Management Frameworks and Management System Standards in the Context of Integration and Unification: A Review and Classification of Core Building Blocks for Consilience
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Foundations
2.1. Consilience Approach, Theory, Thinking, and Intelligence
2.2. General Systems Theory and Systems Thinking
2.3. Related Work
3. Research Method
4. Findings
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Methodology | Reference Sources |
---|---|
Implementation/Application | [9,92,93,94,95,96,97,98] |
Literature Review | [77,99,100,101,102,103,104,105,106,107,108,109,110,111,112,113,114,115] |
Literature Review and Design | [9,83,102,116,117,118,119,120,121,122,123] |
Mixed Methods (Survey, Analysis, Assessment, Case Studies) | [11,12,14,77,101,124,125,126,127,128,129,130,131,132,133,134,135,136,137,138,139,140,141,142,143,144] |
Model Development | [134,145,146,147,148,149,150,151,152,153,154,155,156,157,158,159,160,161,162,163,164,165,166] |
Qualitative Research | [118,133,136,150,163,167,168,169,170,171,172,173,174,175,176,177,178,179,180,181] |
Quantitative Analysis (Statistical) | [76,124,130,143,182,183,184,185,186,187,188,189] |
Survey Research | [83,102,166,169,190,191,192,193,194,195,196,197,198,199,200,201,202,203,204,205,206,207] |
Survey Research with Expert Input | [183,207,208,209] |
No | Name | Issued by |
---|---|---|
1 | Agile Scrum | Ken Schwaber, Jeff Sutherland |
2 | BABOK v3 | IIBA International Institute of Business Analysis (North York, ON, Canada) |
3 | Balanced Scorecard (BSC) | Robert Kaplan and David Norton |
4 | BPM CBOK v4.0 | Association of Business Process Management Professionals International (Pensacola, FL, USA) |
5 | Business Process Execution Language (BPEL) | OASIS (Woburn, MA, USA) |
6 | Capability Maturity Model Integration (CMMI) | Software Engineering Institute (SEI) |
7 | CIS Controls v8 | Center for Internet Security (Pittsburgh, PA, USA) |
8 | COBIT v2019 | ISACA (Schaumburg, IL, USA) |
9 | COBIT v4_1 | ISACA (Schaumburg, IL, USA) |
10 | COBIT v5 | ISACA(Schaumburg, IL, USA) |
11 | Continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) | Unknown |
12 | Customer Relationship Management (CRM) | Various |
13 | Deming Cycle (PDCA) | W. Edwards Deming |
14 | DevOps | Patrick Debois |
15 | DMAIC (Define, Measure, Analyze, Improve, Control) | Motorola, Bill Smith (Chicago, IL, USA) |
16 | DMBOK_v2 | DAMA INTERNATIONAL (Vancouver, BC, Canada) |
17 | DSDM (Dynamic Systems Development Method) | DSDM Consortium (rebranded as Agile Business Consortium (ABC)) (Kent, United Kingdom) |
18 | eSCM-CL | ITSqc at Carnegie Mellon University (Pittsburgh, PA, USA) |
19 | eSCM-SP | ITSqc at Carnegie Mellon University (Pittsburgh, PA, USA) |
20 | eTOM v23 | TM Forum (Parsippany, NJ, USA) |
21 | Event-Driven Process Chain (EPC) | IDS Scheer (Saarbrücken, Germany) |
22 | Extreme programming (XP) | Kent Beck |
23 | GE/McKinsey Matrix | McKinsey & Company (New York City, NY, USA), GE (Boston, MA, USA) |
24 | Holacracy | Brian J. Robertson |
25 | Hoshin Kanri (Policy Deployment) | Yoji Akao |
26 | IT4IT | The Open Group (Berkshire, United Kingdom) |
27 | ITIL v2011 | AXELOS (London, United Kingdom) |
28 | ITIL v3 | AXELOS (London, United Kingdom) |
29 | ITIL v4 | AXELOS (London, United Kingdom) |
30 | ITSCM (IT Service Continuity Management) | British Standards Institution (BSI) (London, United Kingdom) |
31 | Juran’s Quality Trilogy | Joseph M. Juran |
32 | Just-in-Time (JIT) | Toyota (Aichi Prefecture, Japan) |
33 | Kaizen | Toyota—Masaaki Imai (Aichi Prefecture, Japan) |
34 | Kanban System | Toyota (Aichi Prefecture, Japan) |
35 | Kepner–Tregoe Problem Solving and Decision Making (PSDM) | Charles Kepner and Benjamin Tregoe |
36 | Kotter’s 8-Step Change Model | John P. Kotter |
37 | Large Scale Scrum (LeSS) | Craig Larman and Bas Vodde |
38 | Lean Canvas | Ash Maurya |
39 | Lean Construction | Glenn Ballard and Greg Howell |
40 | Lean Six Sigma | Motorola, Bill Smith (Chicago, IL, USA) |
41 | MoP (Management of Portfolios) | AXELOS (London, United Kingdom) |
42 | MoV (Management of Value) | AXELOS (London, United Kingdom) |
43 | NIST Cybersecurity Framework (CSF) 2.0 | National Institute of Standards and Technology (U.S.) (Gaithersburg, MD, USA) |
44 | NIST SP 800-53 Rev. 5 (Security and Privacy Controls for Information Systems and Organizations) | NIST (Gaithersburg, MD, USA) |
45 | Object-Oriented Analysis and Design (OOAD) | Grady Booch |
46 | OODA Loop (Observe, Orient, Decide, and Act) | John Boyd |
47 | OPM3 (Organizational Project Management Maturity Model) | Project Management Institute (PMI) (Newtown Square, PA, USA) |
48 | Pareto Principle (80/20 Rule) | Vilfredo Pareto |
49 | PCI DSS v3.2.1 | PCI Security Standards Council (Wakefield, MA, USA) |
