‘Control is a fundamental in our increasingly complex world of organizations. Managers must make choices about how much to use formal and informal control mechanisms to foster focus, coordination, engagement, and a sense of community and trust. In this important book, which goes beyond standard approaches, Kreutzer and Walter integrate the extensive research on control and synthesize the key implications of that work. For those who wish to study control and those who wish to manage it, this volume is an indispensable reference and springboard for research and practice.’
Sim B. Sitkin - Michael W. Krzyzewski University Distinguished Professor and Professor of Management and Public Policy, Duke University
‘Although control research has a long and rich tradition, its foundations are ill-equipped to tackle organizational challenges of the present and future. Kreutzer and Walter are doing an excellent job of condensing its history and outlining its future trajectory towards modern organizational changes, such as ecosystems or the usage of artificial intelligence. Outstanding - if one wants to see how control research is evolving towards the future, you have to read this book.’
Christoph Lechner - Chair of Strategic Management, University of St. Gallen
‘At a time when exponential technological and societal changes have catapulted us into unknown territory, Kreutzer and Walter take a much-needed panorama of the organizational control research assessing its relevance while reconceptualizing it for the future.’
Laura B. Cardinal - Endowed Chair and Director of the SmartState Center for Innovation and Commercialization, Darla Moore School of Business, University of South Carolina
‘With many trends converging simultaneously, the nature of work in and around organizations is being upended before our eyes. Kreutzer and Walter have directly confronted this situation, and in so doing have created an important, comprehensive examination of organizational control that bridges the past, present, and future. Their contributions to scholarship and practice will be profound.’
C. Chet Miller - C. T. Bauer Professor of Organizational Studies, University of Houston