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Ethics matters! Diese Einsicht führt dazu, für Personalmanager zweierlei zu fordern: eine umfassende Managementkompetenz sowie eine hohe ethische Handlungskompetenz. Dies hat Auswirkungen auf das professionelle Selbstverständnis von Personalmanagern. Letztlich werden Personalmanager im Unternehmen nur dann nachhaltig Erfolg haben, wenn es ihnen gelingt, unter Beachtung der sozialen und gesellschaftlichen Auswirkungen personalwirtschaftlichen Handelns einen Wertschöpfungsbeitrag zu generieren.
Damit stellt die Interpretation eines unternehmerisch denkenden Personalmanagers, der als Business Partner den Wertschöpfungsbeitrag vor Augen hat und die Interessen des Unternehmens auch gegen Widerstände der Mitarbeiter durchsetzt, eine deutlich verkürzte dar. Zwar ist diese verkürzte Interpretation nicht die derzeit überall vorherrschende Auslegung der Rolle des Personalmanagements. Trotzdem sollten und könnten Personalmanager künftig - beispielsweise in Zeitschriften, auf Tagungen und Kongressen - wieder stärker über die ethischen Grundlagen der Profession streiten. Dies wäre ein wichtiger Beitrag zur Professionalisierung des Personalmanagements.
Mastering of complex systems and interfaces, idea and innovation management as well as virtually integrated product and process planning are essential competences to be developed and fostered to cope with the changing role of the workforce in a future industry 4.0 work system. Learning factories, like the Logistics Learning Factory at Reutlingen University, which are equipped with state-of-the-art infrastructure, offer a high potential to decidedly address these competences.
Since its early beginnings in the form of correspondence schools, e-learning has generally sought to provide flexibility and high quality education. While these are indeed noble intentions, the reality of today's connected world demands that such programs focus on a different purpose. As the main purpose of e-learning shifts, so must be the design approaches.
Rethinking e-learning requires open-mindedness on the part of academies, designers, cyber educators, legislators, IT and administrators, but also the learners themselves. All who are involved in or impacted by e-learning programs must speak up and finally share their perspectives, but who will be listening? The key to rethinking e-learning lies in the ability of the stakeholders to listen to each other and make decisions which are in the best interest of the learner.
This chapter will propose a new purpose for e-learning and explore promising possibilities for learner-centered design. The future of e-learning can be shaped by the decisions made today, but before any decisions can be made, one must acknowledge e-learning's successes as well as its shortcomings. The purpose of this chapter is to encourage those who are impacted by e-learning to think about the future.
It has been recognized that to increase the competetitiveness of international higher education institutions in the global education market, their international graduates' employability must be enhanced. The present paper investigates, from the employers' perspective, the possibilities of international graduates with domestic degrees in Russia and Germany to find jobs in the Russian and German labor market. It uses qualitative open-ended interviews at 12 companies in St. Petersburg, Russia and Germany, which are engaged with International Business activities. The investigation concentrates on the employment opportunities and barriers of international graduates from an individual, organizational and an institutional perspective.
The research highlighted the main differences and similarities in the perception of the HR managers in both countries. In the German labor market, companies have a high demand for international graduates, especially those operating internationally, highly demand international graduates, emphasizing the existence of international trainee programs and the need to reflect the diversity of their business in the diversity of their staff. In contrast, Russian companies showed a positive predisposition for international graduates but no demand. Domestic firms focus their efforts on expatriate programs and/or highly-qualified specialists rather than trainee programs to hire internationals. On the other hand, insitutional barriers exist, as well as a lack of support with regards to regulations and requirements for entering both Russian and German markets. The national language requirement was stressed as the major barrier towards hiring internationals in both countries. The investigation from an organizational point of view revealed that interviewers showed a positive predisposition towards international graduates in both countries, focusing on the graduate's skill set rather than their nationality. This research explores the opportunities and barriers and discusses the implications for students and universities.
Projektmanagement
(2015)
Komplexe Aufgaben erfordern geeignete Planungs- und Steuerungstechniken. Der Projektleiter muss kontinuierlich Termine, Kosten, Qualität im Griff behalten und sein Team anleiten und motivieren. Dieses Buch zeigt, wie Sie unterschiedliche Anforderungen meistern und Projekte erfolgreich zum Abschluss bringen.
As long as there have been professional sports, there have been relationships on different levels. For example, sponsorship (or patronage as it was called in the early days) was mostly based on personal relations between the local benefactors and their favourite sports club. Regarding media, clubs always maintained special relationships with selected journalists. The bond between fans and their clubs was always a close and mutually beneficial one. All these relationships existed from the start of the sports business. Therefore, relationship marketing is nothing new in the context of sports. Many sporting organisations always knew to value a deep and good relationship with their stakeholders and practised relationship marketing without being aware of it. Successful sports managers, however, take the old wisdom and turn it into a modern relationship marketing approach by structuring the various relationships in order to make them more effective and profitable for the own sporting organisation and the various stakeholders. This chapter ... illustrates the many facets of relationship marketing and the possibilities it offers in the context of the sports business.