The Managerial Career after Downsizing: Case Studies from the `Leading Edge'
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Work, Employment & Society
- Vol. 12 (3) , 457-477
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017098123003
Abstract
This paper sets out to investigate whether the recent wave of organisational restructuring has contributed to the further decline of the internally promoted manager or produced a new model of managerial employment in large organizations. Our research, which is based on in-depth case studies of eight major British-based employers, finds no evidence of the kind of transformational change associated with the introduction of a new model. Instead, we find that the traditional model of managerial employment has been eroded rather than replaced. The most notable changes include less job security - especially for those older than fifty - more emphasis on `managing your own career', fewer opportunities for upward promotion, and an increased emphasis on lateral career moves. We conclude by arguing that this restructuring adds further impetus to the decline of the internally promoted middle manager.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Human resource management on the line?Human Resource Management Journal, 1997
- Stuck in the Middle? Managers in Building SocietiesWork, Employment & Society, 1997
- Performance management and the psychological contractHuman Resource Management Journal, 1997
- Employability in the finance sector: rhetoric vs realityHuman Resource Management Journal, 1997
- Soft and Hard Models of Human Resource Management: A ReappraisalJournal of Management Studies, 1997
- Ascription into Achievement: Models of Career Systems at Lloyds Bank, 1890-1970American Journal of Sociology, 1996
- Muddle in the middle: organizational restructuring and middle management careersPersonnel Review, 1996
- Cultural Capital and Social Exclusion: Some Observations on Recent Trends in Education, Employment and the Labour MarketWork, Employment & Society, 1995
- Organizational Change and the Corporate Career: The Restructuring of Managers' Job AspirationsHuman Relations, 1992
- Building Theories from Case Study ResearchAcademy of Management Review, 1989