Chapter 4 - An Introduction to Stakeholder Analysis

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Method of Determining Relative Importance of Stakes

- Legitimacy: objectively clear entitlement to a certain outcome - Power: the amount of influence the stakeholder has on the decision maker - Urgency: how soon stakeholder needs or wants its stakes to be met

Types of Stakes

- financial stake - legal stake - rights based stake - moral stake - interest based stake

Suppliers Stake

- financial stakes in companies decision often reflected in legal stakes

4 Things to Know about Analyzing/ Prioritizing the Stakes

- fundamental goals is to solve issue - not everyone will be happy - must be clear about the issue - must analyze stakes objectively

Shortcomings of Method for Analyzing Stakes

- illegitimate stakeholder with large power - weightings

Customers Stake

- interested in the quality, innovation, and price of products

Employees Stake

- internal stakeholders hope for the continued financial success of the company because it means continued employment - legal and safety rights

Governments Stake

- legal interest that company adheres to laws an regulations - financial interest in continued tax revenue and citizen employment

Problems with Stakeholder Management

1. Can become inefficient if left to a department that is not related to operating line 2. Too much emphasis on powerful stakeholder 3. Whether theory is broad enough to allow corporation to act in a truly ethical way

Why Stakeholder Management and Analysis

1. It responds to the demands of modern society 2. It accords with emerging legal reality 3. It is morally superior 4. It may be a more effective business strategy in this century

Stakeholder Analysis

Access stakeholder perspectives and make a decision taking into account competing views

Analyzing/prioritizing the Stakes

Determining which stakes or more important/ relevant

Shareholders Stake

Expectation on a return on their investments and that their legal rights will be respected

Community and Interest Groups Stake

Interest or moral stakes in companies decisions

Environment

Moral stake for continued sustainability of the natural environment

Typical Stakeholders in Business

Shareholders, employees, customers, community and interest groups, government, environment, suppliers

Stakeholder

Someone with something at risk in the decision or who legitimately expects a certain outcome

Rights-based Stake

Stakeholder asserts that a human right is at risk in this decision

Legal Stake

Stakeholder has a specific law or legal right that entitles them to a specific outcome

Interest-based stake

Stakeholder more please with a certain outcome

Stakes

Stakeholders' statuses, costs, or rights that are at risk in the decision

Moral Stake

conviction or value-based principle and stakeholder wouldn't want violated

Financial Stake

stakeholder lose or earns money as a result of the decision

Stakeholder Management

tool for ongoing management by a moral company


Ensembles d'études connexes

Chapter 1: Using Technology to Change the World

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Chapter 7 - Organizational Culture

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Complete the sentences. Put the verbs in the past simple and past perfect. We <didn't get> a table in the restaurant because we <hadn't booked>. (not get, not book)

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