Upper echelons (Hambrick & Mason, 1984) - Weekend Classics

EPISODE · Apr 4, 2026 · 1H 59M

Upper echelons (Hambrick & Mason, 1984) - Weekend Classics

from Revise and Resubmit - The Mayukh Show · host Mayukh Mukhopadhyay

English Podcast starts at 00:00:00Bengali Podcast Starts at 00:56:52Hindi Podcast Starts at 01:21:30Danish Podcast Starts at 01:45:01ReferenceHambrick, D. C., & Mason, P. A. (1984). Upper echelons: The organization as a reflection of its top managers. Academy of Management Review, 9: 193–206. https://doi.org/10.5465/amr.1984.4277628‌Youtube channel link https://www.youtube.com/@weekendresearcherPodcast Websitehttps://mayukhmukhopadhyay.com/reviseandresubmit/Welcome to Revise and Resubmit 🎙️✨ and to another episode of Weekend Classics 📚Sometimes I come across a paper that does not simply explain organizations, but explains people. And once it explains people, everything else begins to make a different kind of sense. That is how I feel about today’s classic, Upper Echelons: The Organization as a Reflection of Its Top Managers, written by Donald C. Hambrick and Phyllis A. Mason, and published on 1 April 1984 in the Academy of Management Review 🏛️, one of the most prestigious FT50 listed journals in management research.What makes this paper endure, I think, is its refusal to pretend that organizations are machines running on cold logic alone. It reminds me that behind every strategy memo, every merger, every ambitious leap, every cautious retreat, there are human beings sitting in rooms, carrying their histories with them. Their educations. Their ambitions. Their fears. Their habits of seeing. Their private ways of deciding what matters and what can be ignored. 👀🧠Hambrick and Mason gave us a sentence so powerful that it still echoes through management scholarship today: organizations are, in part, reflections of their top managers. And when I sit with that idea, it feels at once obvious and quietly profound. Of course companies do not emerge from nowhere. Of course choices are filtered through the minds of the people powerful enough to make them. But to say it this clearly, and to build a theory around it, was to change the conversation.This paper argues that leaders do not encounter the world as it is in its total complexity. None of us do. Instead, they see through filters shaped by age, experience, education, functional background, and social roots. Those visible facts about a leader’s life become clues, little windows into how they might interpret uncertainty, risk, innovation, or opportunity. 🧩📈And what I love most is that the paper does not stop at the heroic image of the lone CEO. It asks us to look at the broader top management team, the dominant coalition, the collective of people whose biographies and assumptions quietly guide the fate of an organization. In that sense, this is not just a theory of leadership. It is a theory of interpretation itself. It says that before organizations act, people perceive. Before firms decide, executives make meaning. 🔍✨That is why this piece remains a classic. It gave scholars a way to connect executive backgrounds to organizational outcomes, but it also gave the rest of us a humbling insight. Institutions may look large, abstract, and impersonal from a distance, yet so often they carry the fingerprints of the people at the top.If you enjoy these deep dives into landmark research, please subscribe to Revise and Resubmit on Spotify 🎧 and to the YouTube channel Weekend Researcher ▶️ You can also find the show on Amazon Prime Music and Apple Podcast 🍎🎵My sincere thanks to Donald C. Hambrick and Phyllis A. Mason for this enduring contribution, and to the Academy of Management for publishing a work that still shapes how we think about leadership, strategy, and organizations 🙏📘So here is the question I want to leave with you: if every organization is, in some measure, a reflection of its top managers, then what hidden parts of a leader’s life are we really seeing every time a company makes a choice? 🤔

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Upper echelons (Hambrick & Mason, 1984) - Weekend Classics

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