50 | PDCA Cycle (Plan, Do, Check, Act) | W. Edwards Deming |
51 | PERT (Program Evaluation and Review Technique) | US Department of Defence (Arlington, VA, USA) |
52 | PESTEL Analysis | Francis Aguilar |
53 | PMBOK v7 | PMI Project Management Institute (Newtown Square, PA, USA) |
54 | Porter’s Five Forces | Michael Porter |
55 | Porter’s Diamond Model | Michael Porter |
56 | Porter’s Generic Strategies | Michael Porter |
57 | Porter’s Value Chain | Michael Porter |
58 | Pyramid Principle | Barbara Minto |
59 | RACI Matrix | Various |
60 | Rapid Application Development (RAD) | James Martin |
61 | RiskIT | ISACA (Schaumburg, IL, USA) |
62 | RUP (Rational Unified Process) | Rational Software (now part of IBM) (Armong, NY, USA) |
63 | Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe) | Dean Leffingwell—Scaled Agile, Inc. (Boulder, CO, USA) |
64 | Scrum | Jeff Sutherland and Ken Schwaber |
65 | SIAM (Service Integration and Management) | Scopism (York, United Kingdom) |
66 | Systems Development Life Cycle (SDLC) | Various |
67 | Systems Thinking | Various |
68 | TMMi Reference Model—R1.3 | The TMMi Foundation (Chester, United Kingdom) |
69 | TOGAF v10 (The Open Group Architecture Framework) | The Open Group (Berkshire, United Kingdom) |
70 | Total Productive Maintenance (TPM) | Seiichi Nakajima |
71 | Total Quality management (TQM) | W. Edwards Deming |
72 | ValIT | ISACA (Schaumburg, IL, USA) |
73 | Value Proposition Canvas | Alexander Osterwalder |
74 | Value Stream Mapping (VSM) | Toyota, Mike Rother and John Shook (Aichi Prefecture, Japan) |
75 | Viable System Model (VSM) | Stafford Beer |
76 | V-Model | US Department of Defense (Arlington, VA, USA) |
77 | Voice of the Customer (VOC) | Unknown |
78 | Waterfall Model | Winston W. Royce |
79 | Zachman Framework | John A. Zachman |
Standard | Standard Name | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | ISO 7101:2023 [210] | Healthcare organization management—Management systems for quality in healthcare organizations—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/81647.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
2 | ISO 9001:2015 [4] | Quality management systems—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/62085.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
3 | ISO 9004:2018 [211] | Quality management—Quality of an organization—Guidance to achieve sustained success | https://www.iso.org/standard/70397.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
4 | ISO 10012:2003 [212] | Measurement management systems—Requirements for measurement processes and measuring equipment | https://www.iso.org/standard/26033.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
5 | ISO 13485:2016 [213] | Medical devices—Quality management systems—Requirements for regulatory purposes | https://www.iso.org/standard/59752.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
6 | ISO 14001:2015 [67] | Environmental management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/60857.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
7 | ISO 14298:2021 [214] | Graphic technology—Management of security printing processes | https://www.iso.org/standard/80070.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
8 | ISO 16000-40:2019 [215] | Indoor air—Part 40: Indoor air quality management system | https://www.iso.org/standard/70424.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
9 | ISO 18788:2015 [216] | Management system for private security operations—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/63380.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
10 | ISO/IEC 19770-1:2017 [217] | Information technology—IT asset management—Part 1: IT asset management systems—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/68531.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
11 | ISO/IEC 20000-1:2018 [218] | Information technology—Service management—Part 1: Service management system requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/70636.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
12 | ISO/CD 20001.2 [219] | Food loss and waste management system—Requirements for the minimization of food loss and waste across the food value chain | https://www.iso.org/standard/85052.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
13 | ISO 20121:2024 [220] | Event sustainability management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/86389.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
14 | ISO 21001:2018 [221] | Educational organizations—Management systems for educational organizations—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/66266.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
15 | ISO 21101:2014 [222] | Adventure tourism—Safety management systems—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/54857.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
