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Title: Managers and Management


1
Managers and Management
  • HDCS 4393/4394InternshipDr. Shirley Ezell

2
Managers and Management
  • Managers in todays market must update tools and
    principles on a continuous basis.
  • Management development is increasingly global in
    outlook and places a high value on contributing
    to organizational effectiveness and competitive
    advantage.
  • To be successful a manager must use and
    integrated approach, using a combination of tools
    and principles.

3
Management Development
  • High performance leading organizations are
    increasingly distinguished by 7 features
  • 1. Linking management development to business
    plans and strategies.
  • 2. Being boundless, flat, nonhierarchical
  • 3. Using global and cross cultural orientation
  • 4. Individualizing learning that is focused
    within the context of organizational learning
  • 5. Applying customized training aligned with
    corporate culture
  • 6. Employing a career development focus
  • 7. Focusing on the development of core
    competencies.

4
Management Affects Everyone
  • Our society depends on the goods and services
    provided by different types of organizations that
    individuals manage.
  • All organizations are guided and directed by the
    decisions of one or more individuals who are
    commonly known as managers.

5
Management Affects Everyone
  • Peter Drucker, a nationally recognized
    management consultant describes 3 major tasks of
    managers as
  • 1. To decided the purpose and mission of the
    organization.
  • 2. To make work productive.
  • 3. To manage social impacts and responsibilities.

6
Management as a Process
  • What do statements like that is a well-managed
    company mean? They seem to imply that
    management is some type of work
    or set of activities and that these
    activities are performed quite well
    and sometimes not so well.

7
Management as a Discipline
  • Classifying management as a discipline
    suggests that there is a body of
    knowledge that can be learned.
  • (1) Management is a subject with principles,
    concepts, and theories.
  • (2) A critical purpose of studying management is
    to learn how in the process of managing to apply
    principles, concepts, and theories of management
    and this is particularly emphasized throughout
    your internship experiences.
  • (3) This internship semester you will assume the
    role of a manager even if this is not your
    current position. Why? To begin to think,
    analyze, and apply management theories, concepts
    and principles within your internship setting.
    It is never to early to start thinking like a
    manager.

8
Management is also a Human Activity
  • As a human activity management emphasizes the
    importance of employees with whom managers work
    and whom they manage in accomplishing an
    organizations objectives.
  • In organizations, people are the most important
    asset. Successful managers understand this and
    recognize the need to establish a strong bond
    between the organization and the relationships of
    the manager and the people they manage.

9
Management As a Career
  • We are emphasizing management in the internship
    experiences because we recognize that in todays
    environment which is fast changing and
    competitive. We can contribute to successful
    organizations by providing students with a solid
    foundation of experience in thinking like a
    manager while they are learning about the
    organization.
  • Spend this internship semester thinking about the
    management theories and principles that can
    contribute positively to your organization. And
    also think about how you would manage each
    situation for a more positive outcome.

10
Definition of Management
  • The management process is an integrated whole
    even though we may describe the process as a
    series of separate activities to understand the
    parts.
  • The model we are using identifies the management
    functions as planning, organizing, and
    controlling linked together by leading.
  • What does this mean? Planning determines what
    results the organization will achieve, organizing
    specifies how it will achieve the results, and
    controlling determines whether results are
    achieved and by using planning, organizing and
    controlling managers exercise leadership.

11
Organizing
  • Leading is the management process
    that integrates everything else a manger
    does.
  • Leadership is a difficult concept to define but
    means the ability to influence others to pursue a
    common goal.
  • Think about good leaders that you have known.
    Good leaders are typically driven by an
    overriding vision or mission.

12
Organizing
  • The organizing, leading, and controlling
    functions all come from planning. How? These
    functions carry out the planning decisions.
  • These plans may differ in focus from goals for
    the short or long term but as a whole these plans
    are the primary tools for preparing for and
    dealing with changes in the organizations
    environment.

