Tuesday 25 February 2020

Management concerns related to zone 3b items in the agile literature review approach

Management concerns related to zone 3b (solutions-related) items in the agile literature review approach: a list:

1. The impacts of the organizational solution just implemented are unclear.

2. The impacts and progress of the organizational solution now being implemented are unclear.

3. It is not clear how to improve the rest of the execution exercise of the ongoing organizational solution implementation.

4. The potential impacts of the proposed organizational solution are unclear.

5. It is unclear how the proposed organizational solution direction can be further refined before its introduction to the organization.

6. The implementation details of the proposed organizational solution need to be worked out.

Examples of artworks in cultural geography

Examples of artworks in cultural geography:

1. History of Hong Kong visualized.
2. Puerto Rican artwork.
3. Street art - graffiti.
4.Venice romance.
5. HK graffiti.

Monday 24 February 2020

Some additional analytical academic ideas in the agile literature review approach

Some additional analytical academic ideas in the agile literature review approach - examples:

  1. Theories related to staff turnove
  2. The business model canvas
  3. A marketing capability framework
  4. Human resource capability model
  5. Brand management competency framework


An intelligent lone wolf’s endorsement on teamwork via dialectical thinking


An intelligent lone wolf’s endorsement on teamwork via dialectical thinking



For a part-time lecturer with a self-image of a lone wolf, it is quite a tranquil and isolated life to me recently.  The only minor issue: I have been thinking hard of how to reduce usage of toilet paper in a convenient way.  Thus, when the university asks me to write an article on teamwork, I come up with this article title: “An intelligent lone wolf’s endorsement on teamwork”. Conducting this intellectual exercise inevitably invokes my dialectical thinking. This thinking follows three stages: thesis, antithesis and synthesis.

To begin with, teamwork is generally considered as the commitment of a group of people (i.e., a team) to work together in order to achieve a common challenging team purpose. Teamwork is not required to a group, which is simply a collection of people who interact with each other such that one person’s actions have an impact on the others. With regard to the management field, I understand why managers are interested in teamwork as a management technology: organizations comprise groups and teams[1] (including teams of teams), which managers need to manage well. Besides, there are business trends that foster managerial interest in teamwork, e.g., (i) need for organizational restructuring to cope with increased competition, (ii) need for better talent utilization, and (iii) need for more flexibility and responsiveness to come with changes of all kinds, etc.. This kind of favourable view constitutes the thesis position of dialectical thinking on teamwork. For a self-proclaimed intelligent lone wolf, I also hold a negative view on teamwork. Such antithesis view is based on the following ideas:

Idea 1: I am not a sociable person, and have a low level of affiliation need.
Idea 2: As an intellectual with critical thinking, I suspect that teamwork is being used as a coercive tool to force people to comply with illegitimate aims.
Idea 3: I am highly concerned that, more often than not, some team members are pig-like (a Cantonese English for stupid people).
Idea 4: Teamwork hampers my personal life experience of liberation as a lone wolf.
Idea 5: Teamwork is not much required for certain professions, e.g. golf players. Again, as an academic, I do not write academic papers with other people as co-authors.
Idea 6: Teamwork, by stressing common purpose, very often promotes a functionalist (thus conservative) sociological view, while, an intelligent lone wolf is fully aware of a more pluralist and coercive view on society.

In the setting of education, the conflict between the thesis and antithesis positions is often at work: universities set group assignments so that students are able to gain useful teamwork experience (which many students do). At the same time, some students do not enjoy group assignments and have bad experience to work with uncommitted teammates.

Using dialectical thinking, I now try to offer a way to synthesize the thesis and antithesis views on teamwork. The synthesis view is based on two ideas:

Idea 1 - the contingency idea: whether teamwork is effective or not depends on the application situation. The three main application situational factors are: (i) context (adequate resources, leadership and structure, climate of trust, performance evaluation), (ii) composition (abilities of members, personality, allocating roles, diversity, team size, member flexibility and preferences) and (iii) process (common purpose, specific goals, team efficacy, conflict levels, and social loafing. If these factors are unfavourable to teamwork effectiveness, then teamwork is an unattractive organizational practice.
Idea 2 - the critical idea: the perceived application situation (re: idea 1) is itself a social construct; thus it is important to maintain high critical awareness in the social construction of such teamwork application situation.

The synthesis view, in this respect, represents this intelligent lone wolf’s endorsement of teamwork. More importantly, it makes clear that, an intelligent lone wolf can be a valuable teammate, especially in his/her analytical contribution, on team performance when the team environment is right.


[1] In this regard, there are different types of teams, i.e., problem-solving teams, self-managed teams, cross-functional teams and virtual teams.

Sunday 23 February 2020

Core-focus domain typology: a note

Core-focus domain typology: an ALRA note




The underlying consideration:


1. ensure sufficient variety on the intellectual response to inevitably wicked managerial problems.
2. reduce significant blind spots in problem-solving.
3. promote holistic as well as creative thinking in problem-solving.
4. maintain sufficient focus with a reasonable investigation scope for doing a dissertation project.
5. Core-focus domain items are located in ALRA diagrams zone 2.
6. Zone 2 should preferably have 2-3 items in total.


