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Topic 2 PIONEERING IDEAS IN MANAGEMENT

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Title: Topic 2 PIONEERING IDEAS IN MANAGEMENT


1
Topic 2PIONEERING IDEAS IN MANAGEMENT
  • Chapter 2

2
The Role of Theory and History in Management
  • Why theory?
  • A theory is a conceptual framework for
    organising knowledge and providing a blueprint
    for action.

3
The Role of Theory and History in Management
  • Why history?
  • Understanding history can provide a sense of
    heritage and help avoid the mistakes of others.
  • Social factors
  • Political factors
  • Economic factors

4
History of Management
  • Classical management approaches
  • Behavioural management approaches
  • Quantitative approaches
  • Contemporary approaches

5
Pre-classical contributors to management theory
  • Robert Owen (1771-1858) - concern for working
    conditions
  • Charles Babbage (1792-1871) efficiency, profit
    sharing, harmony

6
Classical Management
  • 1. Scientific Management
  • The use of the scientific method to define the
    one best way for a job to be done.
  • 2. Administrative Management
  • General theories of what managers do and what
    constitutes good management practice.

7
Scientific Management
  • Fredrick W. Taylor Father of Scientific
    Management.
  • Develop a science for each element of the job
  • Systematic selection and training of workers
  • Supervision
  • Support workers by helping them perform the work
    as required.

8
Scientific Management
  • Science of work?
  • Aim - to increase productivity of workers.
  • How?
  • Increase efficiency
  • How?
  • Time and motion studies
  • Observations, stop watch recordings, flaws
    identified such as, the kind of equipment.

9
Scientific Management
  • The economic man?
  • What the workmen want from their employers
    beyond anything else is high wages, (Taylor,
    1911, p22 in Shop Management)
  • Incentives- wages linked with production

10
Scientific Management
  • Other prominent theorists
  • Frank and Lillian Gilbreth- time and motion
    pioneers
  • Henry Gantt - Gantt chart and incentive systems

11
General Administrative Theorists
  • Henri Fayol
  • Universal management process
  • Max Weber
  • Ideal bureaucracy

12
ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGEMENT
Organising
Planning
Commanding
Henri Fayol
Co-ordinating
Controlling
13
Fayols 14 Principles
14
BUREAUCRATIC MANAGEMENT
  • Max Weber (1864- 1920) German sociologist
  • Analysed organisation design and conceived the
    notion of the ideal bureaucracy as a rational
    set of guidelines
  • Developed a theory of authority structures and
    described organisational activity based on
    authority relations

15
BUREAUCRATIC MANAGEMENT
Advancement on merit
Hierarchy of positions
Specialisation of labour
Max Weber
Formal rules and procedures
Impersonality of processes
16
Classical Management
  • Universalist approach
  • Efficiency
  • Focus on formal structure
  • Standardisation
  • Control
  • Rationalism
  • Separation of conceptualisation of work from
    execution of work
  • Impersonal
  • Mechanistic model
  • Inflexible

17
Behavioural approach
  • Study of management that focuses on human
    behaviour
  • Emphasises individual attitudes and group
    processes.

18
Early exponents
  • Hugo Munsterburg (1863-1916) - selection and
    motivation in management, creating optimal
    psychological conditions, behaviour shaping
  • Mary Parker Follett - adult education,
    leadership, importance of group functioning

19
Behavioural approach
  • Elton Mayo - Hawthorne studies 1927-32
  • Human relations movement -Maslow, McGregor (X/Y)
    - emphasised a concern for workers
  • Organisational behaviour

20
Hawthorne studies
  • Series of experiments at Hawthorne plant of
    Western Electric Company

21
Hawthorne studies
  • Findings suggested that psychological factors
    and social interaction influence productivity.
  • Drew attention towards group dynamics

22
Human Relations Movement
  • Human relations movement grew from Hawthorne
    studies.
  • Proposed that workers respond primarily to the
    social context of work, including social
    conditioning, group norms, and interpersonal
    dynamics.

23
Human Relations Movement
  • Assumed that the managers concern for workers
    would lead to increased worker satisfaction and
    improved performance.
  • An effort to make managers more sensitive to
    employees needs
  • Key influencers
  • Abraham Maslow
  • Douglas McGregor

24
Maslows hierarchy of needs
Self-actualisation
Esteem
Social
Safety
Physiological
25
McGregors Theory X and Theory Y
Theory Y
Theory X
Natural
Avoid work
Self-direction
Control
Seek responsibility
Avoid responsibility
Good decisions
Security
26
Behavioural science theorists
  • Scientific study of human behaviour in
    organisations
  • Examples
  • Fred Fiedler - Leadership
  • Victor Vroom - Leadership
  • Frederick Herzberg - Motivation
  • Richard Hackman - Job design

27
Behavioural Management Approach
  • Provides insights into individual, interpersonal
    and group processes encourages managers to take
    such factors into account
  • Suffers from a simplicity of formulation,
    difficulty in prediction of human behaviour

28
Quantitative Management
  • Management science - mathematical and statistical
    methods and modelling to predict needs or to
    design systems
  • Operations management - applied management
    science, e.g. using linear programming for
    production and inventory control, scheduling and
    planning

29
Quantitative Management
  • Assists in decision making, and in understanding
    complex organisational processes
  • Is not able to fully explain or predict
    behaviour of people in organisations often uses
    simplistic mathematical models with unfounded
    assumptions

30
Contemporary Theories
  • Systems Theory
  • - Inputs, transformation, outputs, feedback.
  • - Open closed systems

31
Systems Perspective
  • Synergy
  • Subsystems are more successful working together
    in a cooperative and coordinated fashion than
    working alone.
  • The whole system (subsystems working together as
    one system) is more productive and efficient than
    the sum of its parts.

32
Systems Perspective
  • Entropy
  • A normal process in which an organisational
    system declines due to failure to adjust to
    changes in its environment
  • Entropy can be avoided and the organisation
    re-energised through organisational change and
    renewal.

33
Contemporary Theories
  • Contingency Theory
  • Each organisation is unique
  • There is no one universal right way for all
    occasions
  • Managerial decisions are contingent upon the
    current organisational environment

34
Contemporary Theories
  • Theory Z
  • The best of Japanese and American practice
  • Total quality approaches
  • W Edwards Deming

35
Summary
  • Knowing history and theory can minimise chances
    of repeating errors
  • Different perspectives offer the opportunity to
    understand present trends.
  • Challenges will always exist.

36
Food for thought
  • What can be learnt from classical management? Do
    you see it in action today?
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