13
Organizing
  • The purpose of the organizing function is to
    create a structure of task and authority
    relationships to achieve the organizations
    objectives.
  • Organizing can be viewed as turning plans into
    action and this allows an organization to
    function effectively as a cohesive whole.

14
Controlling
  • The controlling function of management
    requires 3 elements
  • 1. Established standards of performance.
  • 2. Information that indicates deviations between
    actual performance and the established standards.
  • 3. Action to correct performance that does not
    meet these standards.

15
And Now To The Fun! Learning How to Manage
  • The internship is trying to help you develop your
    knowledge, attitudes and skills. And it will
    teach you how to apply your formal education so
    that once you become a manager you will
    understand how to face challenges and make
    decisions.
  • The term management refers to the body of
    knowledge, concepts and procedures used by
    managers.
  • A great deal of management knowledge comes from
    the autobiographies of people who practiced
    management.

16
Learning How to Manage (Cont.)
  • Many disciplines have contributed to the study of
    management, such as social scientists,
    psychologists, sociologists and others. Consider
    management a social phenomenon and the manager to
    be an important social resource to scientifically
    understand and study. Other professions like
    mathematics, accounting, philosophy and numerous
    others have contributed applications to the
    practice of management.

17
Learning How to Manage (Cont.)
  • In the end contemporary management knowledge is
    the product of 3 basic approaches
  • The Classical Approach
  • The Behavioral Approach
  • The management Science Approach

18
The Classical Approach
  • The serious study of management began in the late
    19th century with the need to increase the
    efficiency and productivity of the workforce.
  • The classical approach to management can be
    understood by looking at 2 perspectives
  • 1. Scientific management concentrated on the
    problems of lower-level managers
  • 2. Classical organizational theory focused on
    problems of top-level managers.

19
The Classical Approach (Cont.)
  • Think about the context. At the turn of the 20th
    century, business was expanding and creating new
    products and new markets, but labor was in short
    supply.
  • The solutions were (1) substitute
    capital for labor or (2) use labor
    more efficiently.

20
The Classical Approach (Cont.)
  • Frederick W. Taylor made an important
    contribution to scientific management. He
    observed workers producing far less than capacity
    in steel firms. He recognized their were no
    studies to determine expected daily output per
    worker in the form of work standards and the
    relationship between these standards and wages.
    Then he tried to find the one best way to do a
    job, determining the optimum work pace, the
    training of people to do the job properly and
    successful rewards for performance but using an
    incentive pay system.

21
The Classical Approach
  • Taylors work lead to the following 4 principles
  • Principle 1. Study the way workers perform their
    tasks, gather all the informal knowledge that
    workers possess, and experiment with ways to
    improves the performance of tasks.
  • Principle 2. Codify the new methods of performing
    tasks into written rules and standard operating
    procedures (sops).
  • Principle 3. Carefully select workers so that
    they possess skills and abilities that match the
    needs of the task and train them to perform
    according to rules and procedures.
  • Principle 4. Establish a fair or acceptable level
    of performance for a task and then develop a pay
    system that awards acceptable performance.

22
Classical Organizational Theory
  • Another body of ideas developed at the same
    time. While scientific management focused on
    the management of work, the Classical approach
    focused on the management of organizations.
  • The classical organizational theory focus was on
    (1) developing principles that could guide the
    design, creation, and maintenance of large
    organizations and (2) to identify the basic
    functions of managing organizations.
  • Engineers were the main contributors to
    scientific management while practicing executives
    were the major contributors to classical
    organizational theory.

23
The Contributors to Classical Organizational
Theory Weber and Fayol
  • Max Weber was the primary architect of the theory
    of the organization as a bureaucracy.
  • His view of a bureaucracy was a smoothly
    functioning, highly efficient machine in which
    each part is tuned to perform its prescribed
    function.