See the following diagram with zone 2 indication:



Friday 21 February 2020

Activity-based costing and product costing: lecture note

Activity-based costing and product costing: lecture note:

I. Product costing based on marginal costing
Direct materials, direct labour + variable manufacturing overhead

II. Product costing based on absorption costing
Direct materials, direc labour + manufacturing overhead (variable and fixed)

III. Product costing based on full product costing with ABC
Direct costs (manufacturing and non-manufacturing)
ABC costing (manufacturing and non-manufacturing

Thursday 20 February 2020

Underlying costing view of activity-based costing: a note

Underlying costing view of activity-based costing - four points:

1. Fixed overhead cost is variable in the long run.

2. Activities can be conceived as operational routine for cost management purpose.

3. Cost allocation of overhead can be treated as if it is a cost tracing exercise.

4. In case 1-3 are not realistic, consider to apply the ABC cost hierarchy concept.

City image(s) of Hong Kong - possible themes

City image(s) of Hong Kong - possible themes for doing geographical imaginations assignment:


1. Hong Kong is a global city

2. Hong Kong is a modern city

3. Hong Kong is a divided city

4. Hong Kong is a failed city

5. Hong Kong is a dystopian city

6. Hong Kong is a heaven city for home-owners

7. Hong Kong is an affectionate city

8. Hong Kong is a (being)mainlandized city

9. Hong Kong is a dangerous city

10. Hong Kong is an unlivable city

Monday 17 February 2020

Readings on ALRA zoning and zone items

Readings on ALRA zoning and zone items

1. Difference between zone 2 and zone 3b.

2. Formulating zone-specific items.

3. Typical research methods used in different ALRA zones.

4. Literature search steps for zone 2 items: an illustration.

5. Literature review process for core-focus domain items (normally in zone 2).

6. Management thinking underlying the ALRA zoning architecture.

Formulating ALRA zone-specific items: an illustration

Formulating ALRA zone-specific items: an illustration:





Take the example of supply chain collaboration





Zone 1 [environmental drivers] item

To evaluate the deteriorating global supply chain collaboration landscape





Zone 2 ["existing" organizational capabilities] item

To evaluate the supply chain collaboration capability of ABC Ltd.




Zone 3a [outcomes-related] item

To evaluate the supply chain collaboration quality of ABC Ltd with its business partners



Zone 3b [solutions-related] item
To evaluate improvement tactics on supply chain collaboration of ABC Ltd with its business partners

Friday 14 February 2020

Examples of opportunity cost - as an accounting topic

Examples of opportunity cost - as an accounting topic

(re: https://www.referenceforbusiness.com/management/Ob-Or/Opportunity-Cost.html)


"Opportunity costs are often overlooked in decision making. For example, to define the costs of a college education, a student would probably include such costs as tuition, housing, and books. These expenses are examples of accounting or monetary costs of college, but they by no means provide an all-inclusive list of costs. There are many opportunity costs that have been ignored: 
(1) wages that could have been earned during the time spent attending class, 
(2) the value of four years' job experience given up to go to school, 
(3) the value of any activities missed in order to allocate time to studying, and 
(4) the value of items that could have purchased with tuition money or the interest the money could have earned over four years"

Wednesday 12 February 2020

Key ideas of applied business research with ALRA thinking

Key ideas of applied business research with ALRA thinking:

Research object of study

  • An organization unit of analysis 
  • Management-concerns formulation, based on complexity thinking
  • Management-concerns-driven high-level research tasks
  • Holistic
  • Engaging
  • Applied in orientation mainly
  • Latent core-focus-domain-centric
  • Visibility management with diagrams
  • MBA spirit [for MBA dissertation]


Literature review focus

  • Management-concerns driven
  • Agile in responding to high-level research tasks
  • Holistic
  • Core-focus-domain centric
  • Agile intellectual learning
  • Engaging
  • Capability-focused
  • Visibility management with diagrams
  • MBA spirit [for MBA dissertation]


Research design

  • Explicitly aligned with agile literature review findings
  • Core-focus-domain centric
  • Multiple research methods-based
  • Qualitative-cum-quantitative
  • More deductive than inductive in approach
  • Holistic
  • Visibility management with diagrams
  • Evaluative


Findings and analysis

  • Theory-driven
  • Mainly deductive
  • Evaluative
  • Holistic
  • Core-focus-domain centric
  • Fully justified throughout
  • Qualitative-cum-quantitative


Conclusions and recommendations

  • Managerial in orientation
  • Actionable value-focused
  • Core-focus-domain centric
  • Fully justified throughout
  • Holistic


Project control tools

  • ALRA diagrams
  • Dissertation table of content template







An example of a flowchart view of research design using UML activity diagram

An example of a flowchart view of research design using UML activity diagram



** RM1: research method 1; RM2: research method 2, etc.


Reference
UML activity diagram