16 | ISO 21401:2018 [223] | Tourism and related services—Sustainability management system for accommodation establishments—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/70869.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
17 | ISO 22000:2018 [224] | Food safety management systems—Requirements for any organization in the food chain | https://www.iso.org/standard/65464.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
18 | ISO 22163:2023 [225] | Railway applications—Railway quality management system—ISO 9001:2015 and specific requirements for application in the railway sector | https://www.iso.org/standard/79427.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
19 | ISO 22301:2019 [88] | Security and resilience—Business continuity management systems—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/75106.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
20 | ISO 24518:2015 [226] | Activities relating to drinking water and wastewater services—Crisis management of water utilities | https://www.iso.org/standard/64118.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
21 | ISO/IEC 27001:2022 [5] | Information security, cybersecurity and privacy protection—Information security management systems—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/27001 (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
22 | ISO/IEC 27003:2017 [227] | Information technology—Security techniques—Information security management systems—Guidance | https://www.iso.org/standard/63417.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
23 | ISO/IEC 27010:2015 [228] | Information technology—Security techniques—Information security management for inter-sector and inter-organizational communications | https://www.iso.org/standard/68427.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
24 | ISO/IEC 27014:2020 [229] | Information security, cybersecurity and privacy protection—Governance of information security | https://www.iso.org/standard/74046.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
25 | ISO 28000:2022 [230] | Security and resilience—Security management systems—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/79612.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
26 | ISO 28001:2007 [231] | Security management systems for the supply chain—Best practices for implementing supply chain security, assessments and plans—Requirements and guidance | https://www.iso.org/standard/45654.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
27 | ISO 29001:2020 [232] | Petroleum, petrochemical and natural gas industries—Sector-specific quality management systems—Requirements for product and service supply organizations | https://www.iso.org/standard/67773.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
28 | ISO 30000:2009 [233] | Ships and marine technology—Ship recycling management systems—Specifications for management systems for safe and environmentally sound ship recycling facilities | https://www.iso.org/standard/51244.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
29 | ISO 30301:2019 [234] | Information and documentation—Management systems for records—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/74292.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
30 | ISO 30401:2018 [235] | Knowledge management systems—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/68683.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
31 | ISO 31101:2023 [236] | Robotics—Application services provided by service robots—Safety management systems requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/80886.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
32 | ISO 34101-1:2019 [237] | Sustainable and traceable cocoa—Part 1: Requirements for cocoa sustainability management systems | https://www.iso.org/standard/64765.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
33 | ISO 35001:2019 [238] | Biorisk management for laboratories and other related organisations | https://www.iso.org/standard/71293.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
34 | ISO 37001:2016 [239] | Anti-bribery management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/65034.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
35 | ISO 37101:2016 [240] | Sustainable development in communities—Management system for sustainable development—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/61885.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
36 | ISO 37301:2021 [241] | Compliance management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/75080.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
37 | ISO 39001:2012 [242] | Road traffic safety (RTS) management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/44958.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
