MGMT 1001 Theory Notes
MGMT 1001 Theory Notes
MGMT 1001 Theory Notes
Learning Outcome
1. Why are managers so
important?
2. What is an organization?
Manager: Someone who coordinates and oversees the work of other people
so that organisational goals can be accomplished
Top managers: Managers (near the top) are responsible for making
organisation-wide decisions and establishing the goals and plans that
affect the entire organisation
Middle managers: Manage the work of first-line managers
First line managers: Manage the work of non-managerial employees
who are directly involved with he production or creation of the
organizations products.
Efficiently: Getting the most output, from the least amount of inputs (low
resource waste)
Effectively: Doing things right, completing activities so that
organisational goals are attained (high goal attainment)
Management functions:
1. Planning: Setting goals, establishing strategies, developing plans to
integrate and coordinate activities
2. Organising: Arranging and structuring work that employees do to
accomplish the organisations goals
3. Leading: Working with and through people to accomplish organisational
goals
4. Controlling: Monitoring, comparing and correcting work performance
Management roles:
1. Interpersonal: Involve people and other duties:figurehead, leader,
liaison (maintain self-developed network of outside contacts)
2. Informational: Receiving, collecting and disseminating information:
Organisational level
All managers, regardless of level, make decisions
The amount of time they give to each function is not necessarily the
same, (content of managerial functions changes with managers level
e.g. top managers: designing overall organisation, lower-level: focus on
job design for individuals)
As managers move up = more planning, less direct supervising
Organisational area
Relative degree and mixture of roles performed by a particular manager
will depend on the functional area of the organisation
Also some roles are universally required for managers independently of
their function areas, and that all have to perform the managerial
component & functions
Organisational size
Small business manager: most important role is spokesperson,
outwardly directed activities as meeting with customers, arranging
finance, searching for new opportunities
Large organisation: directed internally, deciding which organisational
units get what resources and how much of them = resource allocator
needs.
Social media; forms of communication are becoming important and
valuable tools in managing.
Innovation: Important for organisations to be competitive, and
managers to improve entrepreneurial skills.
Sustainability: Business goals are developed to manage in efficient and
effective way, responding strategically, increase long-term shareholder
value
Universality of management: managers are needed in all types and
sizes of organisations, at all levels and work areas and in global
locations
The reality of work: you will either manage, or be managed.
Managing yourself: Greater need to take greater control of our own
actions in the new types of organisations that are developing
Awareness: That there are significant rewards (such as creating work
environments to help employees work the best of their ability; support
and encouragement; helping others find meaning and fulfillment in
work; challenges in being a manager
Learning Outcome
Studying history is important because it helps us see the origins of
todays management practices and identify what has and has not
worked
Early examples: construction of the Egyptian pyramids, arsenal of
Venice
Publication of Adam Smiths The Wealth of Nations: argued the
benefits of division of labour (job specialisation)
Industrial revolution: became more economical to manufacture in
factories than at home
Managers were needed to manage these factories, and these
managers needed formal management theories to guide them.
5. Discuss the
development and uses of
the organisational behavior
approach
The early OB advocates: all believed that people were the most
important asset of the organisation and should be managed.
Hawthorne Studies: scientific management experiment: emphasis on
the human behaviour factor in managing - group factors: group
standards establish individual worker output, group attitudes.
The study stimulated an interest in human behaviour in organisations
Largely shaped how todays organisations are managed: foundation for
current theories of motivation, leadership, group behaviour.
6. Explain the systems and System theory: Organisation takes in inputs from the environment and
contingency theories in the transforms these resources into outputs that are distributed into the
environment.
contemporary approach
Helps us understand management, since managers must ensure that
all interdependent units are working together in order to achieve the
organisations goals
Realise that decisions and actions taken in one organisational area will
affect others.
Recognise that organisations are not self-contained, rely on their
environment for essential inputs and as outlets to absorb outputs
7. Provide examples of
current trends and issues
that are influencing
management today
Learning Outcome
1. Identify problem
2. Identify decision criteria
3. Weight the criteria
4. Develop alternatives
5. Analyse alternatives
6. Select alternatives
7. Implement alternative
8. Evaluate decision effectiveness
1. The assumptions of rationality: problem is clear and unambiguous,
single, well-defined goal to be achieved: all alternatives and
consequences are known.
