De-contextualising competence: can business best practice be bundled and sold?
Jonathan Wareham and
Han Gerrits
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Jonathan Wareham: Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Faculteit der Economische Wetenschappen en Econometrie (Free University Amsterdam, Faculty of Economics Sciences, Business Administration and Economitrics
No 052a, Serie Research Memoranda from VU University Amsterdam, Faculty of Economics, Business Administration and Econometrics
Abstract:
The study of Business Best Practice (BBP) currently enjoys broad popularity amongst IT-based consultancies as well as the academic community. Unfortunately, despite the growth of practice, BBP lacks sound theoretical foundations. This paper addresses the shortcomings of current best practice benchmarking literature and offers a first step towards a more solid foundation for the study of Business Best Practice. We begin by surveying current normative trends in benchmarking and Business Best Practice literature. We continue by examining a group of BBP cases and show how these prescriptions can become quite problematic and complex when transferring knowledge across organisations, industries, institutional environments, and cultures. In illustrating these challenges, we form a context for a critical evaluation of BBP’s underlying assumptions. Explicitly addressing these assumptions opens an avenue for analysing the epistemological challenges in identifying and defining ‘best practice’. Concluding that apart from the identification of ‘best practice’, the mechanisms of best practice knowledge acquisition and co-ordination are of interest, we turn to contemporary economic
JEL-codes: L21 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1998
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:vua:wpaper:1998-52a
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