Title: MANAGEMENT A PACIFIC RIM FOCUS
1MANAGEMENTA PACIFIC RIM FOCUS
- Lecture 2
- 4 August, 2004
- PIONEERING IDEAS IN MANAGEMENT
2Last Week THE CHALLENGE OF MANAGEMENT
- Overview of management
- What is management? (POLC)
- The management process
- What managers actually do (Mintzberg) -
Interpersonal, informational, decisional,
negotiator) - Work methods, roles, work agendas
- Managerial knowledge, skills, performance
- Management job types
- Vertical differences in management roles
- Horizontal differences in management roles,
entrepreneurial managers - The nature of 21st century management
- Change innovation
- Diversity
- Globalisation
- Quality and organisational improvement
3This week -
- Preclassical contributors to management theory
- Classical theorists
- Scientific management
- Bureaucratic management
- Administrative management
- Behavioural theorists
- Early theorists
- The Hawthorne studies
- The Human relations movement
- Behavioural science
- Quantitative management
- Management science
- Operations management
- Management information systems
- Contemporary ideas
- Systems theory
- Contingency theory
- Theory Z
- Total quality
- Implications for managing innovation
4The Birth of Management Ideas
- Growth of factories during the industrial
revolution (1800s) - Need for effective ways to co-ordinate a large
number of people - Need for efficiency in producing goods
- A number of individuals starting looking for
solutions to particular problems - Robert Owen
- Charles Babbage
- Henry R. Towne
5PRECLASSICAL CONTRIBUTORS TO MANAGEMENT THEORY
- Robert Owen - concern for working conditions
- Charles Babbage - specialisation of labour,
incentive payments - Henry R Towne - the professionalisation of
management
6Robert Owen
- A successful British entrepreneur (1771-1858), he
was running a cotton mill in Lanark, Scotland. - Was interested in his employees working and
living conditions - Worked to improve employees living conditions by
upgrading streets, houses, sanitation, and the
educational system. - He was ahead of his time, his ideas laid
groundwork to the human relations movement
7Charles Babbage
- An English mathematician (1792-1871) - is known
as the father of modern computing. - Difficulties in managing his various projects,
however, led him to look at new ways of doing
things. - He was excited by work specialisation and the
degree work is divided into jobs. - He recognised that both physical work and mental
work could be specialised. - Developed a profit-sharing plan
8Henry R. Towne
- Henry R. Towne (1844-1924) was was a mechanical
engineer, president of Yale and Towne
Manufacturing Company. - He explained the need to view management as a
separate field on a par with engineering. - In 1886 he delivered the paper The engineer as
an economist to the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers in Chicago. - He observed that although good engineering skills
and good business skills were rarely combined in
one person, both are needed to effectively run an
organisation. - Called for the establishment of the science of
management and the development of management
principles.
9Classical Viewpoint
- Henry R. Townes call to establish management as
a separate field generated a major approach
called the Classical Viewpoint. - It comprised three different management
approaches - Scientific Management
- Bureaucratic Management
- Administrative Management
- This Viewpoint includes early work and
contributions making up the core of the field of
management - Frederick Taylor attended Henrys paper
presentation
10CLASSICAL THEORISTS - SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
- Frederick Taylor
- Select and train the best
- One best way to do work/Time and motion study
- Co-operate with workers for success
- Divide work and responsibility, workers/managers
- Frank (1868-1924) Lillian (1878-1972) Gilbreth
- time and motion pioneers - Henry Gantt (1861-1919) - pay incentives, Gantt
chart.
