
Managing for Stakeholders
Freeman, R. Edward
Managing for Stakeholders
E-0383 | Published January 7, 2013 | 13 pages Technical Note
Collection: Darden School of Business
Product Details
Managing for Stakeholders is used in the Darden School's first-year required "Business Ethics" course. This note explains managing for stakeholders, an emerging view that, basically, businesses and the executives who manage them actually do and should create value for customers, suppliers, employees, communities, and financiers (or shareholders)--which contrasts with the dominant idea that businesses are to be managed solely for the benefit of shareholders. The note examines why the dominant model is no longer viable in today's business world, then goes on to define the basic ideas of managing for stakeholders (and why it solves some of the problems of the dominant model) and to sketch three primary arguments from ethical theory for adopting managing for stakeholders.
0
Get Ahead in Class

Clear, Complete, and Concise: Avoiding t...
Lipson, Marc L.

Business Valuation in Mergers and Acquis...
Schill, Michael J....

A Brief Introduction to Macroeconomics
Murphy, Daniel

Moral Theory, Frameworks, and the Langua...
Wicks, Andrew C.; ...

Three Empirical Methods for Calculating ...
Zhang, Zhihao; Whi...

The Basics of Multivariate Regressions i...
Batova, Tatiana

Advanced Tableau Tips and Tricks
Palomba, Anthony

Digital Marketing Metrics: Measuring Wha...
Venkatesan, Rajkum...

Disruption, Response, and Transformation...
Chen, Ming-Jer; Mc...

Using AI to Expand Your Leadership Commu...
Murray, Meghan

Understanding Organizational Culture: An...
Martin, Sean; Kemp...

A Brief Introduction to Managerial Accou...
Lynch, Luann J.

How to Prototype a Prototype
Chao, Raul O.

The Strategist’s Toolkit
Lenox, Michael; Ha...

Finance People
Schill, Michael J.