how%20to%20think%20like%20a%20manager - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

how%20to%20think%20like%20a%20manager

Description:

how to think like a manager. Diagnosing problems in ... burden of casuistic argumentation and ethical reasoning. Persuasion: policy, fact, and value ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:138
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: Fre6
Learn more at: https://willamette.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: how%20to%20think%20like%20a%20manager


1
how to think like a manager
  • Diagnosing problems in complex, messy
    situations.Prescribing solutions to
    organizational problems.Sustaining the
    rhetorical burden of casuistic argumentation and
    ethical reasoning.

2
Persuasion policy, fact, and value
3
propositions of policy stock issues
(systematized common sense)
  • Need for change/action identification of
    deficiencies -- problem diagnosis
  • Workability of policy alternative
  • Practicality of policy alternative
  • Policy doesnt entail greater evils
  • Best available alternative

4
Workability
  • The proposed policy prescription will at least
    in theory remedy the problem diagnosis.
    Proposal meets the identified need.

5
practicality
  • The means needed to bring about the proposed
    change are available.
  • Resources
  • Time
  • Commitment
  • Understanding

6
Best policy alternative
  • Compared with the alternatives, the recommended
    policy offers the best balance of advantages and
    disadvantages (benefits and costs)

7
Facts(propositions of fact are not facts -- they
are belief claims for which factual evidence is
needed)
  • Causal claims
  • Predictive claims
  • Historical claims

8
Value claims
  • Central to managerial reasoning
  • Examples?

9
Dialogue ethics I
  1. Practice inquiry before advocacy. Be open to a
    variety of points of view before you embrace any
    one of them.
  2. Know your subject do your homework
  3. Be honest about what you know and dont know
    dont invent
  4. Try to tell the truth as you perceive it dont
    lie or distort

10
Dialogue ethics II
  1. Dont oversimplify
  2. Acknowledge possible weaknesses in your position.
    Be honest about your own ambivalence or
    uncertainty.
  3. Avid irrelevant emotional appeals or diversionary
    tactics
  4. Appeal to the best motives of your fellows, not
    their worst

11
Dialogue ethics I
  1. Be prepared to lose if winning means doing
    psychological harm to others and demeaning
    yourself in the bargain

12
Reverse Engineering or Unpacking Diagnostic
Arguments
  • The AFMC Case

13
Problem diagnosis can be represented as follows.
  • (1) Described Situation (S) AS (Perceptions,
    Theories)
  • (2) Diagnosis (D) AD (Described situation,
    Theories, Values)

14
Babbitts diagnostic conclusion
  • (1) D A ()
  • (2) D A (S, T), S is situation, T is theory
  • (3) T A (PPG, KG, MAN)
  • (4) MAN A (MAC, BPM)
  • Where
  • PPG refers to public value, with cost being a
    factor.
  • KG refers to organizational knowledge, combined
    with S, needed for an assessment of future
    operating environment.
  • MAN refers to practice-oriented management
    disciplines
  • MAC refers to managerial accounting and control
  • BPM refers to business process management

15
managers engage in a half dozen different
intellectual performance
  • 1. Synthesizing management ideas see formula
    (4).
  • 2. Selecting and reformulating KG.
  • 3. Synthesizing PPG and MAN translating
    efficiency as a good into doctrinal arguments
    about how to pursue this good in big
    organizations.
  • 4. Synthesizing MAN and KG seeing some
    tendencies in governmental organizations to exert
    negative influence over the practicality of
    doctrines about how to achieve efficiency.
  • 5. Perceiving S an exercise in attending and
    equivocality reduction, aided by tacit
    consideration of T.
  • 6. Diagnosing mixing S and T to establish D.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com