WORKING PAPER: 06-03 Mar. 2006 The Tata Group after the JRD Period: Management and Ownership Structure by Ram Kumar Kakani & Tejas Joshi XLRI‚ Jamshedpur 831001‚ India E-Mail: kakani@xlri.ac.in Last updated in Feb. 2008 Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=889394 XLRI Working Paper: 06-03 2 The Tata Group after the JRD Period: Management and Ownership Structure1 Ram Kumar Kakani & Tejas Joshi E-Mail: kakani@xlri.ac.in Abstract Complex ownership structures
Premium Tata Group
individual or group incentives. If the individual incentive plans can’t be implemented the group incentive plans take their place and vice versa. In this paper I would like to focus on group incentives and try to explain how the group incentives can influence employee motivation and I hope I would come to some conclusion in the end. What are the group incentives? At first we have to define what the group incentives are to better understand their influence on motivation. Group incentives are
Premium Motivation
1.0 Source Problems Being able to maintain Tata Groups core values and vision; during a time of uncertainty in the economy and in the internal organisation as well. 2.0 Secondary Problems These problems can be identified separately as short or long term problems. Whereby the short term problems are ones that can be solved and addressed currently or instantly‚ whereas long term problems having to take some careful planning and analysis and require solutions that are spread out over a couple of
Premium Tata Group
Executive Summary: A group of investors (Arundel group) is looking into the idea of purchasing the sequel rights associated with films produced by one or more major movie studios. Movie rights are to be purchased prior to films being made. Arundel wants to come up with a decision to either purchase all the sequel rights for a studio’s entire production during a specified period of time or purchase a specified number of major films. Arundel’s profitability is dependent upon the price it pays for
Premium Film Warner Bros. Net present value
To what extent have pressure groups changed in recent years? A pressure group is an organised group that seeks to influence government policy‚ public opinions or protect or advance a particular cause or interest. Groups may promote a specific issue and raise it up the political agenda‚ represent a particular section in society or they may have more general political and ideological objectives in mind when they campaign. In this essay I am going to analyse the significant changes in the nature
Premium European Union Political party Human rights
Group Influence Gloria Fajardo PSY/400 April 04‚ 2013 Joycelyn Bennett‚ MA Group Influence A group is a combination of more than one individual sharing some values‚ beliefs‚ or a set of behaviors. Many individuals together sharing a common goal or need is a group of people. People in a group sharing these common things tend to have interdependent behaviors. Each of the members of a group influences the behavior of another. Individuals will tend to react to situations or have specific
Premium Management Sociology Leadership
BAN THE HATE GROUPS!! <br> <br>Right now‚ there are many active hate groups in the United States such as the Ku Klux Klan‚ Neo-Nazi‚ Skinheads‚ Christian identity‚ Black Separatists‚ etc. These hate groups like the Ku Klux Klan‚ which is one of America’s oldest and more feared‚ use violence and move above the law to promote their different causes. Another example is a group called Christian Identity‚ who describes a religion that is fundamentally racist and anti-Semitic; and other are the Black Separatist
Premium Ku Klux Klan Southern Poverty Law Center
Depending on the type of student and teacher‚ the use of group work has many supporters and those who completely despise the use. The general theory behind group work seems free of complications‚ however‚ the implementation is not. Individual learning seems to be the most popular and full proof way to conduct a classroom. Many classrooms also mix methods or try new experimental ways‚ some successful and some not. This is an apparent problem for students and teachers everywhere‚ but only the theories
Premium Education Learning Lev Vygotsky
Interest Groups I. What is an Interest Group? II. Why do people Join Interest Groups? III. Types of Interest Groups IV. Interest Groups Incentives V. Interest Group Strategists VI. Regulating Lobbyists I. Interest Group Interest Group- An organized group of individuals having common goal and actively attempting to influence government policies. Why have interest groups been so successful in the United States? Variety of interest due to economic social cleavages among the members of the American
Premium United States Lobbying Advocacy group
Interest Groups Interest Group is defined as "an organized body of individuals who try to influence public policy." This system is designed so that interest groups would be an instrument of public influence on politics to create changes‚ but would not threaten the government much. Whether this is still the case or not is an important question that we must find out. Interest groups play many different roles in the American political system‚ such as representation‚ participation‚ education‚ and
Premium