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Chapter 2 Management, Yesterday and Today

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Title: Chapter 2 Management, Yesterday and Today


1
Chapter 2Management, Yesterday and Today
2
Historical background of management
  • Are there any management in the history?
  • Pyramid and the Great Wall
  • The Wealth of Nation by Adam Smith
  • Industrial revolution
  • Chinese traditional government and confucianism
  • Politics is also a kind of management.
  • Modernization and rationalization

3
Management theories
General administrative theory
Historical background Early examples Adam
Smith Industrial revelution
Scientific management
Quantitative approach
System approach
Organizational behavior Early advocates Hawthorne
studies
Contingency approach
4
Scientific management
  • Frederick W. Taylor (1856-1915), the father of
    scientific management.
  • Taylors four principles
  • Develop a science for each element of an
    individuals work, replacing the old
    rule-of-thumb method.
  • Scientifically select and then train, and develop
    the workers.
  • Heartily cooperation between manager and
    employee.
  • Divide work and responsibility equally.
  • Significance and critics.
  • Can you find some scientific management now?

5
Taylorism and Fordism
  • Mass production.
  • Machine controls people.
  • Modernization.

6
Frank and Lillian Gilbreth
  • Construction contractor and psychologist.
  • Optimizing work performance.
  • Microchronometer and motion research.
  • Cheaper by the Dozen.
  • Time is money, efficience is life. Compare their
    time and today.

7
General administrative theory
  • Henri Fayol (1841-1925).
  • Five functions of manager
  • Planning, organizing, commanding, coordinating,
    and controlling.
  • 14 principles of management
  • Division of work, authority, discipline, unity of
    command, unity of direction, subordination of
    individual interests to general interest,
    remuneration, centralization, scalar chain,
    order, equity, stability of tenure of personnel,
    initiative, esprit de corps.

8
Max Weber (1864-1920)
  • Sociologist and religious.
  • Burearcracy, todays formal organization
  • Division of labor
  • Authority hierarchy
  • Formal selection
  • Format rules and regulations
  • Impersonality
  • Career orientation
  • Other type of organization
  • Chrisma
  • traditional
  • Organization in the future.

9
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Quantitative approach
  • Operations research or management science.
  • Statistics, optimization models, information
    models, computer simulations, linear programming,
    etc.
  • Example.
  • Queuing, ticket saling, classroom allocation.
  • Centralized transportation.
  • Restriction local, micro issue.

14
Organizational behavior
  • Early advocates
  • Robert Owen, late 1700s
  • Hugo Munsterberg, early 1900s
  • Mary Parker Follett, Early 1900s
  • Chester Barnard, 1930

15
Hawthorne Studies
  • Elton Mayo
  • Experiment on the effect of light intensity on
    output.
  • Redesign fo jobs
  • Changes in workday and workweed length
  • Introduction of rest period
  • Individual vs. group wage plans
  • Conclusion
  • Peoples behavior and attitudes are closely
    related
  • Group factors significantly affect individual
    behavior
  • Group standards establish individual worker
    output
  • Money is less a factor in determining output than
    are group standards, group attitudes, and
    security.
  • Lead to new emphasis on the human behavior
    factorin the management of organizations.

16
Behavior approach in today
  • Design jobs
  • Teams
  • Open communication
  • Motivation
  • Leadership
  • Group behavior and development

17
Systems approach
  • System
  • A set of interrelated and interdependent parts
    arranged in a manner that produces a unified
    whole.
  • close system
  • System that are not influenced by and do not
    interact with their enviroment.
  • open system
  • Systems that interact with their environment.

18
environment
system
Inputs Raw materials Human resources Capital Techn
ology Information
Transformation process Employees work
activities Management activities Technology and
operation methods
Output Products and services Financial
results Information Human results
feedback
environment
19
Contingency approach
  • Management approach that says that organizations
    are different, face different situations
    (contigencies), and require different ways of
    managing.

20
Current trends and issues
  • Globalization
  • Working with people from different cultures
  • Coping with anticapitalist backlash
  • Movement of jobs to countries with low-cost labor
  • Civilization clash
  • Global citizenship and governance

21
ethics
  • Profit and socia responsibility
  • Stakeholder vs. shareholder
  • Corporation citizenship

22
  • Workforce diversity
  • A workforce that is heterogeneous in terms of
    gender, race, ethnicity, age, and other
    characteristics that reflect differences.
  • Entrepreneurship
  • E-business
  • Knowledge management

23
Learning organization
Are there any learning organizations? Can you
give some examples?
24
Total quality management (TQM)
  • Interse focus on customer.
  • Concern for continual improvement.
  • Improvement in the quality of everything the
    organization does.
  • Accurate measurement.
  • Empowerment of employees.
  • To be perfect.
  • Examples, KFC, TOYOTA, APPLE.
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