Title: Management 11e John Schermerhorn
1Management 11e John Schermerhorn
- Chapter 2
- Management Learning Past to Present
2Planning Ahead Chapter 2 Study Questions
- What can be learned from classical management
thinking? - What insights come from behavioral management
approaches? - What are the foundations of modern management
thinking?
3Figure 2.1 Major branches in the classical
approach to management
4Study Question 1 What can be learned from
classical management thinking?
- Scientific management (Frederick Taylor)
- Develop rules of motion, standardized work
implements, and proper working conditions for
every job - Carefully select workers with the right
abilities for the job - Carefully train workers and provide proper
incentives - Support workers by carefully planning their work
and removing obstacles - Scientific management (the Gilbreths)
- Motion study
- Science of reducing a job or task to its basic
physical motions - Eliminating wasted motions improves performance
5Study Question 1 What can be learned from
classical management thinking?
- Practical lessons from scientific management
- Make results-based compensation a performance
incentive - Carefully design jobs with efficient work methods
- Carefully select workers with the abilities to do
these jobs - Train workers to perform jobs to the best of
their abilities - Train supervisors to support workers so they can
perform jobs to the best of their abilities
6Study Question 1 What can be learned from
classical management thinking?
- Administrative principles (Henri Fayol) rules
of management
7Study Question 1 What can be learned from
classical management thinking?
- Administrative principles (Henri Fayol)
- Scalar chain
- there should be a clear and unbroken line of
communication from the top to the bottom of the
organization - Unity of command
- each person should receive orders from only one
boss - Unity of direction
- one person should be in charge of all activities
with the same performance objective
8Study Question 1 What can be learned from
classical management thinking?
- Bureaucratic organization (Max Weber)
- Bureaucracy
- An ideal, intentionally rational, and very
efficient form of organization - Based on principles of logic, order, and
legitimate authority
9Study Question 1 What can be learned from
classical management thinking?
- Characteristics of bureaucratic organizations
- Clear division of labor
- Clear hierarchy of authority
- Formal rules and procedures
- Impersonality
- Careers based on merit
- Possible disadvantages of bureaucracy
- Excessive paperwork or red tape
- Slowness in handling problems
- Rigidity in the face of shifting needs
- Resistance to change
- Employee apathy
10Figure 2.2 Foundations in the behavioral or human
resource approaches to management
11Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- Behavioral Management - human resource approaches
include - Hawthorne studies
- Maslows theory of human needs
- Mary Parker Folletts Organizations as
communities - McGregors Theory X and Theory Y
- Argyriss theory of adult personality
12Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- Organizations as communities Mary Parker
Follett - Groups and human cooperation
- Groups allow individuals to combine their talents
for a greater good - Organizations are cooperating communities of
managers and workers - Managers job is to help people cooperate and
achieve an integration of interests
13Study Question 1 What can be learned from
classical management thinking?
- Organizations as communities
- Forward-looking management insights
14Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- Hawthorne studies
- Initial study examined how economic incentives
and physical conditions affected worker output - No consistent relationship found
- Psychological factors influenced results
- Relay assembly test-room studies
- Manipulated physical work conditions to assess
impact on output - Designed to minimize the psychological factors
of previous experiment - Factors that accounted for increased
productivity - Group atmosphere
- Participative supervision
15Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- Hawthorne studies (cont.)
- Employee attitudes, interpersonal relations and
group processes - Some things satisfied some workers but not others
- People restricted output to adhere to group norms
- Lessons from the Hawthorne Studies
- Social and human concerns are keys to
productivity - Hawthorne effect people who are singled out for
special attention perform as expected
16Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- Maslows theory of human needs
- A need is a physiological or psychological
deficiency a person feels compelled to satisfy - Need levels
- Physiological
- Safety
- Social
- Esteem
- Self-actualization
17Figure 2.3 Maslows hierarchy of human needs
18Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- Maslows theory of human needs
- Deficit principle
- A satisfied need is not a motivator of behavior
- Progression principle
- A need becomes a motivator once the preceding
lower-level need is satisfied - Both principles cease to operate at
self-actualization level
19Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- McGregors Theory X assumes that workers
- Dislike work
- Lack ambition
- Are irresponsible
- Resist change
- Prefer to be led
20Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- McGregors Theory Y assumes that workers are
- Willing to work
- Capable of self control
- Willing to accept responsibility
- Imaginative and creative
- Capable of self-direction
21Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- Implications of Theory X and Theory Y
- Managers create self-fulfilling prophecies
- Theory X managers create situations where workers
become dependent and reluctant - Theory Y managers create situations where workers
respond with initiative and high performance - Central to notions of empowerment and
self-management
22Study Question 2 What insights come from the
behavioral management approaches?
- Argyriss theory of adult personality
- Classical management principles and practices
inhibit worker maturation and are inconsistent
with the mature adult personality - Argyriss theory of adult personality
- Management practices should accommodate the
mature personality by - Increasing task responsibility
- Increasing task variety
- Using participative decision making
-
23Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Foundations for continuing developments in
management
24Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Management science or operations research
25Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Management science or operations research
- Queuing theory allocates service
personnel/workstations to minimize service cost
and customer waiting time - Network models break large tasks into smaller
components for for better coordination - Simulations create problem models to test
different solutions - Operations management is the study of how
organizations produce goods and services
26Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Organizations as Systems
- System
- Collection of interrelated parts that function
together to achieve a common purpose - Subsystem
- A smaller component of a larger system
- Open systems
- Organizations that interact with their
environments in the continual process of
transforming resource inputs into outputs
27Figure 2.4 Organizations as complex networks of
interacting subsystems
28Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Contingency thinking
- Tries to match managerial responses with problems
and opportunities unique to different situations
- No one best way to manage
- Appropriate way to manage depends on the
situation
29Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Quality and performance excellence
- Managers and workers in progressive organizations
are quality conscious - Quality and competitive advantage are linked
- Total quality management (TQM)
- Comprehensive approach to continuous quality
improvement for a total organization - Creates context for the value chain
- Quality and performance excellence
- ISO certification
- Global quality benchmark
- Refine and upgrade quality to meet ISO standards
- Continuous improvement
- Continual search for new ways to improve quality
- Something always can and should be improved
30Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Knowledge Management and Organizational Learning
- Knowledge management is the process of using
intellectual capital for competitive advantage - Portfolio of intellectual assets include patents,
intellectual property rights, trade secrets, and
accumulated knowledge of the entire workforce
31Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Learning organizations
- Organizations that are able to continually learn
and adapt to new circumstances - Core ingredients include
32Study Question 3 What are the foundations of
modern management thinking?
- Evidence-Based Management
- Making management decisions on hard facts about
what really works - Evidence-Based Positive Human Resource Management
Practices - Employment security
- Selective hiring
- Self-managing teams
- High pay based on merit
- Training and development
- Reduced status distinctions
- Shared information
33Chapter 2 Case
- Zara International Fashion at the speed of light