Rational decision making: choices that are consistent and value
maximising the organisations interests
Assumes that decisions are made in the best economic interests
2. Bounded rationality: Behaviour that is rational within the parameters of a
simplified decision-making process that is limited by an individuals ability
to process the information
Because managers cannot possible analyse ALL information on all
alternatives, managers satisfice: accept the solutions are good enough
Escalation of commitment: managers increase commitment to a decision
even when they have evidence it may have been wrong.
Reflects two things: source of information (external or internal) and how they
process that information (linear or non-linear)
1. Linear thinking style: Characterised by a persons preference for using
external data and processing this information through rational, logical
thinking
2. Non-linear thinking: Characterised by a preference for internal sources of
information and processing this information with internal insights, feelings
and hunches.
Overconfidence
Immediate gratification
Selective perception
Framing
Availability
Randomness
Representation
Hindsight
Self-serving bias
Understanding cultural differences in decision making, knowing when it
is time to call it quits, using effective decision-making process, building
an organisation that can spot the unexpected, quickly adapt to the
changed environment.
Learning Outcome
3. Explain ecologically
sustainable management,
and discuss how
organisations can go
green
Ethics: Refers to the principles, values, and beliefs that define right and
wrong decisions and behaviour
1. Stage of moral development
Pre conventional- Person choice between right and wrong is based on
the personal consequences involved such as physical punishment,
reward.
Conventional: moral values reside in maintaining expected standards,
living up to others.
Principled: clear effort to define moral principles regardless of the
authority of groups
2. Individual characteristics
Value: Basic convictions about what is right and wrong
Personality: ego strength: personality measure / locus of control:
reflects the degree to which people believe they control their own fate)
3. Structural variables
Structural design, use of goals, performance appraisal system, reward
allocation procedures
4. Organisational culture (Shared values and cultural strength)
5. Intensity: Greatness of harm, consensus of wrong, probability of harm,
immediacy of consequences, proximity to victims.
Since ethical standards are NOT universal, managers should know what is
allowed or not legally, important to recognise any cultural differences, and
clarify ethical guidelines for employees working in different global locations
know the principles of the Global Compact
5. Describe managements
role in encouraging ethical
behavior
2. Social entrepreneurship
Seeking out opportunities to improve society by using practical, innovative
and sustainable approaches.
3. Promoting positive social change
Learning Outcome
Focus (3)
Individual behaviour (Attitudes, perception, personality, learning,
motivation)
Group behaviour (Norms, roles, team building, conflict, leader)
Organisational aspects (Structure, culture, HR policies)
Goals: Explain, predict and influence behaviour, to manage employees
behaviour.
1.
2.
3.
4.
LINK TO MANAGERS
o Managers should be interested in attitude: give warnings of potential
problem and influence behavior.
o Given that mangers want to keep absences down- especially among
productive employees- want to do things that will generate positive job
attitudes e.g. flexible work options, monetary incentives, management
support programs.
o Managers should focus on factors that are conducive to high levels of
employee job satisfaction etc.
o Recognise that employees will try to reduce dissonance- pressure to
reduce is minimized if it is perceived as externally imposed, however
can offset if rewards are significant.
The Big Five Model: Five basic personality dimensions underlie all
others and encompass most of the significant variations in human
personality.
o Extraversion (Degree of sociable, talkative)
o Agreeableness (Cooperative, trusting)
o Conscientiousness (Responsible, dependable)
o Emotional stability (Calm, secure: positive/negative)
o Openness to experience (imaginative, intellectual)
LINK TO MANAGERS:
o Main value in understanding personality differences lie in employee
selection: use personality traits when recruiting
o
5. Describe perception and
factors that influence it
_____________________________________________________________
LINK TO MANAGERS:
o Managers need to recognise that their employees react to
perceptions, not reality.
o If individuals perceive appraisals to be biased, they will behave as if
those conditions actually exist. Always potential for perceptual
distortion.
o Managers need to recognise how shortcuts can influence their
perception when recruiting/performance appraisals.
o Can reduce perceptual errors/distortions such as comparing to an
objective measure, or asking if others agree with that perception.
6. Discuss learning
theories and their
relevance in shaping
behaviors
_____________________________________________________________
LINK TO MANAGERS:
o Issues if whether managers are going to manager their learning
through the rewards they allocate and the examples they set, or
allow it to occur.
o Managers should expect that employees will look to them as models,
read the message they are sending and model their behavior
accordingly e.g. act a s appositive role model= picked up by their
employees.