24
Max Weber (Cont.)
  • Weber believed that an efficient organization
    should be based on 5 principles
  • Principle 1. In a bureaucracy, a managers formal
    authority comes from the position held in the
    organization.
  • Principle 2. In this context people should occupy
    positions because of their performance, not
    because of their social standing or personal
    contacts.
  • Principle 3. The extent of each positions formal
    authority and task responsibilities should be
    clearly understood.
  • Principle 4. Positions should be arranged
    hierarchically to that authority is exercised
    effectively and employees know to whom they are
    to report and who reports to them.
  • Principle 5. Managers must create a will-defined
    systems of rules, standard operating procedures,
    and norms to control behavior within an
    organization.

25
The Contributors to Classical Organizational
Theory Weber and Fayol
  • Henry Fayol was the other major contributor and
    devised his 14 principles of effective
    management
  • Principle 1. Division of Labor Advocated
    specialization and increasing workers
    responsibilities.
  • Principle 2. Management Authority and
    Responsibility Managers must have the authority
    to give orders and be responsible for
    effectiveness of their departments.
  • Principle 3. Unity of Command Employees should
    receive orders from and report to only one
    supervisor.

26
Henry Fayol (Cont.)
  • Principle 4. Line of Authority Restricting the
    organizations number of levels enable it
    to act quickly and flexibly.
  • Principle 5. Centralization Managers must decide
    how much authority to centralize at the top and
    how much to give to workers.
  • Principle 6. Unity of Direction All workers
    should be committed to the same plan of action.
  • Principle 7. Equity Workers are expected to
    perform at high levels and to be treated with
    respect and justice.
  • Principle 8. Order Order is the methodical
    arrangement of jobs to provide the greatest
    benefits and career opportunities.
  • Principle 9. Initiative Managers must encourage
    workers to act on their own to benefit the
    organization.

27
Henry Fayol (Cont.)
  • Principle 10. Discipline Employees would be
    expected to be obedient, energetic and
    concerned about the organizations welfare.
  • Principle 11. Remuneration Managers should use
    reward systems, profit sharing and bonuses to
    acknowledge high performance.
  • Principle 12. Stability of Tenure of Personnel
    Long term employment helps employees develop the
    skills to make significant contributions.
  • Principle 13. Coordination of Individual Interest
    to the Common Interest Employees subordinate
    their individual interest to those of the firm.
  • Principle 14. Espirit de Corps Importance of a
    shared commitment and enthusiasm in an effective
    organization.

28
Contributions of the Classical Approach
  • The greatest contribution of the classical
    approach was the identification of management as
    an important element of organized society.
  • The identification of management functions
    planning, organizing and controlling provided the
    basis for training new managers and was a
    valuable practice.
  • Many management techniques used today time and
    motion analysis, work simplification, incentive
    wage systems, production scheduling,
    personnel testing, and budgeting are
    techniques from the classical approach.

29
Limitations of the Classical Approach
  • One major criticism is that the majority of
    insights are to simplistic for todays complex
    organization. The classical approach and the
    scientific management approach worked in
    organizations that were very
    stable and predictable and
    today little of that exists.

30
Behavioral Approach
  • The behavioral approach to management has 2
    branches the Human relations approach from the
    1950s and the behavioral science approach.
  • In the human relations approach managers must
    know why their subordinated behave as they do and
    what psychological and social factors influence
    them.
  • Advocates of this approach try to show how the
    process and functions of management are affected
    by differences in individual behavior and the
    influence of groups in the workplace.
  • This approach requires managers to recognize
    employees need for recognition and social
    acceptance and this results in training in human
    relation skills for managers.

31
The Behavioral Science Approach
  • The individuals in the behavioral science branch
    of the behavioral approach believe that the human
    is more complex than the economic man
    description of the classical approach and the
    social man description of the human relations
    approach.
  • The behavioral science approach concentrates more
    on the nature of work itself and the degree to
    which it can fulfill the human need to use skills
    and abilities.

32
The Behavioral Science Approach
  • Mary Parker Follett (1868-1933) provided
    much of the management theories
    helping organizations recognize that they
    could be viewed form the perspective of
    individual or group behavior. She was a social
    philosopher whose writings provided a more
    people-centered view of the organization than the
    predominant scientific management writing.
  • According to Follett, the managers job was to
    harmonize and coordinate group efforts and
    managers and workers should view themselves as
    partners in a common project. Managers would act
    more from their knowledge of human behavior than
    from their formal authority.

