Title: MANAGEMENT HISTORY
1 MANAGEMENT HISTORY
2- What is management getting things done through
other people - What can history tell us?
- Knowledge of management history can increase
understanding of management theory and practice - Earliest forms of Management
- Pyramids Great
wall of China -
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3History Management
- Studying history is a way to achieve strategic
thinking, see the big picture, and improve
conceptual skills. - Before Industrial Revolution, organizational
scale in economic undertakings was small. - Neverthless, there was still a need for
management in the conduct of military campaigns,
in household affairs, and in the administartion
of government.
4The Near East Priest-Ruler
- One such divine king was the Babylonian
Hammurabi, who received his right to rule and his
code of laws from the sun god. In 2250 BC,
Hammurabi issued a code of 282 laws, which
governed business dealings, personal behavior,
interpersonal relations, wages, punishments, and
a host of other societal matters.
5The Near East Priest-Ruler
- Law 104, for examle, was the first mention of
accounting. It dealt with the handling receipts
and established an agency relationship between
the merchant and the agent. - Law 229 If a builder builds a house for a man
and does not make its construction firm, and the
house collapses, and causes the death of the
owner, that builder shall be put to death.
6The Far East Philosophical Foundations of
Management
- Chinese general Sun Tzu (600 BC)
- Structuring of army into subdivisions,
gradations of rank among the officers, using
gongs, flags, and signal fires for communications.
7The Far East Philosophical Foundations of
Management
- Planning for the battle
- If our forces are ten to the enemys one,
surround them. If five to one, attack them. If
twice as numerous, divide our army in two, one to
meet the enemy in front and the other fall upon
their rear. If equally matched, we can offer
battle. If slightly inferior in number, we can
avoid the enemy. If quite unequal in every way,
we can flee from them.
8The Far East Philosophical Foundations of
Management
- Confucius (552-479 BC) Merit system
- Govenment offices should go to individuals of
proven merit and ability. Merit exams, based on
Confucian advice, began during the Han dynasty
(206BC-220AD). Merit as a basis for selection
would in time lead to merit rating (performance
appraisal) for promotions. The Sung dynasty
started a merit rating system around AD 962.
9The Far East Philosophical Foundations of
Management
- There is evidence that the Chinese were familiar
with the division of labor and the departmental
form of organization as early as AD 1. An
inscription on a rice bowl indicates that it was
made in a government workshop in which there was
a high degree of specilization of labor among the
various artisans. The workshop was divided into
three departments accounting, security, and
production.
10Egypt The Rule of Ten
- Egyptians were aware of limits to the number of
people one manager could supervise. There was a
ratio of about ten servants to each supervisor.
There were distinctive dressing for managers and
workers. The supervisors wore kilts or
ropbes,while the latter were dressed so as to
represent their trade or occupation.
11EVOLUTION OF MODERN MANAGEMENT
1. CLASSICAL APPROACHES 2. HUMAN
RELATIONS APPROACHES 3. POST-1945
APPROACHES
12Classical Approaches to Management
13SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
- Underlying Assumptions
- There is One Best Way to do a job
- Workers are primarily motivated by increased
earnings
14SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
- 1. There is One Best Way to do a job
- By applying scientific methods of analysis, it is
possible to breakdown the work into tasks and
subtasks and rearrange them into the most
efficient method of working
15SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
- 2. Workers are primarily motivated by increased
earnings. - By finding the best way of producing,
productivity will rise and so workers should
receive better wages. - This is the basis of the argument that
scientific management uses money as a motivator
for workers.
16Taylors Five Principles of Management
- Develop standard methods for performing each job
- Select workers with appropriate abilities for
each job - Train workers in standard methods
- Support workers eliminate interruptions
- Provide wage incentives
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17ADMINISTRATIVE PRINCIPLES
- Henry Fayol French Mining Engineer
- concerned with making the overall organization
more effective - developed theories of what constituted good
management practice - proposed a universal set of management functions
- published principles of management
- fundamental, teachable rules of management
18Fayols 14 Principles of Management
- Division of Work
- Authority
- Discipline
- Unity of Command
- Unity of Direction (One Boss)
- Subordination of Interests
- Remuneration
19Fayols 14 Principles of Management
- Centralization
- Scalar Chain (Clear Boxes)
- Order
- Equity
- Stability of Personnel
- Initiative
- Esprit De Corps
20Centralization and Decentralization
DEGREE OF CENTRALIZATION
DEGREE OF DECENTRALIZATION
Judging by the size of the desk, where do
decisions get made? Which organization looks more
appealing to you?
21BUREAUCRATIC ORGANIZATIONS
- A systematic approach that looked at the
organizations as a whole is the bureaucratic
organizations approach, developed by the German
theorist Max Weber. - During the late 19th century many business
organizations were still managed on a personal,
familiy-like basis. Employees were loyal to a
single individual rather than to the organization
or its mission.
22BUREAUCRATIC ORGANIZATIONS
- Principles of Bureaucracy
- A managers formal authority derives from the
position he or she holds in the organiztion - People should occupy positions because of their
performance, not because of their social standing
or personal contacts - The extend of positions formal authority and
task responsibilities, and its relationship to
other positions in an organization, should be
clearly specified. - So that authority can be exercised effectively in
an organization, positions should be arranged
hierarhically, so employees know whom to report
and who reports to them. - Managers must create a well-defined system of
rules, standard operating procedures, and norms
so that they can effectively control behavior
within an organization.
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24United Parcel Service
- UPS specializes in the delivery of small
packages. Why has the Brown Giant been so
successful? - One important reason is the concept of
bureaucracy. UPS is bound up in rules and
regulations. There are safety rules for drivers,
loaders, clerks, and managers. Strict dress codes
are enforced- no beards hair cannot touch the
collar mustaches must be trimmed evenly and no
sideburns. Rules specify cleanliness standards
for buildings and other properties.
25United Parcel Service (cont.)
- No drinking or eating is permitted at employee
desks. Every manager is given bound copies of
policy books and expected to use them regularly. - UPS also has a well-defined division of labor.
Each plant consists of specialized drivers,
loaders, clerks, washers, sorters, and
maintenance personnel. UPS thrives on written
records. Daily worksheets specify performance
goals and work output. Daily employee quotas and
achievements are reported on a weekly and monthly
basis.
26United Parcel Service
- Technical qualification is the criterion for
hiring and promotion. The UPS policy book says
the leader is expected to have the knowledge and
capacity to justify the position of leadership.
Favoritism is forbidden. The bureaucratic model
works just fine at UPS, the tightest ship in the
shipping business.
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28HUMAN RELATIONS APPROACH
- Hawthorne Studies
- started in 1924 at Western Electric Company
- began with illumination studies
- intensity of illumination not related to
productivity - Elton Mayo studies of job design
- looked at the importance of social norms as
determinants of individual work behavior - changed the view of workers as machines
29Hawthorne Studies
- This research began as an attempt to investigate
how the level of lighting or illumination affect
worker performance. - The researchers found that regardless of whether
they raised or lowered the level of illumination,
productivity increased. - It was found that employees performed better when
managers treated them in a positive manner.
30POST-1945 APPROACHES
- System Theory
- Contingency Theory
- Total Quality Management