250 _aNINTH EDITION.
260 _aAbingdon, Ox :
_bRoutledge,
_cc2014
300 _axx, 592 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c25 cm.
365 _bUSD151.11
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 _a1. Global leaders, culture, and a changing world -- 2. Global leaders and intercultural communications -- 3. Negotiating long term for mutual benefit -- 4. Global leaders learning from others and change -- 5. Women leaders in global business -- 6. Motivating the global workforce: the case for diversity and inclusion -- 7. Global leaders set strategies for emerging markets -- 8. Managing global transitions and relocations -- 9. Global teams and global leadership -- 10. Doing business in the middle east: turkey, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Israel -- 11. Latin America -- 12. Doing business with south and southeast Asians, and Australians -- 13. Doing business with east Asians: china, japan, and south Korea -- 14. Doing business with Europeans and Russians: European union: France, Germany, Italy; and Russia -- 15. Doing business with Africans: northern Africa, east Africa, west central Africa, and southern Africa -- 16. Doing business with north Americans.
520 _aThe world of business for all organizations in the twenty-first century is global, interdependent, complex, and rapidly changing. That means sophisticated global leadership skills are required more than ever today. Individual and organizational success is no longer dependent solely on business acumen. Our ability to understand, communicate, and manage across borders, countries, and cultures has never been as important as it is now. The understanding and utilization of cultural differences as a business resource is a key building block as companies rely on their global reach to achieve the best profit and performance. For this reason, international business and cross-cultural management are key topics in undergraduate business, MBA, and executive education programs worldwide as companies and institutions prepare current and future business leaders for the global marketplace. This exciting new edition of the highly successful textbook, Managing Cultural Differences, seeks to guide students and any person with global responsibilities to understand how culture fits in a changing business world, how to gain a competitive advantage from effective cross-cultural management, and gives practical advice for doing business across the globe. With updated content, new case studies, and a new author team, Managing Cultural Differences is required course reading for undergraduates, postgraduates, and MBA students alike, as well as being of significant value for anyone who sells, purchases, travels, or works internationally.
650 _aACCULTURATION
700 _aAbramson, Neil Remington ; Moran, Sarah V.
_eco-author;co-author
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c14272
_d14272