33
The Behavioral Science Approach
  • The Hawthorne Studies a series of research
    studies conducted at the Hawthorne Works of
    General Electric helped lend support to
    the behavioral approach to management
    theory.
  • The research used varying lighting levels in the
    plants secretarial pool to determine the effects
    of different levels on productivity expecting
    productivity levels to drop when lighting levels
    dropped. The Result was surprising productivity
    only dropped when workers could no longer see
    well enough to do their work.
  • The results showed that the presence of the
    researchers was affecting the results because the
    workers enjoyed the attention and produced the
    results they believed the researchers wanted.
  • Summary The Hawthorne effect was used to
    describe this effect of increased productivity
    due to increased attention.

34
Contributions of Behavioral Approach
  • Contributions of the Behavioral Approach
    include increased use of teams to
    accomplish organizational goals, focus
    on training and development of employees,
    and the use of innovative reward and
    incentive systems.
  • In addition the focus on modern management theory
    resulted in empowering employees through shared
    information.

35
Limitations of the Behavioral Approach
  • The limitations included the difficulty for
    managers in problem situations and the fact that
    human behavior is complex. This complicated the
    problem for managers trying to use insights from
    the behavioral sciences which often changed when
    different behavioral scientists provided
    different solutions.

36
The ManagementScience Approach
  • The Management Science approach is a modern
    version of the early emphasis on the management
    of work in scientific management. It features
    the use of mathematics and statistics to aid in
    resolving production and operations problems,
    thus focusing on solving technical rather than
    human behavior problems.
  • The management science approach was used in World
    War II when the English formed teams of
    scientists, mathematicians, and physicist into
    units called operations research teams, and today
    businesses use these teams to deal with operating
    issues.

37
Contributions of the Management Science Approach
  • Most important contributions are in production
    management focusing on manufacturing production
    and the flow of material in a plant and in
    operations management solving production
    scheduling problems, budgeting problems and
    maintenance of optimal inventory levels.

38
Limitations of the Management Science Approach
  • The shortfall of this approach is that management
    science does not deal with the people aspect of
    an organization.

39
Attempts to Integrate the Three Approaches to
Management
  • One attempt to integrating the three approaches
    to management is the Systems Approach. The
    Systems Approach stresses that organizations must
    be viewed as systems in which each part is linked
    to each other.
  • The other approach is the Contingency Approach.
    The Contingency Approach stresses that the
    correctness of a managerial practice is
    contingent on how it fits the particular
    situation.
  • The systems approach views the elements of an
    organization as interconnected and as being
    linked to its environment. See the discussion on
    Compaq.

40
Attempts to Integrate the Three Approaches to
Management
  • It is important to understand that most
    organizations must operate as open systems to
    survive and use a systems perspective to
    management. And the objectives of the individual
    parts of the organization must be compromised for
    the objectives of the entire firm.
  • See the section on Management Focus on Best
    Practice and review the critical principles of
    customer responsiveness.

41
Attempts to Integrate the Three Approaches to
Management
  • The contingency theorists believe that most
    workplace situations are too complex to analyze
    and control as the scientific management approach
    suggests. Paul Hersey has developed a
    situationalist theory of leadership. He believes
    managers should not ascribe to one best approach.
    Instead managers should identify the appropriate
    principles, along with relevant contingency
    variables and then evaluate these factors. In
    summary, the contingency approach involves
    identifying the important variables in different
    situations, evaluating the variables, and then
    applying appropriate management knowledge and
    principles in selecting an effective approach to
    the situation.

42
Attempts to Integrate the Three Approaches to
Management
  • Although both the systems approach and the
    contingency approach have developed value to
    insights on management. It is early in their
    stage of development and the report card is not
    complete on how these approaches will contribute
    compared to other methods.
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