38 | ISO 41001:2018 [243] | Facility management—Management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/68021.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
39 | ISO 41015:2023 [244] | Facility management—Influencing organizational behaviours for improved facility outcomes | https://www.iso.org/standard/68171.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
40 | ISO/IEC 42001:2023 [245] | Information technology—Artificial intelligence— Management system | https://www.iso.org/standard/81230.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
41 | ISO 44001:2017 [246] | Collaborative business relationship management systems—Requirements and framework | https://www.iso.org/standard/72798.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
42 | ISO 45001:2018 [247] | Occupational health and safety management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/63787.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
43 | ISO 46001:2019 [248] | Water efficiency management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/68286.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
44 | ISO 50001:2018 [249] | Energy management systems—Requirements with guidance for use | https://www.iso.org/standard/69426.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
45 | ISO 55001:2024 [250] | Asset management—Asset management system—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/83054.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
46 | ISO 56001:2024 [251] | Innovation management system—Requirements | https://www.iso.org/standard/79278.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
47 | ISO 56002:2019 [252] | Innovation management—Innovation management system—Guidance | https://www.iso.org/standard/68221.html (accessed on 28 December 2024) |
Step | Description | Tool | Tool Selection Reason |
---|---|---|---|
1 Text Extraction | Extract text from documents, focusing on structured data extraction. | PyMuPDF | PyMuPDF is chosen due to its speed, efficiency, and structured text extraction capabilities across diverse document types. Compared to PDFMiner, PyMuPDF is faster and more efficient while handling embedded text better. pdfplumber, which builds on PDFMiner, offers more flexibility for table extraction but is not as optimised for general text extraction. pypdfium2 is another high-performance tool but is more focused on rendering rather than precise text extraction. Apache Tika is a broader tool that extracts text, metadata, and content from multiple file types, but it is heavier and may require additional setup. PyMuPDF provides a good balance of performance and ease of use, making it a reliable choice for text extraction [253]. |
2 Preprocessing | Tokenize, remove stop words, and perform lemmatization on extracted text. | spaCy | spaCy is selected due to its efficient and scalable pipeline, making it well suited for large-scale text processing. Compared to NLTK, which offers extensive NLP tools, spaCy is optimised for speed and deep learning applications. StanfordNLP provides high accuracy but is slower and requires more computational resources. OpenNLP is another alternative but lacks the same level of ease of use and integration as spaCy. GATE is designed for information extraction and may be more complex for general NLP tasks. SpaCy provides a balance of speed, accuracy, and usability, making it an ideal choice for preprocessing [254]. |
3 Feature Extraction | Convert preprocessed text into semantic text embeddings. | Sentence-BERT (sBERT) | sBERT is chosen for its ability to generate context-aware sentence embeddings while maintaining efficiency. Compared to Word2Vec, FastText, and GloVe, which generate word-level embeddings without considering word order, sBERT captures full sentence meaning. TF-IDF, while useful for keyword extraction, does not encode semantic relationships. Universal Sentence Encoder (USE) is another strong alternative but is computationally heavier and does not always outperform sBERT in semantic similarity tasks. sBERT provides state-of-the-art sentence embeddings while being optimised for speed and scalability [71]. |
4 Clustering | Identify clusters of documents discussing similar topics. | HDBSCAN | HDBSCAN is chosen because it handles variable density clustering and automatically identifies noise points. Unlike K-Means, which assumes spherical clusters and requires the number of clusters beforehand, HDBSCAN is density-based and requires only the minimum cluster size as input. DBSCAN is similar but struggles with clusters of varying density. OPTICS improves on DBSCAN but does not provide a straightforward flat clustering output. Agglomerative Clustering is a good hierarchical alternative but is more sensitive to noise and is computationally expensive for large datasets. HDBSCAN combines density-based clustering and hierarchical tree construction, making it robust for discovering natural groupings without needing to set a global distance threshold [255]. |
