题目内容

案例分析题某咨询公司是一家以战略咨询为主要业务的公司,已有9年的发展历史。公司形成了强调冒险与革新的组织文化,提升了公司的核心竞争力。公司一直重视员工的培养,注重从各种年龄和经验层次的员工中选拔人才。公司的薪酬制度强调以员工绩效水平为依据,对工作出色的员工提供高额奖金和较大的工作自由度,因而员工的敬业度很高。目前,公司有员工32人,通常以小组为单位进行工作。公司把管理决策权下放到员工手中,也没有设置严格的部门界限。由于最近获得一笔很大的海外投资,公司着手开始组织变革,计划在未来半年内实施大规模扩张计划,针对不同行业组建专业咨询小组,以便为客户提供更加专业的服务。同时,公司计划成立独立的客户关系部门,加强客户的拓展和维护工作。 该咨询公司计划进行的组织变革方法属于()。

A. 以人员为中心的变革
B. 以结构为中心的变革
C. 以技术为中心的变革
D. 以文化为中心的变革

查看答案
更多问题

Sending E-mails to ProfessorsOne student skipped class and then sent the professor an e-mail (51) for copies of her teaching notes. Another (52) that she was late for a Monday class because she was recovering from drinking too much at a wild weekend party. At colleges and universities in the US, e-mail has made professors more approachable(平易近人 ). But many say it has made them too accessible, (53) boundaries that traditionally kept students at a healthy distance. These days, professors say, students seem to view them as available (54) the clock, sending a steady stream of informal e-mails. "The tone that they take in e-mails is pretty astounding(令人吃惊的)." said Michael Kessler, an assistant dean at Georgetown University. "They’ll (55) you to help: ’I need to know this. ’" "There’s a fine (56) between meeting their needs and at the same time maintaining a level of legitimacy (正统性) as an (57) who is in charge. " Christopher Dede, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, said (58) show that students no longer defer to (听从) their professors, perhaps because they realize that professors’ (59) could rapidly become outdated. "The deference was driven by the notion (60) that professors were all-knowing sources of deep knowledge. " Dede said, and that notion has weakened (61) . For junior faculty members, e-mails bring new tension into their work, some say, as they struggle with how to (62) . Their job prospects, they realize, may rest in part on student evaluations of their accessibility. College students say e-mail makes (63) easier to ask questions and helps them learn. But they seem unaware that what they write in e-mails could have negative effects on (64) them, said Alexandra Lahav, and associate professor of Law at the University of Connecticut. She recalled an e-mail message from a student saying that he planned to miss class so he could play with his son. Professor Lahav did not respond. "Such e-mails can have consequences. " she said. "Students don’t understand that (65) they say in e-mail can make them seem unprofessional, and could result in a bad recommendation. " 58()

A. e-mails
B. passages
C. texts
D. books

引起细胞兴奋阈强度越大,表明该细胞的兴奋性越大。

A. 对
B. 错

市场营销管理过程包括哪几个主要步骤?

第二篇Milosevie’s DeathFormer Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic was found dead last Saturday in his cell at the Hague-based International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. The 64-year-old had been on trial there since February 2002. Born in provincial Pozarevac in 1941, he was the second son of a priest and a school teacher, Both of his parents died when he was still a young adult. The young Milosevic was "untypical", says Slavoljub Djukic, his unofficial biographer. He was "not interested in sports, avoided excursions (短途旅行) and used to come to school dressed in the old-fashioned way-white shirt and tie. " One of his old friends said, he could "imagine him as a station-master or punctilious (一丝不苟的) civil servant. Indeed that is exactly what he might have become, had he not married Mira. She was widely believed to be his driving force. At university and beyond he did well. He worked for various firms and was a communist party member. By 1986 he was head of Serbia’s Central Committee. But still he had not yet really been noticed. It was Kosovo that gave him his chance. An autonomous province of Serbia, Kosovo was home to an Albanian majority and a Serbian minority. In 1989, he was sent there to calm fears of Serbians who felt they were discriminated against. But instead he played the nationalist card and became their champion. In so doing, he changed into a ruthless (无情的) and determined man. At home with Mira he plotted the downfall of his political enemies. Conspiring(密谋) with the director of Serbian TV, he mounted a modern media campaign which aimed to get him the most power in the country. He was elected Serbian president in 1990.In 1997, he became president of Yugoslavia. The rest of the story is well-known: his nationalist card caused Yugoslavia’s other ethnic groups to fight for their own rights, power and lands. Yugoslavia broke up when four of the six republics declared independence in 1991.War started and lasted for years and millions died. Then Western countries intervened. NATO bombed Yugoslavia, and he eventually stepped down as state leader in 2000. Soon after this, Serbia’s new government, led by Zoran Djindjic arrested him and sent him to face justice at the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal in the Hague. What happened in 1991()

A. Yugoslavia broke up.
B. Western countries intervened.
C. NATO bombed Yugoslavia.
D. Milosevic was arrested.

答案查题题库