Management by missions: How to make the mission a part of management

Publication date

2006-02-14



Abstract

Management by Objectives has certain limitations that are not easily overcome simply by including non-financial objectives or by promoting a system of values imported from outside the management system. What is needed, therefore, is a new management system capable of enriching and making sense of the objectives. Management by Missions (MBM) rises above the limitations of MBO and, at the same time, takes into account other innovative proposals put forward in recent years such as Management by Competencies. MBM is based on the idea of distributing the corporate mission to all levels of the company, right down to the particular mission of each individual. Each mission shares in the higher-level missions, so that ultimately everyone has a stake in the corporate mission. The corporate mission is then made operational through objectives. Objectives have no value in themselves but only as a means to fulfill the mission. This new management philosophy is much richer and better able to persuade people to identify with the company they work for and so ensure superior performance at all levels of the organization.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

12

Publisher

Business Perspectives

Published in

Problems and Perspectives in Management

Recommended citation

Cardona, P.; Rey, C. Management by missions: How to make the mission a part of management. Problems and Perspectives in Management, 2006, 4, 1, pp. 164-174. Disponible en: <https://www.businessperspectives.org/index.php/journals/problems-and-perspectives-in-management/issue-11/management-by-missions-how-to-make-the-mission-a-part-of-management>. Fecha de acceso: 26 Mar 2026.

Rights

© The author(s) 2026. This publication is an open access article.

Copyright© 2003, IESE Business School.

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