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EXECUTIVE SUCCESSION AND ORGANIZATIONAL PERFORMANCE IN SELECTED TRANSNATIONAL COMPANIES IN SOUTHERN NIGERIA

CHAPTER ONE
 INTRODUCTION 
 1.1 BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
 Change is endemic in all organizations. One area of organizational change is executive succession. All organizations, including business organizations, that have historical pasts, experience executive changes at one time or the other because while individuals come and go, the organizations in which they have found themselves, in whatever capacity, remain. Unlike the start-up companies that have only experienced initial selection of top management staff and have no history of succession and succession planning, all companies that are going concerns do the selection of their top management staff within the context of choosing a successor. However, one of the things that should actually be of interest to one with a discerning mind as these changes take place is to examine the mode of entry of new and exit of old top management staff; the reason being that some of such successions have been done in smooth seamless transition, while others have been quite schismic, cataclysmic and catastrophic. Besides, as the business organizations are going concerns that are expected to make profits and satisfy their stakeholders, it has become an area of research interest to assess how organizational performance is affected whenever such executive changes take place in them. Also, in view of the fact that the top management is charged with strategic thinking, and it is at that level that organizations are given strategic directions, the interest in the performance effect of executive successions in these companies is not out of place (Colley, Doyle, Logan and Stettinus, 2003:91-98). To be specific, the focus of this work is to assess how executive succession in the transnational companies operating in Southern Nigeria affects organizational performance. However, our approach to the issue of executive succession and organizational performance in this study is not whether executive succession in the transnational companies has an effect on organizational performance in Southern Nigeria per se. Rather our position is to establish the extent to which these executive changes occurring in the transnational companies affect the stakeholders in the Region (Boyne, James and Petrovsky, 2009:1). Hitherto, executive succession in those companies was an internal affair; but nowadays, other stakeholders, who are not necessarily shareholders in these organizations, are becoming interested in how executive changes in these organizations are carried out, and how they affect them. Simply put, apart from the shareholders and employees who are closer to the organizations, the customers, the suppliers of raw materials, the funds suppliers, environmentalists, non-governmental organizations, governments and their agencies, and the society at large, have developed interest in the executive changes in these organizations around them. Interestingly, each of these stakeholders assesses the success or failure of these organizations from how these changes have met his or her personal interests. This is noticeable in the increasing incidence of youth restiveness, resulting in high profile kidnappings in the Region, which include foreigners, due to the high rate of youth unemployment (Hambrick, 1989:5-6; Broeker, 1992: 400-402; Grube, 1995:42-43; Plitch, 2003: B-3F). Over time managing the process and consequences of top management turnover and succession has become a challenge to organizations; for whether the exit is voluntary or forced, or whether the succession is done internally or externally, there is usually a reaction, negative or positive, from the stakeholders. Recent literature on strategic management succession, has tried to focus attention on these challenges which organizations face in the event of top management turnover or succession (Kesner and Sabora, 1994:327-329; Khurana, 2001: 91-95; Khurana, 2002 cited in Cao, Maruping and Takeuchi, 2006:563-566; Huson, Malatesta and Parino, 2004:237-239; Cao, Maruping and Takeuchi, 2006:563-566). As organizational managers, the top management teams (TMTs) of organizations have become so influential and powerful that they cannot be ignored in the process of examining the performance or non-performance of such organizations (Hambrick, 1981:263-265; Boeker, 1992:400-402; Pettigrew, 1992:163-168). To properly focus this study in a historical perspective, it is imperative that we trace the growth of management theory from early influences to the era of the industrial revolution, the Scientific Management Movement, to the modern era typified by the Japanese and American management thoughts.

Project detailsContents
 
Number of Pages154 pages
Chapter one Introduction
Chapter two Literature review
Chapter three  methodology
Chapter  four  Data analysis
Chapter  five Summary,discussion & recommendations
ReferenceReference
QuestionnaireQuestionnaire
AppendixAppendix
Chapter summary1 to 5 chapters
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