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The document discusses key concepts in management and organizations. It defines managers as people who oversee the work of others to accomplish organizational goals. Managers are classified as first-line, middle, or top based on their level in the organization. Management involves planning, organizing, leading, and controlling. Effective management pursues both efficiency and effectiveness. The roles and skills of managers are also examined.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
44 views27 pages

Class 1 Slides

The document discusses key concepts in management and organizations. It defines managers as people who oversee the work of others to accomplish organizational goals. Managers are classified as first-line, middle, or top based on their level in the organization. Management involves planning, organizing, leading, and controlling. Effective management pursues both efficiency and effectiveness. The roles and skills of managers are also examined.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ninth edition

STEPHEN P. ROBBINS MARY COULTER

Chapter Introduction to
1 Management and
Organizations

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook


All rights reserved. The University of West Alabama
Who Are Managers?
• Manager
 Someone who coordinates and oversees the work of
other people so that organizational goals can be
accomplished.

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–2


Classifying Managers
• First-line Managers
 Individuals who manage the work of non-managerial
employees.
• Middle Managers
 Individuals who manage the work of first-line
managers.
• Top Managers
 Individuals who are responsible for making
organization-wide decisions and establishing plans
and goals that affect the entire organization.

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–3


Exhibit 1–1 Managerial Levels

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–4


What Is Management?
• Managerial Concerns
 Efficiency
 “Doing things right”
– Getting the most output
for the least inputs
 Effectiveness
 “Doing the right things”
– Attaining organizational
goals

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–5


Exhibit 1–2 Effectiveness and Efficiency in Management

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–6


What Do Managers Do?
• Functional Approach
 Planning
 Defining goals, establishing strategies to achieve goals,
developing plans to integrate and coordinate activities.
 Organizing
 Arranging and structuring work to accomplish organizational
goals.
 Leading
 Working with and through people to accomplish goals.
 Controlling
 Monitoring, comparing, and correcting work.

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–7


Management Functions
• Planning requires a manager to:
 Decide which goals the organization will pursue
(organizational, departmental, and individual levels).
 Decide what strategies to adopt to attain those goals
 Decide how to allocate organizational resources to pursue
the strategies that attain those goals
• Organizing requires a manager to determine:
 what tasks are to be done
 how the tasks are to be grouped into departments
 who is to be assigned the tasks
 who reports to whom (laying down lines of
authority/hierarchy)
 where decisions are to be made (centralized/ decentralized)
Management Functions
• Leading requires a manager to:
 Articulate a clear organizational vision for organizational
members to accomplish.
 Energize and enable employees (motivate and direct
them) to play their part in achieving the organizational
vision.
 Coordinate people and groups so that their efforts are in
harmony
 Resolve conflicts among members.
• Controlling requires a manager to:
 Monitor the organization’s performance.
 Compare actual performance with the previously set goals.
 Correct significant deviations
Management Roles
• In the late 1960s, Henry Mintzberg studied
executives to determine what managers did on
their jobs.
• He concluded that managers perform ten
different, highly interrelated roles or sets of
behaviors attributable to their jobs
• The ten roles can be grouped as being primarily
concerned with:
 interpersonal relationships,
 the transfer of information,
 and decision making
Management Roles
• Interpersonal Roles
 Figurehead
—duties that are ceremonial and symbolic in nature
 Leader
—hire, train, motivate, and discipline employees
 Liaison
—contact outsiders who provide the manager with
information. These may be individuals or groups
inside or outside the organization
Management Roles
• Informational Roles
 Monitor
—collect information from organizations and institutions
outside their own
 Disseminator
—a conduit to transmit information to organizational
members
 Spokesperson
—represent the organization to outsiders
Management Roles
• Decisional Roles
 Entrepreneur
—managers initiate and oversee new projects that will
improve their organization’s performance
 Disturbance handlers
—take corrective action in response to unforeseen
problems
 Resource allocators
—responsible for allocating human, physical, and
monetary resources
 Negotiator role
—discuss issues and bargain with other units to gain
advantages for their own unit
Management Skills

• Technical Skills
 The ability to apply specialized knowledge or expertise.
 All jobs require some specialized expertise, and many people
develop their technical skills on the job.
• Human Skills
 Ability to work with, understand, and motivate other people, both
individually and in groups, describes human skills.
 Many people are technically proficient but interpersonally
incompetent.
• Conceptual Skills
 The mental ability to analyze and diagnose complex situations
 Decision making, for example, requires managers to spot
problems, identify alternatives that can correct them, evaluate
those alternatives, and select the best one.
Exhibit 1–6 Conceptual Skills

• Using information to solve business problems


• Identifying opportunities for innovation
• Recognizing problem areas and implementing
solutions
• Selecting critical information from masses of
data
• Understanding of business uses of technology
• Understanding of organization’s business model

Source: Based on American Management Association Survey of Managerial Skills and


Competencies, March/April 2000, found on AMA Web site (www.ama.org), October 30, 2002.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–15
Exhibit 1–5 Skills Needed at Different Management Levels

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–16


Exhibit 1–6 Interpersonal Skills (cont’d)

• Coaching and mentoring skills


• Diversity skills: working with diverse people and
cultures
• Networking within the organization
• Networking outside the organization
• Working in teams; cooperation and commitment

Source: Based on American Management Association Survey of Managerial Skills and


Competencies, March/April 2000, found on AMA Web site (www.ama.org), October 30, 2002.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–17
Exhibit 1–7 Management Skills and Management Function Matrix

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–18


How The Manager’s Job Is Changing
• The Increasing Importance of Customers
 Customers: the reason that organizations exist
 Managing customer relationships is the responsibility of all
managers and employees.
 Consistent high quality customer service is essential for
survival.
• Innovation
 Doing things differently, exploring new territory, and
taking risks
 Managers should encourage employees to be aware of and
act on opportunities for innovation.

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–19


Exhibit 1–8
Changes Impacting
the Manager’s Job

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–20


What Is An Organization?
• An Organization Defined
 A deliberate arrangement of people to accomplish
some specific purpose (that individuals independently
could not accomplish alone).
• Common Characteristics of Organizations
 Have a distinct purpose (goal)
 Composed of people
 Have a deliberate structure

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–21


Exhibit 1–9 Characteristics of Organizations

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–22


Exhibit 1–10 The Changing Organization

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–23


Why Study Management?
• The Value of Studying Management
 The universality of management
 Good management is needed in all organizations.
 The reality of work
 Employees either manage or are managed.
 Rewards and challenges of being a manager
 Management offers challenging, exciting and creative
opportunities for meaningful and fulfilling work.
 Successful managers receive significant monetary rewards
for their efforts.

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–24


Exhibit 1–11 Universal Need for Management

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–25


Exhibit 1–12 Rewards and Challenges of Being A Manager

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–26


Terms to Know
• manager • management roles
• first-line managers • interpersonal roles
• middle managers • informational roles
• top managers • decisional roles
• management • technical skills
• efficiency • human skills
• effectiveness • conceptual skills
• planning • organization
• organizing • universality of
• leading management
• controlling

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 1–27

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