5 Topic Modelling | Refine understanding of topics within clusters through advanced topic modelling. | Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NMF) | NMF is selected for its ability to produce interpretable and semantically meaningful topic representations. Compared to LDA, which assumes probabilistic topic distributions, NMF directly identifies latent topics without probabilistic assumptions, making the results easier to interpret. LSA, which uses Singular Value Decomposition (SVD), often introduces negative values that can complicate interpretation. BERTopic is a modern alternative that leverages transformers, but it can be computationally expensive. NMF strikes a good balance between interpretability, computational efficiency, and scalability [256]. |
6 Summarisation | Generate summaries for each cluster to extract concise descriptions and determine candidate building block universe set via keyword summarisation. | TextRank Algorithm | TextRank is selected because it is unsupervised, computationally efficient, and language-agnostic, making it a practical choice for extractive summarization tasks. Compared to BART and GPT-based summarization, TextRank does not require training data and is much lighter computationally. LexRank, while also unsupervised, focuses on sentence connectivity and may overlook semantic richness in some contexts. TextRank’s graph-based approach effectively captures sentence importance based on the overall structure of the text [75]. |
7 Building Block Universe Set Reduction and Naming | Perform reduction for candidate building block universe set and validate and officially name the consilient building blocks of MFs and MSSs through expert review and standard-based naming. | Expert review, cross-referencing |
No | Criteria | Description |
---|---|---|
1 | Professional Experience | Minimum 15 years in management frameworks (MFs) and management system standards (MSSs), evidenced by publications, certifications, or leadership roles. |
2 | Thematic Expertise | Expertise in areas relevant to CBBT, such as interoperability frameworks, management system design, or cross-industry standardisation. |
3 | Critical Evaluation Skills | Experience in reviewing taxonomies, ontologies, or regulatory frameworks to provide actionable feedback. |
No | Phase | Description |
---|---|---|
1 | Initial Evaluation | Experts independently assessed CBBT using a structured questionnaire (10-point Likert scale), rating importance, clarity, and applicability. Open-ended feedback was collected. |
2 | Consensus-Building Workshop | Two virtual workshops facilitated discussions to reconcile scores, clarify ambiguities, and refine building blocks. Anonymised responses were shared beforehand. |
3 | Iterative Refinement | CBBT was revised iteratively based on aggregated feedback, with a final confirmation round from all experts to validate adjustments. |
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Review Stages | Description | |
---|---|---|
1 | Determine Data Sources | Determine Data Sources: Identify and collect data sources, including management frameworks (MFs), management system standards (MSSs), and academic publications. |
2 | Search and Filter Data | Search Data Sources: Develop search strategies, including database selection, search terms, and options. Filter Gathered Data: Apply criteria to filter and remove irrelevant data to focus on high-quality, relevant sources. |
3 | Explore and Identify Building Blocks | Text Extraction: Extract text from selected data sources. Preprocessing: Clean, standardise, and prepare the extracted data for analysis. Feature Extraction: Identify key features such as keywords, patterns, and concepts. Clustering: Group data into clusters based on identified features. Topic Modelling: Apply topic modelling techniques to detect common themes. Summarisation: Summarise thematic patterns and findings. Universe Reduction and Naming: Streamline building blocks by reducing redundancy and naming key building blocks. Create Consilient Building Block Registry: Document and organise the identified building blocks systematically. |
4 | Verify and Refine Consilient Building Blocks | Design and Implement Survey: Develop a survey to gather expert input on the identified building blocks. Verify and Refine Consilient Building Blocks: Incorporate feedback to refine the registry of the building blocks iteratively. |
5 | Validate Consilient Building Blocks | Validate Consilient Building Blocks: Conduct validation through expert review, case studies, or benchmarking against existing frameworks and standards. |
