Riachain
Member
I did something similar. Except that I didn't define the approaches, because you're not supposed to define them.I would have defined the Fayols approach and the Modern approach, then looked for points of similarity and contrast. The amount of similarity/difference tells you how relevant the theory still is.
Basically, I noticed how several of the references in the given reference list discussed the similarities between Fayol's model of management and contemporary models of management. So I used those similarities as one argument.
I also analyzed an article that actually took a look at how Fayol's principles of management were faring today. I didn't discuss his principles at all, only the reasoning behind why several of his principles aren't relevant today, so in a way, I sort of twisted it to fit my argument on Fayol's functions of management.
None of the references will ever clearly talk about service economies. (I learned this halfway through the first article.) You just sort of have to analyze and twist everything to your advantage.
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