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Chapter 2 strategic management
Course: Hospitality Management (BSHM 241)
167 Documents
Students shared 167 documents in this course
University: Urdaneta City University
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Chapter 2 - Strategic Management of Stakeholder Relationships - Summary
Stakeholders refer to those people and groups who have a “stake” in some aspect of a
company’s products, operations, markets, industry, or outcomes. The relationship
between organizations and their stakeholders is a two-way street.
The historical assumption that the key objective of business is profit
maximization led to the belief that business is accountable primarily to investors and
others involved in the market and economic aspects of the organization. In the latter half
of the twentieth century, perceptions of business accountability evolved to include both
market constituencies that are directly involved and affected by the business purpose
(e.g., investors, employees, customers, and other business partners) and non market
constituencies that are not always directly tied to issues of profitability and performance
(e.g., the general community, media, government, and special-interest groups).
In the stakeholder model, relationships, investors, employees, and suppliers
provide inputs for a company to benefit stakeholders. This approach assumes a relatively
mechanistic, simplistic, and nonstakeholder view of business. The stakeholder model
assumes a two-way relationship between the firm and a host of stakeholders. This
approach recognizes additional stakeholders and acknowledges the two-way dialog and
effects that exist with a firm’s internal and external environment.
Primary stakeholders are fundamental to a company’s operations and survival and
include shareholders and investors, employees, customers, suppliers, and public
stakeholders, such as government and the community. Secondary stakeholders influence
and/or are affected by the company but are neither engaged in transactions with the firm
nor essential for its survival.