Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Part 1- Introduction to Management
- Why Innovative Management Matters
- innovations in products,
services, management systems,
production processes, corporate
values, and other aspects of the
organization are what keep
companies growing, changing and
thriving
- Managing the Unpredictable (Current/Past)
- meltdown of the housing and finance
industries in the U.S./ leading to financial
crisis, volatile oil prices, oil spill on the Gulf
Coast, sweeping govt. changes, (natural
disasters): major earthquakes in Haiti &
Chile, continuing threats of terrorism,
massive problems for automakers from GM
to Toyota, Global health scares-H1N1 flu
virus
- Study of the Grateful Dead (rock band)
- famous for: allowing fans to tape their shows
- This gave up a major source of
revenue in record sales, but widened
their fan base. (Creating FB: "Interest
community page")
- Management Theorist:
Peter Drucker
- credited w/ creating modern
study of management [-Sums
up the job of a manager in 5
tasks]
- Four Core Management Functions
Anlagen:
- Planning (setting goals and deciding activities)
- (Managerial planning:
where the organization
wants to be in the future &
how to get there)
- Coordinated Planning: Jonas Brothers Franchise
- Organizing (organizing activities and people)
- Performance (attain
goals, products,
services, efficiency,
effectiveness)
- Organizational Performance
- Definition: social entity that is goal directed and deliberately structured
- social entity:means
being made up of
two people
- goal directed: means
designed to achieve some
outcome
- Example: make a profit
(Walmart), win pay
increases for members
(AFL-CIO), meet spiritual
needs (United Methodist
Church), provide social
satisfaction (college
sorority)
- deliberately structured: means tasks
are divided and responsibility for their
performance is assigned to
organization members
- Organizational Efficiency
- refers to the amount of
resources used to achieve an
organizational goal (based on
how much raw material or money
to make a product
- Efficiency: can be calculated as
the amount of resources used to
produce a product or service
- Ex: Target: continuously
looks for ways to increase
efficiency while also meeting
the company's quality and
customer satisfaction goals
- High performance:
attainment of
organizational goals by
using resources in an
efficient and effective
manner
- Leading (motivating, communicating w/ & developing people)
- Controlling (establishing targets and measuring performance)
- Resources (human,
financial, raw
materials,
technological,
information
- Definition of Management
- attainment of organizational goals
in effective and efficient manner
through planning, organizing,
leading and controlling
organizational resources.
- This definition holds
two important ideas:
- (1) the four
functions of planning,
organizing, leading
and controlling
- (2) the attainment of
organizational goals
in an effective &
efficient anger
- Exhibit 1.1 What Do Managers Do?
- 1. Set Objectives-Establish goals for
the group & decide what must be
done to achieve them
- 2. Organize- Divide work into
manageable activities and select
people to accomplish tasks
- 3. Motivate and Communicate- Create
teamwork via decisions on pay,
promotions, etc., and through
communication
- 4. Measure-set targets and
standards; appraise performance
- 5. Develop People- Recognize
the value of employees and
develop this critical organizational
asset
- Management Skills: skills for managing a department
or an organization can be summarized in three
categories: (conceptual, human, and technical)
Anlagen:
- Conceptual Skills
- the cognitive ability to see the
organization as a whole system and
the relationships among it parts
- Human Skills
- Manages ability to work with and
through other people and to work
effectively as a group member.
<----how mangers control conflicts)
- How manger relates to other
people: motivate, facilitate,
coordinate, lead,
communicate, resolve
conflicts
- Technical Skills
- understanding of and
proficiency in the
performance of specific
tasks: includes the
mastery of methods,
techniques, equipment
- When Skills Fail
- The # 1 reason for manager
failure is ineffective
communication skills and practices
(81% of managers)
- What is it Like to Be a Manager?
