Industrial Management and Engineering Economics: Lecture Note by Abraham Genetu
Industrial Management and Engineering Economics: Lecture Note by Abraham Genetu
ENGINEERING ECONOMICS
Lecture note by Abraham Genetu
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CHAPTER 1
BASIC MANAGEMENT CONCEPTS AND
INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATION
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1.1 INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT
Management is a vital aspect of the economic
life of man, which is an organized group activity.
A central directing and controlling agency is
indispensable for a business concern.
Without managers and effective managerial
leadership the resources of production remain
merely resources and never become production.
Under competitive economy and ever-changing
environment the quality and performance of
managers determine both the survival as well as
success of any business enterprise.
Management occupies such an important place in
the modern world that the welfare of the people
and the destiny of the country are very much
influenced by it.
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Definition
There are many definitions of management but most
perceptive managers are convinced that it is an
organized effort of people whose purpose is to
achieve the objectives and goals of an organization.
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Contd…
Necessity of Management:
(1) Management is an essential activity of all
organizational level
(Low, middle, and upper level)
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Management Levels
Top
Managers
Middle
Managers
First-line
Managers
Non-managerial Employees
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Contd…
Top-level managers
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Contd…
a) Technical skill: ability to perform a
specialized task that involves a certain method,
equipment set of procedures or process.
For example, a manager may have technical
skills in accounting, finance, engineering,
manufacturing, or computer science.
b) Human skill: ability to work well with others,
both as a member of a group and as a leader
who gets things done through other.
c) Conceptual skill: ability to visualize the
organization as a whole, discern
interrelationships among organizational parts,
and understand how the organization fits into
the wider context of the industry, community,
and world. 11
Contd…
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Management Roles
specific categories of managerial behavior
Figurehead role
Interpersonal Role Leader
liaison
Monitor
Informational Role Disseminator
spokesperson
Entrepreneur
Decisional Role Disturbance handler
Resource allocator
Negotiator
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Contd…
Interpersonal role
Developing and maintaining positive
relationship with others
Figurehead role: Head of organization performs
symbolic or ceremonial duties of social or legal duties
E.g greeting guests, presenting awards, delivering
speech
Leader: involves creating sound relationship with
subordinates also communicate, motivates and train
the employee
Liaison: Build and maintain a network of contact with
outside work unit who provide help or information.
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Contd…
Informational role
receiving and transmitting information
from staff members (acquires, processes
and communicate information)
Monitor role: Collection of internal and external
information that affect organization (Scan the
source of information)
Disseminator role: After collecting, they will pass
certain information to peers and subordinates
Spokesperson role: Provide information to external
community such as press, TV, suppliers, government
offices.
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Contd…
Decisional role
identify problems and attempt to resolve
them
Entrepreneur role: Acts as an initiator, designer and
encourages change.
E.g Start new projects, enter into new market
Disturbance handler: take corrective action when
organization faces important unexpected difficulties.
E.g Cancellation of order, violation of standards, strikes
Resource allocator: distribute all types of resources
(time, budget, equipment, human) to functional unit.
Negotiator role: represent the organization in major
negotiations. E.g deal with customers, suppliers, Govt.
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1.2 THE FUNCTIONS OF MANAGEMENT
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1 Planning
Planning involves selecting missions and objectives and
the action to achieve them (activities, resources,
schedules, procedures..)
It requires decision making, that choosing future
courses of action from among alternatives
Efficiency
Mission Goals plans and
Effectiveness
Efficiency - getting the most output from the least amount of inputs
Effectiveness - completing activities so that organizational goals are attained
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Types of planning Contd…
Based on the scope three types of plan
1. Strategic planning
Focus on the broad aspects of the organization.
Incorporate both external environment & internal
resources.
Goal affect all aspects of the organization
It is a long term plan (3-5 years)
2.Tactical Plans
Developed to achieve the strategic goal
Translate strategic plan into specific goals for specific parts
of an organization
An intermediate range plan (1-3 years)
3. Operational Plan
Devised to support the implementation of tactical plans
Translate Tactical plans into specific goals & actions.
A short range plan (less than 12 months) 19
Plan should be Contd…
SMART
M:Measurable- Quantifiable
A: accepted- participants
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2 Organizing
Is the management function that focuses on allocating
& arranging human and non human resources.
Also concerns with developing & maintaining working
relationships.
It is the process of establishing organizational
structure.
Process of defining and grouping the activities of an
enterprise.
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Organization process contd…
Determining objective
Assigning responsibility
Providing
Delegation of authority facilities and
resources
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3 Staffing
Staffing is the process of fullfilling the manpower
needs of an organization
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Recruitment Process Contd…
CV and Application Personal, educational, work
form and experience, training
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Contd…
2. Democratic
Involve the group in decision making
Delegate authority
Use expert power to influence others
Based on the assumption everyone can contribute
2. Laissez Faire
Gives the group complete freedom
Leaders are there to provide assistant alone
Uses when workers are knowledgeable, motivated
and independent
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5 Controlling:
It is the process of regulating organizational activities so
that actual performance confirms to expected
organizational standards and goals.
control areas
Quality
Budget
Production
Cost etc
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Control process
Determines areas of controla
Establish standard
Measure Performance
Compare
performance
Vs standards
Take action
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2. Departmentation based on product
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3. Departmentation based on
territory/geography
groups jobs on the basis of territory or
geography
Vice President
for Sales
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4. Departmentation based on process
groups jobs on the basis of product or
customer flow
Plant Superintendent
Director
of Sales
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1.4 BASICS OF PRODUCTIVITY
The measure that is most frequently used to indicate
how successful an operation is at doing is
productivity.
Productivity is the ratio of what is produced by an
operation to what is required to produce it.
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Example
A company produces 160 kg of plastic moulded parts of
acceptable quality by consuming 200 kg of raw materials for a
particular period. For the next period, the output is doubled
(320 kg) by consuming 420 kg of raw material and for a third
period, the output is increased to 400 kg by consuming 400 kg
of raw material.
Solution:
During the first year, production is 160 kg
Productivity =Output/Input =160/200 = 0.8 or 80%
For the second year, production is increased by 100%
Productivity = Output/Input =320/420= 0.76 or 76% ↓
For the third period, production is increased by 150%
Productivity =Output/Input =400/400= 1.0, i.e., 100% ↑
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Contd…
Often partial measures of input or output
are used so that comparisons can be made.
Labour productivity
Machine productivity
Energy productivity
Material productivity etc
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Factors Influencing Productivity:
Factors influencing productivity can be classified
broadly into two categories: (1) controllable (or internal)
factors and (2) un-controllable (or external) factors.
A. Structural adjustments/policy
B. Natural resources
C. Government and infrastructure:
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