Title: Week 5: Chapter 9
1Week 5 Chapter 9
- The Human Factor Preparing the Way
2The Human Factor Preparing the Way
- Personnel Management
- Psychology and the Individual
- The Social Problem
- Participative Decision Making
3Personnel Management A Dual Heritage
- One part of personnel management can be found in
the industrial betterment/welfare movement. - The other side comes from scientific management
and the needs for record.
4Personnel Management As Welfare Work
- A number of companies hired a welfare secretary
to advise management. Their duties were many, and
in some cases appeared to be paternalistic. - Many secretaries were female, perhaps because of
their experience in vocational guidance or social
work, or perhaps because some of their duties
resembled a role stereotype of what a woman did
i.e. administering dining facilities, handling
illnesses, etc.
5Personnel Management As Welfare Work
- This approach grew out of the Social Gospel
movement. - The moral behavior of unmarried females factory
workers was a concern. - Early companies establishing welfare offices
- National Cash Register Company in 1897
- John Bancroft and Sons in 1899
- H.J. Heinz Company in 1902
- International Harvester Company in 1903.
6Personnel Management Scientific Management Roots
- Scientific management emphasized
- Personnel selection
- Placement
- Wage plans
- Other issues involving employee welfare.
- Welfare work eventually was replace with
Employment Management after 1910 as personnel
practices were standardized and improved.
7Psychology and the Individual
- Wilhelm Wundt pioneered scientific psychology.
- He opened the first laboratory in Leipzig in
1879. - He founded experimental psychology, leading to
applied and industrial psychology.
William Wundt Courtesy of Dr. Charles I. Abramson
8The Birth of Industrial Psychology
- Hugo Munsterberg (1863-1916) applied scientific
psychology to industrial problems - Best possible worker
- Best possible work
- Best possible effect
- Munsterberg advocated
- Tests for worker selection
- Research in the learning process in training
- Studied under Wundt
Hugo Munsterberg
9Foundations of the Social Person Industrial
Sociology
- Whiting Williams (1878-1975)
- Emile Durkheim (1858-1917)
- Charles H. Cooley (1864-1929)
- Gestalt Psychology
Whiting Williams from Weekly London Tabloid,
called 'ANSWERS', dated 24th February 1934.
10Whiting Williams (1878-1975)
- Williams was a participant-observer. He put on
the clothes and guise of a worker to study work
first hand. - He emphasized the centrality of work.
- He believed
- that the job defines social status as well as a
persons place in the work situation - that the workplace is a part of a larger social
system.
11Whiting Williams
- Williams saw earnings as a matter of social
comparison influencing how a person viewed
himself relative to others (similar to equity
theory). - The Eleventh Commandment Thou shalt not take
thy neighbor for granted. - Summary Industrial sociology began with
Williams and the Social Gospel influenced his
thoughts.
12Emile Durkheim Contributions to Sociological
Theory
- Anomie state of confusion, insecurity, and
normlessness. - Mechanical societies were dominated by a
collective consciousness. - Organic societies were characterized by
interdependence and the division of labor leading
to anomie. - Durkheims thinking influenced the human
relationists view of the need for social
solidarity.
Emile Durkheim
13Social Behaviorism
- C. H. Cooley Looking Glass Self is a very
interesting way of looking at the formation of
self-efficacy, personality development, and other
similar ideas. - Gestalt psychology the whole system is greater
than the sum of its parts.
Charles H. Cooley
14Employee Participation in Decision Making
- Three paths for giving employees a voice in the
organization led to the democratization of the
workplace - Membership in a union that would represent the
workers. - Union-management cooperation
- Employee representation plans.
15The Trade Union Movement and Industrial Relations
- John R. Commons (1862-1945) was the Father of
Industrial Relations. - He was probably the first to use the term Human
Resources. - He wrote of the need for workers to have a voice
in the workplace.
John R. Commons, courtesy of the Wisconsin
Electronic Reader
16The Trade Union Movement and Industrial Relations
- John R. Commons admired Taylor.
- He was not anti-scientific management because it
worked in some firms, but felt workers needed a
say-so in the workplace.