6 | Present and Interpret Consilient Building Blocks | Present Findings: Present the finalised consilient building blocks using visualisations, tables, or conceptual models. Conclusion: Synthesise findings, interpret results, and discuss their implications for research and practise. |
Consilient Building Block | Consilient Building Block Detail |
---|---|
Process | Highlights inclusive practises and activities within the Management System Architecture (MSA), presented in a Process Landscape Map showing the interconnections of core, support, and management processes. |
Governance Processes | Focuses on governance activities ensuring efficient oversight, responsibility, and strategic alignment within the management system. |
Management and Planning Processes | Deals with systematic methods to organise and supervise management activities, ensuring the efficient use of resources and achievement of goals. |
Value Chain/Operation and Support Processes | Outlines processes that generate and deliver value to customers, emphasising the integration and optimisation of operational workflows to meet efficiency and satisfaction goals. |
Enabler Processes | Includes supportive processes that enable core and governance processes, covering technological, human, and informational resources essential for success. |
Outcome | Emphasises a structured approach to evaluating results achieved through organisational outcomes as services and products, organised within hierarchies and portfolios. |
Services | Focuses on the systematic arrangement and lifecycle management of services offered, ensuring alignment with organisational goals and stakeholder requirements. |
Products | Pertains to the structured categorisation and strategic oversight of products, managing development, lifecycle, and market positioning. |
Norm | Outlines internal norms, including policies and procedures that govern the management system, ensuring compliance and alignment with best practises and requirements. |
Internal Norms | Details specific policies, plans, procedures, standards, and work instructions underpinning the management system. |
Information | Presents the architecture of the Consilient Information System (CIS), organising data, information, knowledge, and intelligence for decision-making within the unified framework. |
Intelligence and Learning | Supports decision-making by enabling the collection and application of intelligence and learning mechanisms within the CIS. |
Knowledge | Contains the structure of organisational knowledge, integrating data and information into a tool supporting priorities and informed decision-making. |
Information | Focuses on the systematic gathering, processing, and sharing of information, ensuring smooth flow across the management system. |
Data | Forms the base layer of the CIS, concerned with the collection, storage, and analysis of the basic data foundational to the entire information system. |
People and Organisation | Delineates structural and relational models integrating human resources within organisational processes, aligning capabilities with strategic goals. |
People Capability | Centres on identifying, developing, and optimising individual and collective skills, defining roles, and ensuring clarity around responsibilities. |
Functional Organisation | Elaborates on structuring organisational units and their interrelations to enhance efficiency and strategic coherence. |
Technology | Encompasses the structure and organisation of technological resources, ensuring assets align with business objectives. |
Digital Technology | Focuses on integrating digital tools, platforms, and systems to facilitate operational processes and decision-making. |
Non-Digital Technology | Addresses the role of physical technologies essential for the production, operation, and delivery of products and services. |
Preside and Oversee | Encapsulates the overarching governance function, characterised by strategic oversight ensuring alignment with organisational vision and objectives. |
Leadership | Emphasises the significance of vision, mission, and authority, establishing a clear direction and guiding principles for governance and strategies. |
Manifesto | Embodies core principles and control objectives, articulating policy statements that guide organisational ethos, values, and practises. |
Cascaded Steering | Pertains to mechanisms disseminating governance principles via structured committees and codes of conduct throughout the organisation. |
Direct, Monitor and Evaluate | Focuses on the continuous oversight of implementation and effectiveness, ensuring practises remain relevant and improve continuously. |
