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Strategic Seduction? Information Technology Consultancy in UK Financial Services

In: The Diffusion and Consumption of Business Knowledge

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  • Andrew Sturdy

Abstract

In the UK, in both academic and popular media, there is a growing interest in the production, diffusion and consumption of managerial knowledge (or ‘fads’) and the rise of management gurus. This interest can be linked to a number of developments including: the increasing profile, number and apparently wide popularity of prescriptive management writers in the UK and USA; and debates about ‘globalization’, ‘knowledge work’ and discourse in late/postmodernity. The role of management consultants in the production and diffusion of, for example, strategic and marketing discourses is typically recognized as important. Indeed, there is a growing number of accounts seeking to outline and explain the historical and/or current influence of consultants and the ideas and practices they purvey at a general level. For example both Huczynski (1993a and b) and Grint (1994) outline the particular contexts associated with the emergence of families of ideas from Taylorism to Business Process Re-engineering, or BPR (see also Littler, 1982; Tisdall, 1982; Hollway, 1991). Another theme is the apparent transience of ‘new’ (usually repackaged) ideas and the irony of the continued demand for ‘solutions’ (Gill and Whittle, 1992; Huczynski, 1993b; Abrahamson, 1996).

Suggested Citation

  • Andrew Sturdy, 1998. "Strategic Seduction? Information Technology Consultancy in UK Financial Services," Palgrave Macmillan Books, in: José Luis Alvarez (ed.), The Diffusion and Consumption of Business Knowledge, chapter 10, pages 229-249, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:palchp:978-1-349-25899-4_11
    DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-25899-4_11
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    Cited by:

    1. Hislop, Donald, 2002. "The client role in consultancy relations during the appropriation of technological innovations," Research Policy, Elsevier, vol. 31(5), pages 657-671, July.

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