John R. Commons, courtesy of the Wisconsin
Electronic Reader
17The Trade Union Movement and Industrial Relations
- American Federation of Labor formed under the
leadership of Samuel Gompers in 1886. - Goal was to achieve gains for organized labor
through bargaining power, not productivity. - Gompers said more, more, and then more was what
labor wanted.
Samuel Gompers,
courtesy of Library of Congress
18The Era of Union-Management Cooperation
- Morris Cooke, Ordway Tead, and Robert Valentine
were examples of those who were trying to
reformulate what labor felt was the unyielding,
no union, position of scientific management. - The revised emphasis was to be on consent
- Union-management cooperation plans began when
union membership was in decline in the early
1920s. Unions agreed to accept scientific
management if they were involved by electing
representatives and could bargain about wages,
hours working conditions, etc.
19Employee Representation Plans
- Employee representation plans did not involve
unions but the workers elected representatives
and participated through shop councils and
committees. - Unions did not like these plans, but studies of
these plans indicated they were progressive and
improved labor-management relations.
20Summary
- The 1920s was prosperous for employers and
employees. - Despite a surplus of labor, employers created
industrial goodwill with a variety of employee
benefit programs. - Scientific Management inspired social scientists
and psychologists to study the workplace. - Industrial Sociology began in the 1920s.
- The Social Gospel spawned the industrial
betterment/welfare movement.
21Week 5, Chapter 10
- Emergence of Management and Organization Theory
22Emergence of Management and Organization Theory
- Henri Fayol Modern approach to general
management theory through the management process - Max Weber Bureaucracy to provide a formal
approach to organization theory
23Henri Fayol (1841-1925)
- Jules Henri Fayol was born to French parents in
Constantinople. - His experiences as the Managing Director of
Comambault formed his conception of management as
the general activity of integrating functions of
the firm in order to intelligently use resources
to attain the objectives of the firm. - While Taylor was more production oriented,
Fayols viewpoint was that of general management.
Henri Fayol
Wren, History of Management Thought
24Henry Fayols Conclusions
- Managerial abilities differed from technical
ones, and the success of the firm depended to a
greater degree on good managers than good
technicians. - Fayol felt that every organization required
management regardless of whether it was
commercial, industry, politics, religion, war,
- This statement suggests the universality of
management in that this activity is necessary in
all organizations. - It does not mean that managers are universal.
25Fayols List of Managerial Qualities
- Physical qualities health, vigor, address
- Mental qualities ability to understand and
learn, judgment, mental vigor, and adaptability - Moral qualities energy, firmness, willingness to
accept responsibility, initiative, loyalty, tact
dignity - General education general acquaintance with
matters not belonging exclusively to the function
performed - Special knowledge that peculiar to the function,
be it technical, commercial, financial,
managerial, etc. - Experience knowledge arising from the work
proper the recollection of lessons a person has
derived from things
26Henry Fayols Conclusions
- Managerial abilities become more important as a
person moves up in the hierarchy. - Technical abilities are less essential for upper
level managers. - Management could be taught in schools and
universities but was not because of the absence
of management theory. - Fayol defined management theory as a collection
of principles, rules, methods, and procedures
tried and checked by general experience. (Fayol,
1949, p. 15)
27Fayols Principles of Management
- Division of work
- Authority
- Discipline
- Unity of command
- Unity of direction
- Subordination of individual interests to the
general interest - Remuneration
- Centralization
- Scalar Chain
- Order
- Equity
- Stability of tenure of personnel
- Initiative
- Esprit de corps
28Fayols Principles of Management
- Keep in mind that there is nothing rigid in
management. Fayols principles were guides, not
absolutes or universals. - We will not stress each principlethe following
is a discussion of a few key ones.
Henri Fayol
29Fayols Principles of Management
- Division of Labor Fayol is rather traditional
here regarding work design. However, he also used
job enlargement when appropriate. - Authority Fayol distinguished between formal
authority and personal authority. He was aware of
the need to combine and complement the authority
of position with leadership qualities. - Authority must be commensurate with
responsibility.
