Your cart

Your cart is empty


Explore our range of products

SAGE Publications Ltd Paperback English

An Introduction to Business and Management

Edited by Christine Parkin Hughes

Regular price £51.99
Unit price
per

SAGE Publications Ltd Paperback English

An Introduction to Business and Management

Edited by Christine Parkin Hughes

Regular price £51.99
Unit price
per
 
Dispatched tomorrow with FREE Express Tracked Delivery
Delivery expected between Saturday, 23rd May and Tuesday, 26th May
(0 in cart)
Apple Pay
Google Pay
Maestro
Mastercard
PayPal
Shop Pay
Visa

You may also like

  • This new essential management textbook is a one-stop shop for students undertaking a Business and Management degree, equipping you with the knowledge, skills, and inspiration to build a career that has the potential to make a meaningful difference. Key features include:The development of key skills for a changing world, including problem-solving, critical thinking and adaptability, as well as academic skillsA commitment to equality, diversity and inclusivity by featuring diverse case studies, international research and diverse perspectives throughoutA strong reflective element, encouraging you to consider how this new knowledge changes your perspectives and how it will inform your future managerial choicesA ‘Students like you change the world’ feature showing how business and management graduates are contributing to a more sustainable and just worldThe promotion of practices and behaviours aligned with the UN Sustainable Development GoalsA focus on technology, with a chapter on AI, Technology and Digital Transformation. This essential textbook can be used for a wide range of courses from introduction to management modules to across a whole business and management degree or degree apprenticeship. The book is complemented by PowerPoint slides, a Teaching Guide, and a Testbank of Multiple Choice Questions for lecturers. Rossana Guttilla is a Senior Lecturer in HRM and Induction and Transition coordinator for the business school at the University of Exeter. Christine Parkin Hughes is an Associate Professor in OB and HRM and Director of Education and Student Experience for the Department of Management at the University of Exeter. All royalties from the sale of this book are donated to the Student Hardship Fund at the University of Exeter.
This new essential management textbook is a one-stop shop for students undertaking a Business and Management degree, equipping you with the knowledge, skills, and inspiration to build a career that has the potential to make a meaningful difference. Key features include:The development of key skills for a changing world, including problem-solving, critical thinking and adaptability, as well as academic skillsA commitment to equality, diversity and inclusivity by featuring diverse case studies, international research and diverse perspectives throughoutA strong reflective element, encouraging you to consider how this new knowledge changes your perspectives and how it will inform your future managerial choicesA ‘Students like you change the world’ feature showing how business and management graduates are contributing to a more sustainable and just worldThe promotion of practices and behaviours aligned with the UN Sustainable Development GoalsA focus on technology, with a chapter on AI, Technology and Digital Transformation. This essential textbook can be used for a wide range of courses from introduction to management modules to across a whole business and management degree or degree apprenticeship. The book is complemented by PowerPoint slides, a Teaching Guide, and a Testbank of Multiple Choice Questions for lecturers. Rossana Guttilla is a Senior Lecturer in HRM and Induction and Transition coordinator for the business school at the University of Exeter. Christine Parkin Hughes is an Associate Professor in OB and HRM and Director of Education and Student Experience for the Department of Management at the University of Exeter. All royalties from the sale of this book are donated to the Student Hardship Fund at the University of Exeter.