Strategic Planning | Crucial in formulating actionable strategies aligning with long-term vision, setting objectives, identifying resources, and determining paths to goals. |
Performance Monitoring and Evaluation | Provides a systematic approach to assess performance by establishing and governing metrics and indicators. |
Conformance Monitoring and Evaluation | Ensures operations comply with legal, ethical, and industry standards, safeguarding integrity and reputation. |
Implementation | Delineates processes involved in embedding the framework within an organisation, integrating principles into daily operations. |
Implementation in an Organisation | Involves tailoring the framework to align with the organisation’s structure, culture, and operational needs. |
Improvement | Emphasises continuous enhancement, acknowledging the need to evolve in response to new insights, challenges, and opportunities. |
Continuous Improvement | Elaborates on the systematic pursuit of incremental and breakthrough improvements, essential for maintaining relevance and effectiveness. |
Stakeholder Engagement and Journey | Highlights the significance of engaging stakeholders throughout their journey, recognising their support as crucial for success. |
Stakeholder Experience and Support | Focuses on supporting stakeholders, creating positive experiences, providing resources, and acting on feedback. |
Maturity Model | Refers to a structured model assessing and guiding the progression of organisational capabilities across predefined maturity levels. |
Maturity Model | Extends the maturity concept by focusing on developing organisational capabilities to achieve higher maturity levels. |
Capability Maturity Model | Refers to cohesive mechanisms facilitating seamless interactions between the framework and the management system, ensuring alignment to achieve objectives. |
Integrations | Focuses on strategic connections within the framework itself, coordinating components to support vision and objectives. |
Management Framework Integrations | Delves into integrating management system components to actively support strategic imperatives, streamlining processes and information flows. |
Management System Integrations | Encompasses foundational elements shaping the approach to organising, evaluating, and improving practises, including understanding context, applying methodologies, and utilising techniques. |
Context, Methodologies and Techniques | Highlights recognising and incorporating external and internal factors influencing the framework’s operation. |
Contexts | Identifies systematic approaches adopted to achieve objectives, enhancing efficiency, fostering innovation, and mitigating risks. |
Methodologies | Delves into specific tools and practises employed to execute strategies and methodologies effectively. |
Techniques | Encapsulates unique elements differentiating the organisation’s approach, including bespoke processes or tools. |
Proprietary Aspects | Focuses on distinctive elements within the framework tailored to the organisation’s strategic vision, addressing specific challenges or opportunities. |
Management Framework Proprietary Aspects | Delineates unique components within the management system designed to enhance performance and strategic execution, providing an operational edge. |
Management System Proprietary Aspects | Highlights inclusive practises and activities within the Management System Architecture (MSA), presented in a Process Landscape Map showing the interconnections of core, support, and management processes. |
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© 2025 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
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Gerek, Y.; Aydin, M.N. Management Frameworks and Management System Standards in the Context of Integration and Unification: A Review and Classification of Core Building Blocks for Consilience. Systems 2025, 13, 234. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems13040234
Gerek Y, Aydin MN. Management Frameworks and Management System Standards in the Context of Integration and Unification: A Review and Classification of Core Building Blocks for Consilience. Systems. 2025; 13(4):234. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems13040234
Chicago/Turabian StyleGerek, Yalcin, and Mehmet Nafiz Aydin. 2025. "Management Frameworks and Management System Standards in the Context of Integration and Unification: A Review and Classification of Core Building Blocks for Consilience" Systems 13, no. 4: 234. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems13040234
APA StyleGerek, Y., & Aydin, M. N. (2025). Management Frameworks and Management System Standards in the Context of Integration and Unification: A Review and Classification of Core Building Blocks for Consilience. Systems, 13(4), 234. https://doi.org/10.3390/systems13040234