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Organisational capabilities and the role of routines in the emergence of a modern life insurer: The story of the AMP
39
Citations
14
References
2009
Year
Organizational EconomicsIndustrial OrganizationModern Life InsurerOrganizing (Management)Corporate StrategyManagementOrganisational CapabilitiesInsuranceManagement AnalysisLargest Life InsurerAccountingHealth InsuranceStrategyCorporate GovernanceStrategic ManagementBranch StructureBusiness HistoryOrganizational StructureBusinessBusiness StrategyHigher Order Routines
In 1954 the Australian Mutual Provident Society (AMP) undertook a major organisational restructure. This reform provided the foundation upon which the Society was able to develop into a diversified financial intermediary in the following decades. This paper investigates the changing organisational structure within Australia's largest life insurer as it evolved from a branch structure to a multi-divisional form of management in the 1950s. The specialisation encouraged by the divisional system allowed the development of higher order routines upon which the executive could draw. The resulting growth and sophistication of the organisation in the late 1950s ensured higher order routines were able to develop to promote further development.
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