| ▲ | TeMPOraL 4 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Think in terms of a dynamic system. Or in terms of "selfish gene", as I've observed it to be easier to talk about. Any single person or group in a corporation is expendable. You can swap out the sales department or a CEO, and the corporation will continue on its course without a pause or major change of direction. No single person or group of people is in total control of the direction - what directs the corporation is the sum total of ideas, vibes, internal influences, bylaws, operating practices, assets, and external environment of competitors and markets and regulatory landscape. The people that make up a corporation may be diverse and have conflicting goals, but if there's one thing they're all aligned on, is that they all want to keep their jobs and increase their pay or influence. I.e. they want the corporation to go on, to survive at least to their next paycheck. The end result is, a corporation can be seen as an independent entity - kinda like an animal (or a super-colony for more accurate comparison) with a survival drive independent of the people that form it. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | RandomLensman 4 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
If there is a single owner, could shut down the place, for example. As I said, in my experience, the humans - interchangible or not, as customers, competitors, owners etc - determine what happens, not the corporation itself. Can look at a corporate as "living thing" itself, but I think that underestimates the human side. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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