- Individual Performer:
- Role of manager: a person who
builds systems rather than doing
specific tasks (this individual
performer is a specialist) and a
"doer" mind is conditioned into
performing specific tasks and
activities as expertly as possible
- Problem for Managers:
- they expect to have greater
freedom to do what they think is
best for the organization
- IN REALITY: thinking in terms of building teams & networks
- becoming a motivator
and organizer within a
highly interdependent
system of people and
work
- Adventures in Multi-tasking
- Mintzberg
- his observations and
subsequent research indicate
that diverse manager activities
can be organized into 10 roles.
Anlagen:
- Roles divided into three categories:
- Informational Role
- "describes the activities used
to maintain and develop an
information network"
- monitor role: involves
seeking current information
from many sources
- disseminator: manager
transmits current
information to others both
inside and out
- interpersonal:
managing through
people
- Interpersonal Role:
- Figure-head: roles involve
handling ceremonial and symbolic
activities for the organization.
- Example: Presentation
of employee awards by
a branch manager for
Commerce Bank
- Liaison role
- pertains to the
development of
information sources
both inside and out
- Leader Role
- encompasses relationships
with subordinates, including
motivation, communication
and influence
- Decisional Roles:
- Entrepreneur role: involves the initiation change
- Disturbance handler: resolving
conflicts among subordinates or
between the managers departments
and other departments
- Resource allocator: pertains to
decisions about how to assign
people, time, equip, money and
other resources to attain desired
outcomes
- Negotiator
role: involves
formal
negotiations
and
bargaining to
attain
outcomes for
the
managers
unit of
responsibility
- Management Types: not
all manager jobs are the
same (managers are
responsible for different
departments and meet
different requirements
for achieving high
performance
- Vertical Differences:
- -(Top managers) are at the top
of the hierarchy and are
responsible for the entire
organization
- Responsible for:
setting organizational
goals, defining
strategies for
achieving them,
motivating and
interpreting-the
external environment
and making decisions
that affect the entire
organization
- Middle Managers
- work at middle levels of
the organization and are
responsible for business
units and major
departments
- Responsible for:
implementing the overall
strategies and policies
defined by top managers
(more conceded with the
near future rather than
long range planning)
- Project Manager
- responsible for: a temporary
work project that involves the
participation of people from
various functions and levels of the
organization and perhaps from
outside the company as well
- First-line Managers
- responsible for: the
production of goods
and services (are the
first or second level of
management and
have titles as
supervisor line
manager, section
chief and office
manager), teams and
non-management
employees
- Horizontal Differences
- Functional managers
- responsible for departments
that perform a single
functional task and have
employees with similar training
skills (includes advertising,
sales, HR, finance,
manufacturing, and
accounting)
- Line managers
- responsible for the
manufacturing and
marketing departments
that make or sell the
product or service
- Staff managers
- in charge of
departments such as
finance and HR that
support line
departments
- General Managers
- responsible for several
departments that perform
different functions (and a
self-contained division)
- Managing in Small
Businesses & Nonprofit
Organizations
- Managers in small
companies- see their
most important role as
a spokesperson to
promote a growing
company
- Entrepreneur role
- critical in small
businesses,
managers have to be
innovative
- Financial resources for
nonprofit organizations:
typically come from govt.
appropriations, grants,
and donations
- Managers have to measure intangibles:
- improve public health, make a
difference in the lives of the
disenfranchised, increase
appreciation for the arts
- Innovative Management for the New
Workplace: rapid environmental shifts
- Turbulent Forces
- dramatic advances in technology,
globalization, shifting social values,
changes in the workplace
- Internet, electronic communication
Anmerkungen:
- Exhibit 1.9 The Tranisition to a New Workplace
- New Workplace Characteristics
- old workplace: characterized by
routine, specialized tasks, and
standardized control procedures
- Individuals- concentrate on
doing their own specific tasks
- Managers: are cautious about
sharing knowledge and
information across boundaries
- The organization: controlled through a vertical hierarchy, w/ decision making authority residing with upper level managers
- New Workplace
- Work is free flowing and flexible and
knowledge is widely shared, work is often
virtual "never really come to work"
- Interim managers: who are not
affiliated with a specific
organization but work on a project
by project basis