Lecture 2 - Introduction To Management
Lecture 2 - Introduction To Management
Efficiency
The comparison of what is actually produced or performed
with what can be achieved with
thesame consumption of resources. Doing things right.
Effectiveness
The degree to which objectives are achieved and the extent to
which targeted problems are solved. Doing the right thing.
Principle Combinations of Effectiveness & Efficiency
Goal Accomplishment
Effective Ineffective
Resource Use
5. Develop
2. Organize
People
3. Motivate
and
4. Measure
Communicat
e
The Four Management Functions
Planning
Organizing
Leading
Controlling
The Process of Management
Management Functions
Planning
Resources Performance
Human Attain Goals
Financial Controlling Organizing Products
Raw Services
materials Efficiency
Technological Effectiveness
Information
Leading
Management Levels
Top
Man
ager
s
Middle Managers
First-Line Managers
Management Skills
Conceptual Skills
The ability to
analyze and
diagnose a
situation and
find the cause
and effect.
Management Skills (Cont.)
Human Skills
The manager’s ability to work with and through
other people and to work effectively as a group
member.
Management Skills (Cont.)
Technical Skills
Understanding of and proficiency in the
performance of specific tasks.
Skill Type Needed by Manager Level
Top Managers
Middle
Managers
First-Line
Managers
Common Management Failures
1. Ineffective communication skills and practices
2. Poor work relationships/ interpersonal skills
3. Person – job mismatch
4. Failure to clarify direction or performance expectations
5. Failure to adapt and break old habits
6. Breakdown of delegation and empowerment
7. Lack of personal integrity and trustworthiness
8. Inability to develop cooperation and team work
9. Inability to lead/ motivate others
10. Poor planning practices
Manager Roles
Role Activity
Figurehead Perform ceremonial and symbolic duties such as
greeting visitors, signing legal documents
Leader Direct and motivate subordinates; train, counsel
and communicate with subordinates
Liaison Maintain information links both inside and
outside organization; use e-mail, phone calls,
meetings
Decisional Roles
Decisional roles pertain to those events about which the
manager must make a choice and take action.
Role Activity
Entrepreneur Initiate improvement projects; identify new
ideas, delegate idea responsibility to others
Disturbance Take corrective actions during disputes or crises;
Handler resolve conflicts among subordinates; adapt to
environmental crises
Resource Decide who gets resources; schedule, budget, set
Allocator priorities
Negotiator Represent department during negotiation of
union contracts, sales, purchases, budgets;
represent departmental interests
Management Perspectives over Time
Open (Collaborative)
Innovation
Contingency View
Systems Thinking
Management Science
Perspective
Humanistic Perspective
Classical
Perspective
1880 1890 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 1990 2000 2010 2020
Classical Perspective
The early study of management as we know it today
began with what is now called the classical perspective.
Scientific Management
Bureaucratic Organizations
Administrative Principles
Scientific Management
Emphasizes scientifically
determined jobs and management
practices as the way to improve
efficiency and labour productivity.
Division of Labour
Dividing a particular job into different task.
Narrow specialization of tasks within a production
process so that each worker can become
a specialist in doing one thing, especially on
an assembly line.
Cont.
Approach of Scientific Management
CONTRIBUTIONS CRITICISMS
Demonstrated the importance of Did not appreciate the social context
compensation for performance of work and higher needs of workers
A systematic approach
developed in Europe that
looked at the organization as a
whole is the bureaucratic
organizations approach.
Max Webber (1864 - 1920)
introduced most of the
concepts on Bureaucratic
Organizations.
Characteristics of Weberian Bureaucracy
Division of labour
Selection and
promotion based on Hierarchy of
technical authority
qualifications
The Ideal
Bureaucracy
Management separate
from the ownership of
the organization
Key Points of Bureaucracy
Authority is the power to hold people accountable for
their actions.
8.Order: Each employee is put where they have the most value.
Elton Mayo and his associates, Abraham Maslow, and Douglas McGregor are
the leading contributors to this thought.
They incorporated the insights of social science
disciplines such as sociology, psychology, and
anthropology to the work organizations and thereby to
the field of management.
Operations Management
Information Technology
Recent Historical Trends
Systems Thinking
Contingency View
Subsystems are parts of a system and changes in one part of the system
affect other parts.
Contingency View
The contingency view tells that what works in one setting might
not work in another. Contingency means that one thing depends
on other things and a manager’s response to a situation depends
on identifying key contingencies in an organizational situation.
Total Quality Management (TQM)
Focuses on managing the total organization to deliver better quality to
customers.