11Frederick Taylor
- Frederick Taylor (1856-1915), called the father
of scientific management. - Was an apprentice pattern maker and machinist at
a local firm - Moved to Midvale Steel, rising from labourer to
chief engineer in six years allowed him to tackle
a serious problem he saw, - Workers were working at rate less than full
capacity, Frederick believed the reason was - Workers feared that increased productivity would
cause loss of jobs - Management wage system encouraged workers to
operate slowly - General methods of working and rules of thumb
were often inefficient
12CLASSICAL THEORISTS - BUREAUCRATIC MANAGEMENT
Advancement on merit
Hierarchy of positions
Specialisation of labour
Max Weber (1864-1920)
Formal rules and procedures
Impersonality of processes
13CLASSICAL THEORISTS - ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGEMENT
Organising
Planning
Commanding
Henri Fayol (1841-1925)
Co-ordinating
Controlling
14BEHAVIOURAL THEORISTS
- Early theorists
- Hugo Munsterberg (1863-1916)
- Selection,
- Creating optimal psychological conditions,
behaviour shaping - Mary Parker Follett (1836-1933)
- Importance of group functioning
15BEHAVIOURAL THEORISTS - CONT.
- The Hawthorne studies (1924-1933)
- Supervisory style/Social Interaction
- Human relations movement
- Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
- Hierarchy of needs
- Douglas McGregor (1906-1964)
- Theory X Y
16MASLOWS HIERARCHY OF NEEDS
Self-actualisation
Esteem
Social
Safety
Physiological
17McGREGORS THEORY X Y
Theory X
Theory Y
Work is natural
Work avoiding
Capable of self-direction
Need to control
Seek responsibility
Avoid responsibility
Can make good decisions
Workers seek security
18BEHAVIOURAL THEORISTS - CONT.
- Behavioural science
- Scientific study of human behaviour in
organisations - Quantitative management
- Management science - mathematical and statistical
methods modelling - Operations management - control of inventory,
scheduling, planning
19CONTEMPORARY THEORIES
- Systems theory
- Inputs, transformation, outputs, feedback.
- Open closed systems
- Contingency theory
- Few universal rules exist
20Resources Human Materials Equipment Financial Inf
ormation
managerial Planning Organisation Leading Controll
ing Technology
Outcomes Products services Profit
loss employees growth satisfaction
Inputs
Transformation Process
Outputs
21CONTEMPORARY THEORIES - CONT.
- Theory Z
- The best of Japanese and American practice
- Total quality approaches
- J Edward Deming
22IMPLICATIONS FOR MANAGING INNOVATION
- Classical scientific approach
- Behavioural people, not machines
- Quantitative tools for decision-making
- Contemporary
- Systems
- Contingency
23My own experience over 35 years
- Then
- Autocratic, strong discipline
- Strict line of command
- Manager, superintendent, foreman, leading hand
- Male dominated
- Discrimination discouraged
- Management/union confrontation
- Manual work
- Labour intensive high number of female
employees
- Now
- More consultative/participative
- Fewer levels of management
- Self-managed groups with stated objectives,
Consultative Committees - Females present at most levels
- Discrimination illegal diversity welcomed
- Greater co-operation, enterprise bargaining
- Automation
- Reduction in jobs, changes in skill requirements
24My own experience over 35 years (contd)
- Then
- Piece-rate incentives
- No white-collar staff incentives
- Quality Control
- Efficiency initiatives by management and
engineers - Minimal customer awareness
- Workplace safety desirable
- Fulltime/permanent
- Rigid work arrangements
- Now
- Broader-based incentives
- All covered by incentives part of salary at
risk - Total Quality Management
- Continuous improvement by all in the workforce
- Customer-driven internal and external customer
- OHS top priority
- Contracted/casual
- Flexible work arrangements
25SUMMARY OF PIONEERING IDEAS IN MANAGEMENT
Preclassical contributors - Owen, Babbage, Towne
Classical theorists Scientific management -
Taylor, Gilbreths, Gantt Bureaucratic management
- Weber Administrative management -
Fayol Behavioural theorists Early theorists -
Munsterberg, Follett The Hawthorne studies -
Supervisory style The Human relations movement -
Maslow, McGregor Behavioural science
Quantitative management Management
science Operations management Management
information systems Contemporary ideas Systems
theory - Open closed Contingency theory Theory
Z - Bridging Japanese and US approaches Total
quality - J Edward Deming Implications for
managing innovation Some recent experience
26Thank you for your attention