Introduction to Management
Important learnings from the lecture "Introduction to Management", Fall 2016, @ D-MTEC, ETH Zurich, Prof. Brusoni and Prof. Baschera
Important learnings from the lecture "Introduction to Management", Fall 2016, @ D-MTEC, ETH Zurich, Prof. Brusoni and Prof. Baschera
Set of flashcards Details
Flashcards | 75 |
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Language | English |
Category | Micro-Economics |
Level | University |
Created / Updated | 02.01.2017 / 08.01.2017 |
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What are measure of output on the 3 different levels?
Performance and effectiveness
- Organization level:
- Profit, sales, growth, resource utilization, flexibility/adaptability
- Group level
- innovation, efficiency, cohesion
- Individual level
- Satisfaction, productivity, learning, quality of work life, ethical behaviour
Goals should be SMART. What does that acronym stand for?
Specific (Who? What?)
Measurable (How much/many?)
Achievable (How?)
Relevant (Why?)
Time-bound (When?)
Four rules for ethical decision making?
- Utiliarian Rule: produce the greatest good (or least harm) for the greatest number of people.
- Moral rights rule: An ethical decision should maintain and protect the fundamental rights and privileges of people (e.g. Freedom, life, … )
- Justice Rule: An ethical decision should distribute benefits and harm among people and groups in a fair, equitable and impartial manner (eg. similar payment for similar jobs)
- Practical rule: Answering yes to three questions:
- Decision within the accepted values or standards of my business activity?
- Am I willing to see the decision communicated to the people / groups affected?
- Would the people with whom I have a significant personal relationship (family, friends) approve the decision?
What are the four types of social enterprises?
Market hybrid (Customers = Beneficiaries, only business activites, eg. m-pesa)
Blending hybrid (Customers = Beneficiaries, business and social activites, eg. Grameen Bank)
Bridging hybrid (Customers ≠ Beneficiaries, only business activities, eg. AddioPizzo Travel)
Coupling hybrid (Customers ≠ Beneficiaries, business and social activities, eg. Blindekuh)
What is the ASA model?
Attraction - Selection - Attrition
A theory holding that: (1) individuals are attracted to organizations whose members are similar to themselves in terms of personality, values, interests, and other attributes; (2) organizations are more likely to select those who possess knowledge, skills, and abilities similar to the ones their existing members possess; and (3) over time, those who do not fit in well are more likely to leave. Owing to these three factors, the personal characteristics of those who work for an organization are likely to become more similar over time, leading to the consolidation of organizational culture.
What are the primary activities in the value chain?
- inbound logistics
- operations
- outboundlogistics
- marketing and sales
- services
What are the supporting activities in the value chain?
- firm infrastructure
- human resource management
- technology development
- procurement
6 elements of the general environment?
- Political/Legal
- Economic
- Socio-cultural
- Technological
- Demographics
- Global
How does the strategic performance curve looks like? What are the properties in each section?
Leadership in a crisis, what are the core elements?
Predictability: give people as much information as possible about what will happen and when
Understanding: explain why the changes you are implementing are necessary - again, again and again
Compassion: express empathy, put yourself in other person's place, be sorrow for painful actions
Elements in Hiltis Crisis Management mode?
Decision making: top-down, centralized, strict goals and control
Cost Cutting / Layoffs: consciously taking longer periods for layoff, reduction in sales force only in crisis regions, only small reduction in R&D, continuation of cultural training activities (culture not only in good times)
Supporting activities: all employees at headquarter gave up 5% of salary, Hilti family doesn't take dividend despite Hilti is making profit
What is strategy?
The creation, maintenance, and implementation of competitive advantages
Consists of a series of skillful maneuvers
Involves critical, sometimes irreversible decisions
The Congruence Model. What is part of the input?
- Environment: Current contexts: technological, socio-political, economic, demographic, political, legal, competitive
- Resources
- Tangible (people, plant, $)
- Intangible (reputation, knowledge)
- History: Past behaviour/policies/performance
The Congruence Model. What is part of the transformation process?
- Formal (organisation): explicit, codified aspects of the organisation (structure, rewards, control systems)
- Informal (organisation): implicit, assumed aspects of the organization (culture, values, communication patterns)
- People: characteristics of members of the organisation (demography, personality, skills, motivation)
- Work: characteristics of jobs and how jobs are related to each other
The Congruence Model. What is part of the output?
Are we performing effectively on the following levels?
- Organisation
- Group
- Individual
The Congruence Model. What links the input and the transformation process?
Strategy
What is management?
The practice of planning, structuring, leading and controlling organizations.
Administration, setting the strategy, coordination, application of available resources (financial, human, naturla, technological).
Main points of Weber's «Ideal bureaucracy»?
- Special type of organisation
- Technicals knowledge
- Clearly defined structure (officies, which have defined competencies)
- Fixed salaries and career
- Hiring based on technical skills
- Seperation of operations and ownership
What is the main point of the Congruence Model? Where can misfits occur?
The higher the congruence among the elements, the greater the performance.
Fits and misfits can exist
- among different elements of the transformation process and strategy (“internal fit”)
- between strategy and environment (“external fit”)
What are the five forces in Porter's Model? What is the bascis questions?
- Threat of new entrants
- Bargaining Power of Buyers
- Threat of substitute products or/and services
- Bargaining Power of Suppliers
- Rivalery among existing competitors
Basic question: should we enter, or stay in (if already entered), this ‘industry’?
Poters 5 forces, details on rivalery among existing competitors?
Porters 5 forces, details on threat of new entrants?
Porters 5 forces, details on Bargaining power of suppliers?
- Suppliers can threaten to raise prices or reduce quality of purchased goods/services
- When do suppliers have this power?
- Concentrated groups
- The supplier’s product is an important input to the buyer’s business
- The supplier group’s products are differentiated or it has built up switching costs for the buyer
- etc.
Porters 5 forces, details on threat of substitutes?
What is a possible workflow in technicals forecasting?
- Patent analysis (good for emerging technologies)
- 3-round Delphi Survey (re-adjustment of focus of investigation on industry-wide trends)
- Follow-up interviews with Experts
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