Abstract
In half a century PolyGram expanded from two small Dutch and German companies to become the world's largest music multinational. It did so in the midst of a fast-changing business environment, in which relatively homogenous products and tastes gave way to differentiated outputs for segmented markets. Making use of strengths inherited from its owners Philips and Siemens, PolyGram integrated a continuous series of foreign acquisitions into one international organization while maintaining the creative identities and independence of the firms it acquired. To control and manage the resulting idiosyncratic configuration, it developed the federated form, a decentralized organizational structure that fit the shifting environment. PolyGram became what can be defined as a rightsbased multinational, and its structure showed similarities to multinationals in other rights-based industries.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Business and International Management
Cited by
68 articles.
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1. Inhalt;Studien zur Popularmusik;2023-10-02
2. Frontmatter;Studien zur Popularmusik;2023-10-02
3. 9.7 Sekundärliteratur;Studien zur Popularmusik;2023-10-02
4. 9.6 Online- Dokumente;Studien zur Popularmusik;2023-10-02
5. 9.5 Filmografie;Studien zur Popularmusik;2023-10-02