This document discusses management development and career management. It defines management development as improving managerial effectiveness through a planned learning process. The key aspects of management development include having a clear policy, succession planning, performance reviews, training, self-development, and linking development to individual and organizational needs. Successful management development also requires manager commitment, a supportive climate, mentorship from bosses, and viewing it as a long-term process. Career management aims to satisfy organizational succession needs while providing individuals career guidance aligned with their talents. It involves stages of exploration, establishment, mid-career, late career, and decline.
This document discusses management development and career management. It defines management development as improving managerial effectiveness through a planned learning process. The key aspects of management development include having a clear policy, succession planning, performance reviews, training, self-development, and linking development to individual and organizational needs. Successful management development also requires manager commitment, a supportive climate, mentorship from bosses, and viewing it as a long-term process. Career management aims to satisfy organizational succession needs while providing individuals career guidance aligned with their talents. It involves stages of exploration, establishment, mid-career, late career, and decline.
This document discusses management development and career management. It defines management development as improving managerial effectiveness through a planned learning process. The key aspects of management development include having a clear policy, succession planning, performance reviews, training, self-development, and linking development to individual and organizational needs. Successful management development also requires manager commitment, a supportive climate, mentorship from bosses, and viewing it as a long-term process. Career management aims to satisfy organizational succession needs while providing individuals career guidance aligned with their talents. It involves stages of exploration, establishment, mid-career, late career, and decline.
This document discusses management development and career management. It defines management development as improving managerial effectiveness through a planned learning process. The key aspects of management development include having a clear policy, succession planning, performance reviews, training, self-development, and linking development to individual and organizational needs. Successful management development also requires manager commitment, a supportive climate, mentorship from bosses, and viewing it as a long-term process. Career management aims to satisfy organizational succession needs while providing individuals career guidance aligned with their talents. It involves stages of exploration, establishment, mid-career, late career, and decline.
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Definitions:
The continous process of developing managers knowledge, skills and
attitudes through instruction, demonstration and planned experience to meet the present and future needs of the business. (Tom Roberts 1974) An attempt to improve managerial effectiveness through a planned deliberate learning process. (Training Services Agency 1977) An attempt to improve managerial effectiveness through a learning process. (Alan Mumford 1989) Management development An integral part of the process of Organisation Development Prerequisite Effective manpower planning coupled with procedures for recruitment and selection Programmes of management development Culture and organisational requirements Demands of particular managerial jobs Framework of a clear policy Succession planning and career progression Performance review Training and learning Self- development Motivation and rewards Improvement in organisational effectiveness An outline of the management development process Five basics principles for successful management development I. 1. Management Development is essentially providing opportunities for managers to develop themselves. /All development is self development P Drucker/
2. All development and training needs should be geared to the needs of the individual and to the needs of the company. (Manager Development and Management Development) Five basic principles for successful management development II. 3. The process of managerial development can only take place if the climate of the organisation is favorable. (Top management commitment plus a climate of trust) 4. The most powerful influence in the development of a manager is the managers boss. 5. Management development is a long range process and it is unrealistic to expect quick results. Management development: Levers of success Clear appropriate job objectives Effective selection for the job Driven by business opportunities/ problems Ownership shared / - hierarchically, - by individual self-development, - by personnel/ Shared diagnosis / - of individual needs, - of group needs/ Development activities are / - appropriate to need, - appropriate to individual, - based on management reality/ Development processes are linked Learning processes are identified and worked on Outputs are identified and measured Management development: Causes of failure Purposes (- unclear, - unsupported by managers) Poor diagnosis of culture and business requirements Poor analysis o individual needs Development processes (- unconvincing to managers, - inappropriate to need, - unreal, - unacceptabe to individual) Overemphasis on (- formal, - general, - off the job, - future succession planning, - mechanics, - one off experiences) Flavour of the month Owned by personnel What affects the choice? Contingency factors affecting choice of development Approaches will include:
Size of organisation
Market pressures Money and resources available
Stage in career
Culture/ managerial values
Individual needs/ motivation of managers Management style
Calibre of managers Support from the top
Skills in coaching/ appraising/ delegating/ counselling etc Technology Union invlolvement Product/ service and product life cycles Learning theory Organisation plans
Economic climate Mumfords questions 1) Look back over your managerial career and identify: Your two most significant learning experiences Your two least significant learning experiences 2) Look back at your life and pick out tha major events in it which helped make you the person you are. Assess each event by defining: Your feelings about it then/now What you think you learned from the experience at the time Wheather you have learnt something new or different by looking back at it now. 3) How far have the best and worst experiences been planned/ formal/ structured as compared with informal experiences? Career management Definition: Career management plans and shapes the progression of individuals within an organization in accordance with assessments of organizational needs and the performance, potential and preferences of individual members of the enterprise.
Overall aims of the career management: to ensure that the organizations needs for management succession are satisfied to provide men and women of promise with a sequence of training and experience that will equip them for whatever level of responsibility they have the ability to reach to give individuals with potential the guidance and encouragement they need if they are to fulfil their potential and achieve a successful career with the organization in tune with their talents and aspirations. Career management process 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 P E R F O R M A N C E Approximate age Exploration Establishment Midcareer Late career Decline Career management process 1) Exploration: individuals make critical choices about their career. 2) Establishment: search for work, getting the first job, learning on the job, gaining evidence of the success or failure. 3) Midcareer: improvements in performance or begin to deteriorate. 4) Late career: for those who continue to growth through midcareer stage is a pleasant time, for those who have stagnated means they are locked into their current job. 5) Decline: the final stage is difficult for everyone. Keys to successful management career Do good work Present the right time Learn the power structure Gain control of organizational resources Stay visible Stay mobile Find a mentor Support your boss The integrating approach to management development The reality of management the approach to management development should avoid making simplimistic assumptions on what managers need to know or do. Relevance management development processes must be related to the needs of particular managers in specific job. Self-development managers need to be encouraged to develop themselves and helped to dod so. Experimental learning the principal method by which managers can be equipped is by providing them with the right variety of experience. Formal training - courses can supplement bit can never replace experience. Mumfords virtuous learning circle Effectiveness/ reality/ problem centred/ focus Enthusiasm for further learning Perceived relevance Rewards for application Immediate application / solution centred Mumfords vicious learning sequence Generalised knowledge / skills / theory Poor transfer to own situation Difficulties in application Absence of rewards for learning processes Full stop Career management policies MAKE OR BUY DECISIONS Makes and grows its own managers (a promotion from within policy) Recruits and bus-in deliberately from outside (bringing fresh blood into the organization) SHORT TERM OR LONG TERM POLICIES Short term need (here and now) Long term plans Long term flexibility SPECIALISTS OR GENERALISTS Developing better and better specialists Developing appropriate number of generalists who are capable of exercising effectively all possible managerial functions DEALING WITH THE PLATEAUED MANAGEMENT Contented maturity Discontented maturity Thwarted rising sun
Approaches to management development FORMAL APPROACH INFORMAL APPROACH Develop on the job through coaching, councelling, monitoring and feedback by managers. Emphasizing self-assessment and the identification of development needs by getting managers to assess their own performance against agreed objectives. Development through work experience, which includes job rotating, job enrargement and taking part in project teams or task groups. Getting managers to produce their own development plans. Formal training by means of internal or external courses. Encouraging managers to discuss their own problems and opportunities with their bosses or colleagues. Structured self-development by following self-development programmes agreed with the management.
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