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Towards corporate professionalization: the case of project management, management consultancy and executive search

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Towards corporate professionalization: the case of project management, management consultancy and executive search. / Muzio, Daniel; Hodgson, Damian; Faulconbridge, James et al.
In: Current Sociology, Vol. 59, No. 4, 07.2011, p. 443-464.

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Muzio D, Hodgson D, Faulconbridge J, Beaverstock J, Hall S. Towards corporate professionalization: the case of project management, management consultancy and executive search. Current Sociology. 2011 Jul;59(4):443-464. doi: 10.1177/0011392111402587

Author

Muzio, Daniel ; Hodgson, Damian ; Faulconbridge, James et al. / Towards corporate professionalization : the case of project management, management consultancy and executive search. In: Current Sociology. 2011 ; Vol. 59, No. 4. pp. 443-464.

Bibtex

@article{f0f53a7ae6194aaabe563fd9ddf3a243,
title = "Towards corporate professionalization: the case of project management, management consultancy and executive search",
abstract = "This article explores patterns of professionalization in a number of {\textquoteleft}new{\textquoteright} knowledge-based occupations: management consultancy, project management and executive headhunters. Against a general assumption in the literature that such occupations are unwilling and/ or incapable to professionalize, this article suggests how a professionalization project has indeed been in play within these occupational domains. Perhaps most interestingly, these occupations are developing a new pattern of {\textquoteleft}corporate{\textquoteright} professionalization which departs in significant ways from established paths and which is more appropriate for the specific knowledge-bases, occupational characteristics and historical circumstances of these occupations. Using semi-structured interviews with key institutional protagonists, the analysis identifies some new features of corporate professionalization, which despite differences in occupational structure and history, are common to the three professions under review and which may be relevant to a broader range of knowledge-based occupations. These include: organizational membership, client engagement, competence-based closure and internationalization. The article then proceeds to compare and contrast these new professionalization strategies and tactics with the more traditional processes followed by the established professions. Corporate professionalization, it is then argued, may present the basis for a new pattern of collective mobility and for a new understanding of professionalism in the 21st century.",
keywords = "executive search , management consultancy, new professionalism , professionalization, project management ",
author = "Daniel Muzio and Damian Hodgson and James Faulconbridge and Jonathan Beaverstock and Sarah Hall",
year = "2011",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1177/0011392111402587",
language = "English",
volume = "59",
pages = "443--464",
journal = "Current Sociology",
issn = "1461-7064",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Towards corporate professionalization

T2 - the case of project management, management consultancy and executive search

AU - Muzio, Daniel

AU - Hodgson, Damian

AU - Faulconbridge, James

AU - Beaverstock, Jonathan

AU - Hall, Sarah

PY - 2011/7

Y1 - 2011/7

N2 - This article explores patterns of professionalization in a number of ‘new’ knowledge-based occupations: management consultancy, project management and executive headhunters. Against a general assumption in the literature that such occupations are unwilling and/ or incapable to professionalize, this article suggests how a professionalization project has indeed been in play within these occupational domains. Perhaps most interestingly, these occupations are developing a new pattern of ‘corporate’ professionalization which departs in significant ways from established paths and which is more appropriate for the specific knowledge-bases, occupational characteristics and historical circumstances of these occupations. Using semi-structured interviews with key institutional protagonists, the analysis identifies some new features of corporate professionalization, which despite differences in occupational structure and history, are common to the three professions under review and which may be relevant to a broader range of knowledge-based occupations. These include: organizational membership, client engagement, competence-based closure and internationalization. The article then proceeds to compare and contrast these new professionalization strategies and tactics with the more traditional processes followed by the established professions. Corporate professionalization, it is then argued, may present the basis for a new pattern of collective mobility and for a new understanding of professionalism in the 21st century.

AB - This article explores patterns of professionalization in a number of ‘new’ knowledge-based occupations: management consultancy, project management and executive headhunters. Against a general assumption in the literature that such occupations are unwilling and/ or incapable to professionalize, this article suggests how a professionalization project has indeed been in play within these occupational domains. Perhaps most interestingly, these occupations are developing a new pattern of ‘corporate’ professionalization which departs in significant ways from established paths and which is more appropriate for the specific knowledge-bases, occupational characteristics and historical circumstances of these occupations. Using semi-structured interviews with key institutional protagonists, the analysis identifies some new features of corporate professionalization, which despite differences in occupational structure and history, are common to the three professions under review and which may be relevant to a broader range of knowledge-based occupations. These include: organizational membership, client engagement, competence-based closure and internationalization. The article then proceeds to compare and contrast these new professionalization strategies and tactics with the more traditional processes followed by the established professions. Corporate professionalization, it is then argued, may present the basis for a new pattern of collective mobility and for a new understanding of professionalism in the 21st century.

KW - executive search

KW - management consultancy

KW - new professionalism

KW - professionalization

KW - project management

U2 - 10.1177/0011392111402587

DO - 10.1177/0011392111402587

M3 - Journal article

VL - 59

SP - 443

EP - 464

JO - Current Sociology

JF - Current Sociology

SN - 1461-7064

IS - 4

ER -