7. Discuss contemporary
issues in organizational
behavior
CHAPTER 6: COMMUNICATION
Learning Outcome
Seven elements
Should be noticed that the entire communication process is susceptible
to noise- disturbances that interfere with the transmission, receipt or
feedback of a message
1. Sender: who has the message
2. Message
3. Encoding: Converting a message into symbols
4. Medium: channel a message travels along
5. Decoding: When the receiver translates a senders message
6. Receiver
7. Feedback
Which method a manger used reflect the needs of the sender: the
attriutes of the message, needs of receiver. .
Methods of interpersonal communication:
Face-to-face, telephone, group meetings, formal presentations, memos,
fax, employee publications, bulletin boards, audio, voice male.
Non-verbal communication: without words, or using body language:
gestures, facial expressions.
Verbal intonation: emphasis to given words or phrases that conveys
meaning.
Can evaluate the various communication methods according to their
feedback, confidentiality encoding and decoding ease, interpersonal
warmth, formality and time of consumption
1. Filtering: deliberate manipulation of information to make it appear more
favorable to the receiver
2. Emotions: how they feel = how they interpret
3. Information overload: exceeds their processing capacity, do not
understand certain things
4. Defensiveness: feel threatened = react in ways that reduce their ability
to achieve mutual understanding
5. Language: words mean different things that are influenced by age,
education, cultural background e.g. jargon
6. National culture.
4. Identify barriers to
effective interpersonal
communication, and
describe how to overcome
them.
5. Explain how
communication can flow
most effectively in
organisations.
6. Describe how
information technology
affects managerial
communication
7. Discuss contemporary
issues in communication.
decisions
Provided employees more opportunities to collaborate and share
information
Made it possible for people to be fully accessible, anytime, anywhere
Affects organisations by affecting the way that organisational members
communicate, share information and do their work.
Two main challenges: legal and security issues, and lack of personal
interaction.
Potential for cyberbullying, as a new and disturbing trend.
Communicating with customers: what and how communicate takes place
can significantly impact ta customers satisfaction with the service and
the likelihood of being a repeat customer.
Important for organisations to get input from employees
Organisations can manage knowledge by making it easy for employees
to communicate and share their knowledge so they can learn from each
other: improve effectiveness and efficiency
o Online information databases
o Creating communities of practice.
Important that communication is ethical: encouraged through clear
guidelines and through answering questions that force a communicator
to think through the communication choices made and the consequences
of those choices.
Learning Outcome
5. Discuss contemporary
issues in managing work
teams.
CHAPTER 8: HUMAN RESOURCES
Learning Outcome
Recruitment/Decruitment
Recruitment: Main sources of potential job candidates- internet, employee
referrals, company website, professional recruiting organisations.
Decruitment: Resignation (voluntary), dismissal (involuntary),
redundancy/retrenchment, job sharing
Selection: Ensure the most suitable employees are selected
Different selection devices: application forms, written tests, work
sampling, assessment centers, interviews, background
investigations, physical exams.
Realistic job preview: gives an applicant more realistic expectations
about the job = should increase job satisfaction and reduce turnover.
7. Discuss contemporary
issues in managing human
resources.
Learning Outcome
1. Define strategic
management and explain
why it is important
Four categories:
Cash cows (low growth, high market share), although they generate
large amounts of cash, prospects for future growth are limited
Stars: (High growth & market share), fast-growing market, hold a
dominant share, contribution to cash flow depends on their need for
resources
Question marks: (High growth, low market share), attractive industry
but holds a small market share.
Dogs: (Low growth & market share
Porters Five Forces model: accesses the five competitive forces that dictate
the rules of competition in an industry
1. Threat of new entrants: how likely is that new competitors will come
to the industry? Factors such as EOS, brand loyalty and capital
requirements determine how easy/hard for new competitors.
2. Threat of substitutes: How likely is that other industries product can
be substituted? Factors: switching costs, and buyer loyalty
3. Bargaining power of buyers: Factors: numbers of customers in the
market, customer information and availability of substitutes.
4. Bargaining power of supplies: Factors: degree of supplier
concentration and availability of substitute inputs.
5. Current rivalry: how intense, factors: industry growth rate,
increasing/falling demand, and product differences.
7. Discuss current
strategic management
issues.
Learning Outcome
Leader: Someone who can influence others and who has managerial
authority.
