The book “Reconceptualizing Organizational Control: Managing in the Age of Hybrid Workplaces, Artificial Intelligence, and the Gig Economy”, published in Cambridge University Press, is co-authored with Jorge Walter. Organizational control addresses the fundamental yet vexing managerial problem of aligning workers' capabilities, activities, and performance with organizational goals and aspirations. In recent years, the onset of COVID-19, combined with new developments in information and communication technologies, has brought about profound changes in organizations, and even in the nature of work itself. We have seen surges in virtual and remote work; progression of alternative work arrangements (especially in the gig economy); and an increasingly wide-spread reliance on algorithmic monitoring and control. These changes have exacerbated the tension between the pursuit of individual and organizational interests, exposing the limits of traditional approaches to organizational control, and questioning whether they still reflect contemporary organizational realities. Providing a comprehensive discussion of the multi-disciplinary approaches to organizational control, this book integrates the new and evolving trends in technology, organizations, and society into a reconceptualization of organizational control for twenty-first-century organizations.

Kreutzer, M. & Walter, J. (2025) Reconceptualizing Organizational Control: Managing in the Age of Hybrid Workplaces, Artificial Intelligence, and the Gig Economy. Cambridge University Press. Online-ISBN: 9781009282765; https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009282765 (Published on November 28, 2024)

Control is a fundamental in our increasingly complex world of organizations. Managers must make choices about how much to use formal and informal control mechanisms to foster focus, coordination, engagement, and a sense of community and trust. In this important book, which goes beyond standard approaches, Kreutzer and Walter integrate the extensive research on control and synthesize the key implications of that work. For those who wish to study control and those who wish to manage it, this volume is an indispensable reference and springboard for research and practice.
— Sim B. Sitkin - Michael W. Krzyzewski University Distinguished Professor and Professor of Management and Public Policy, Duke University
With many trends converging simultaneously, the nature of work in and around organizations is being upended before our eyes. Kreutzer and Walter have directly confronted this situation, and in so doing have created an important, comprehensive examination of organizational control that bridges the past, present, and future. Their contributions to scholarship and practice will be profound.
— C. Chet Miller - C. T. Bauer Professor of Organizational Studies, University of Houston