Engineering companies and other organizations face many serious
challenges in the 21st Century. One that is now becoming widely
recognized is the loss of corporate knowledge through staff turnover,
whether it is natural or forced through downsizing or delayering. A
company's store of knowledge and expertise is an asset built up through
the learning and experience of its employees.
In this book the authors show that such loss of experience and knowledge
can substantially erode corporate culture and impact upon a company's
ability to develop and reinvent itself in response to its market. The
concentration is on process, culture, structure and leadership, to
assist engineering organizations in managing their valuable knowledge
resources and the people who possess them. It provides effective
methodologies to devise solutions to the real challenges faced by
engineering managers today.
Illustrated with scenarios and practical examples, which will be
familiar to engineers worldwide, this book represents great value to all
those in engineering management practice. In addition, as management
increasingly appears within the syllabus of engineering courses, it will
interest engineering students preparing for careers in industry, as well
as their educators.