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The quality of British management: Asia‐Pacific perceptions

Lawson Savery (School of Management, Curtin University of Technology, Australia)
Tim Mazzarol (Small Business Unit, Curtin University of Technology, Australia)
Peter Dawkins (University of Melbourne, Australia)

Journal of Management Development

ISSN: 0262-1711

Article publication date: 1 December 1998

1442

Abstract

A stratified random sample of respondents was identified from databases compiled by associate researchers located in each of five countries, namely Singapore, Malaysia Taiwan, Indonesia and Japan. The aim of the study was to establish which dimensions of management skill are important to regional customers; to compare British management skills on these dimensions with those of major trading nations active in the region and to prioritise key areas for improvement if Britain is to become a valued member of the region. The major conclusion of this study was that British managers were generally perceived, amongst managers in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Taiwan and Japan, to be inferior to Japanese and US managers and, in most areas, inferior to German managers. British managers were ranked fourth above Australian and Taiwanese managers, who were ranked as the weakest amongst the countries being investigated on a number of skills.

Keywords

Citation

Savery, L., Mazzarol, T. and Dawkins, P. (1998), "The quality of British management: Asia‐Pacific perceptions", Journal of Management Development, Vol. 17 No. 9, pp. 600-629. https://doi.org/10.1108/02621719810244409

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1998, MCB UP Limited

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