Early theories focused on the leader (trait theories) and how the leader
interacted with the group (behavioural theories)
Early attempts to define leader traits = unsuccessful, although later
attempts found 7 traits associated.
o Drive, desire to lead, honesty and integrity, self-confidence,
intelligence, job-relevant knowledge and extraversion.
o Intent to isolate traits that leaders possessed and non-leaders
did not.
Behavioural Theories:
University of IOWA studies | 3 Leadership styles:
1. Autocratic: tended to centralize authority, dictate work methods,
make unilateral decisions and limit employee participation.
2. Democratic: tended to involve employees in decision making,
delegate authority, encourage participation in deciding work methods
and goals, and use feedback as an opportunity for coaching
employees
3. Laissez-faire-style: generally gave the group complete freedom to
make decisions and complete the work in whatever way it saw fit.
Conclusion: more satisfied under a democratic leader than autocratic
Dilemma of improving satisfaction or performance? (Performance
sometimes on par with autocratic)
The Ohio State | Dimensions of leader behaviour
Initiating structure: extent to which a leader was likely to define and
structure his or her role and the roles of group members in the
search for goal attainment
Consideration: extent to which a leader has job relationships
characterized by mutual trust and respect for group members ideas
and feelings.
High-high leader:
o Leader high in both dimensions = achieve high group task
performance and high group member satisfaction, but not
always
University of Michigan | Dimensions of leader behaviour #2
Employee-oriented: emphasizing interpersonal relations, they took a
personal interest in the needs of their followers and accept individual
differences among
Production-orientated leaders: Emphasis the technical or task aspects,
mainly concerned with accomplishing group tasks and regarded group
members as means tot hat end.
Leaders who were employee oriented could get high group productivity
and high group member satisfaction.
The Managerial Grid: looked at leaders concern for production and concern
for people, and identified five leader styles
4. Describe contemporary
views of leadership
3. Charismatic-visionary leadership:
Charismatic leader: enthusiastic and self-confident leader whose
personality and actions influence people to behave in certain ways,
people can learn to be charismatic
Visionary leader: create and articulate a realistic, credible and
attractive version of the future.
4. Team leadership
Team leader: 2 priorities
1. Manage the teams external boundary
2. Facilitate the team process.
4 leader roles:
1. Liaison with external constituencies: gathers information from the
outside and shares that information with team members.
2. Trouble-shooter: tries to resolve problems
3. Conflict manager: Identify such matters and minimize disruption of
intra-team conflicts.
4. Coach: clarify expectations and roles, teach, offer support
Leading across cultures: do not just use only any single style, they
adjust it to the situations (uncertain working environments)
o Also constrained by the cultural conditions of where they
work
o Suggest that there are universal traits due to pressure to
adopt common technologies and management practices
Learning Outcome
2. Contrast ethnocentric,
polycentric and geocentric
attitudes towards global
business
Polycentric: The view that managers in the host country (the foreign
country in which the organisation is doing business) know the best
work approaches and practices for running their business.
mechanisms.
4. Describes ASEAN,
European Union, NAFTA
and other regional trade
alliances.
Global organisation that deals with the rules of trade among nations
Monitors and promotes world trade, evolving from the GATT in 1995.
Helps businesses in these countries conduct efficient and effective
trading relationships.
WTO rules and principles have assisted governments in keeping
markets open and they now provide a platform which trade can grow
as the global economy improves.
Stage I
Exporting to foreign countries or importing from foreign countries
Global sourcing: purchasing materials or labor from around the world.
Goal: to take advantage of lower costs in order to be more competitive.
Beyond global sourcing, however, each successive stage of becoming
more international requires more investment and thus entails more
risk for the organisation.
Stage II
Hiring foreign representation or contracting with foreign manufacturers
Licensing and franchising
Stage III
Strategic alliances, joint ventures
Foreign subsidiary
8. Describe foreign
subsidiaries, joint
ventures, strategic
alliances, licensing and
franchising
Legal-political environment:
Differences in the laws of various nations effects business activities
and the delivery of products and services
The legal-political environment does not have to be unstable or
revolutionary to be of concern to managers, just the fact that a
countrys social and political systems differ from those of Australia or
NZ is important.
Must recognise these differences if they are to understand the
constraints under which they operate and the opportunities that exist.
Managers must also be aware that laws on issues such as restraint of
trade, working conditions, the right of workers differs between
nations.
Economic environment:
Understand the type of economic system under which the country