Possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “Best Practice” to “Best Fit”

Approaches, processes, and management methods that allegedly helped enterprises to achieve great results are often described as “Best Practice.” These approaches are usually recommended to other enterprises, often without a detailed analysis of the causes of their alleged success, as well as without...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Urban Jan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2018-06-01
Series:Studia Commercialia Bratislavensia
Subjects:
m00
m14
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/stcb-2018-0009
id doaj-3157ecb2adc642d0a25a39acca686ff0
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3157ecb2adc642d0a25a39acca686ff02021-09-05T14:02:05ZengSciendoStudia Commercialia Bratislavensia1337-74932018-06-01113911812710.2478/stcb-2018-0009stcb-2018-0009Possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “Best Practice” to “Best Fit”Urban Jan0Department of Management, Institute of Technology and Business, České Budějovice, Okružní 517/10, 370 01České Budějovice, Czech Republic, tel.: 00420 387 842 184Approaches, processes, and management methods that allegedly helped enterprises to achieve great results are often described as “Best Practice.” These approaches are usually recommended to other enterprises, often without a detailed analysis of the causes of their alleged success, as well as without assessment if they are suitable in other conditions. The article focuses on critical review of the conditions of using best practice when managing enterprises and shows its limits. It comes to the conclusion that “best practice” recommendations are rarely based on rigorous empirical methods of research and therefore are generally unreliable. There is, in addition, no widely held understanding of what is meant by the use of the term. Based on these findings and conclusions, the article promotes a more suitable approach of “Best Fit” which, unlike the methods of best practice based on processes, is based on common goals of successful managerial methods and their adaptation to the conditions and strategies of other enterprises. The approach is demonstrated by methods of human resources management.https://doi.org/10.2478/stcb-2018-0009enterprise managementbest practicebest fithuman resources managementm00m14
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Urban Jan
spellingShingle Urban Jan
Possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “Best Practice” to “Best Fit”
Studia Commercialia Bratislavensia
enterprise management
best practice
best fit
human resources management
m00
m14
author_facet Urban Jan
author_sort Urban Jan
title Possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “Best Practice” to “Best Fit”
title_short Possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “Best Practice” to “Best Fit”
title_full Possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “Best Practice” to “Best Fit”
title_fullStr Possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “Best Practice” to “Best Fit”
title_full_unstemmed Possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “Best Practice” to “Best Fit”
title_sort possibilities and limits of adopting successful managerial approaches: from “best practice” to “best fit”
publisher Sciendo
series Studia Commercialia Bratislavensia
issn 1337-7493
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Approaches, processes, and management methods that allegedly helped enterprises to achieve great results are often described as “Best Practice.” These approaches are usually recommended to other enterprises, often without a detailed analysis of the causes of their alleged success, as well as without assessment if they are suitable in other conditions. The article focuses on critical review of the conditions of using best practice when managing enterprises and shows its limits. It comes to the conclusion that “best practice” recommendations are rarely based on rigorous empirical methods of research and therefore are generally unreliable. There is, in addition, no widely held understanding of what is meant by the use of the term. Based on these findings and conclusions, the article promotes a more suitable approach of “Best Fit” which, unlike the methods of best practice based on processes, is based on common goals of successful managerial methods and their adaptation to the conditions and strategies of other enterprises. The approach is demonstrated by methods of human resources management.
topic enterprise management
best practice
best fit
human resources management
m00
m14
url https://doi.org/10.2478/stcb-2018-0009
work_keys_str_mv AT urbanjan possibilitiesandlimitsofadoptingsuccessfulmanagerialapproachesfrombestpracticetobestfit
_version_ 1717809098838245376