30Fayols Principles of Management
- Unity of command Fayol felt that employees
should receive supervision from only one person. - Unity of direction one head and one plan for a
group of activities having the same objective
(Fayol, 1949, p. 32). This is still good advice
for many organizations today. - Centralization This is not centralized decision
making. Instead it is finding where decisions
should be made depending on the factors Fayol
mentioned. (See Wren text for Fayols excellent
discussion.)
31Scalar Chain and the Gangplank
- The gangplank is a means for providing lateral
communications. - The Foreman (F) wishing to communicate with
Foreman (P) without reporting upward through the
President (A) can use a gangplank to bypass
organizational red tape.
32Figure 10.1 - Scalar Chain and the Gangplank
33Fayols Elements of Management
- Planning (could also be translated as foresight)
- Plans depended on the firms resources, work in
process, and future trends that could not be
predetermined (resembled a strategic audit). - Plans needed to have the characteristics of
unity, continuity, flexibility, and precisions. - Long range planning was a unique idea for his
time but a valuable contribution to the evolution
of strategic management.
34Fayols Elements of Management
- Organizing Fayol included both the design of
the organization and the staffing job of the
manager in this element. - Structure of the organization had to be
consistent with the objectives, resources, and
requirements of the firm - Functional (horizontal) and scalar (vertical)
growth - Span of control narrow at the top but greater
at lower levels - Staff advisory personnel are needed by line
managers - Staffing (separate issue from staff above)
involved selection, evaluation, and training of
personnel.
35Fayols Elements of Management
- Command Fayols term for directing, leading,
supervising, etc. - Coordination harmonizing the activities of the
organization - Control checking on performance to identify and
make corrections if necessary
36Fayols Elements of Management
- Fayol spent relatively little time discussing
command, coordination, and control. - Planning, organizing, and staffing set the stage
for where we are going and when and how we intend
to get there. - These plans, people, and resources are activated,
led, motivated, and coordinated. - As our information system brings us performance
data, the control element enables management to
renew the elements by reorganizing or whatever is
indicated by our control system.
37Fayols Elements of Management
- Management is a continuous process, not a neat
set of discrete elements and functions that are
performed without coordination of other elements. - Fayols perspective was that of a strategist.
38Max Weber (1864-1920) Bureaucracy
- Webers Germany was characterized by cartels
which limited competition (anti-trust laws
limited this in the U.S.). - To Weber, capitalism in the US encouraged
innovation and competition.
Max Weber
39Max Weber and Bureaucracy
- His interest in the U.S. Capitalistic spirit led
him to ask - If a market oriented society could operate large
organizations on some rational, systematic basis?
40Bureaucracy as a Theory
- It was management by the office not by a person.
- It was an ideal, the pure form of
organization but this did not mean that it was
the most desirable. - Weber is suggested as the Founder of
Organization Theory.
41Three Pure Types of Legitimate Authority
- Rational-legal right of those elevated to
authorityto issue commands. - Traditional rested on the belief in the
sanctity of immemorial traditions and the
legitimacy of the status of those exercising
authority under them. - Charismatic based on devotion to the specific
and exceptional sanctity, heroism, or exemplary
character of an individual person. (Weber, 1947,
p. 328) - Weber believed that rational type of authority
must be the basis for a bureaucracy.
42Elements of Bureaucracy
- The division of labor and authority and
responsibility were clearly defined for each
member and were legitimatized as official duties. - Offices or positions were organized in a
hierarchy of authority resulting in a chain of
command or the scalar principle. - All organizational members were selected on the
basis of technical qualifications through formal
examinations or by virtue of training or
education.
Max Weber
43Webers Elements of a Bureaucracy
- Officials were appointed, not elected.
- Administrative officials worked for fixed
salaries and were career officials. - Administrative officials were not owners of the
units they administered. - Administrators were subject to strict rules,
discipline, and controls regarding the conduct of
their official duties. These rules and controls
were impersonal and uniformly applied in all
cases.
44Summary
- The emergence of management and organization
theory had two forms - Fayols principles and elements of management
- Webers rationalized organization structure for
efficiency - Fayol stressed planning and organizing , and
education for management. - Weber sought leadership based on rational-legal
authority, not tradition or charisma.