Principles of management
Principles of management
Principles of management
Fichier Détails
Cartes-fiches | 40 |
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Langue | English |
Catégorie | Gestion d'entreprise |
Niveau | Université |
Crée / Actualisé | 02.01.2020 / 06.01.2020 |
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Types of organisations
Private organisation
Public organisation (government owned)
Not-for profit and non-governamental organisation (NGO)
Industrial revolutions
1780 - 1860 = Coal and iron technologies
1860 - 1914 = Steel and electricity technologies
1970 - now = Digital and robotic technologies
The four industrial revolutions
Industry 1.0 = Mechanisation and introduction steam and water power
Industry 2.0 = Mass production and assembly lines using electrical power
Industry 3.0 = Automated production computers
Industry 4.0 = Smart Factory, autonomous systems and machine learning
technologies allocated to Industry 4.0
Internet of Thinks,
Smart Sensor,
Advanced Robotics,
Big Data Analytics,
3D Printing,
Augmented Reality,
Cloud Computing,
Local Detection.
Managers use four types of resources:
People (the workers)
Financial resources (monetary components)
Physical resources (tangible goods, machines, and real estate)
Information/knowledge resources
The Four Major Managerial Functions
Planning is setting and attaining goals.
Organizing and staffing obtains humans and
physical resources to get job done.
Leading influences others to achieve organizational objectives. Leaders also execute to accomplish goals.
Controlling defines standards of performance and ensures that performance conforms to plans.
Efficiency and Effectiveness:
Efficiency: getting the most output from the least amount of input [goal: low waste]. Also referred to as “doing things right”
Effectiveness: completing activities so that organizational goals are attained [goal: highattainment]. Also referred to as “doing the right things”.
The Seventeen Managerial Roles
Planning:
(1) strategic planner,
(2) operational planner.
Organizing and staffing:
(3) organizer,
(4) liaison,
(5) staffing coordinator,
(6) resource allocator,
(7) task delegator
Leading:
(8) motivator and coach,
(9) figurehead,
(10) spokesperson,
(11) negotiator,
(12) team builder,
(13) team player,
(14) technical problem solver,
(15) entrepreneur.
Controlling:
(16) monitoring,
(17) disturbance handler.
The Five Managerial Skills
Technical skill involves and understanding of or proficiency in specific technique.
Interpersonal skill is manager’s ability to workeffectively as a team member and to build cooperative effort in the unit. Multiculturalism is important subset of interpersonal skill.
Conceptual skill is ability to work with complex concepts and to see the organization as total entity (the “big picture”). Needed for strategic planning.
Diagnostic skill is investigating a problem, identifying possible causes and choosing course of action to solve it.
Political skill is ability to acquire power to achieve objectives. Understanding of people and group interactions is required. Should be a supplement to job competence.
Main principles for the administrative theory (Henri Fayol)
Division of labor
Specialization
Unity of command
Span of control
Methods for International business activity
Exporting
Licensing and franchising
Local assembly and packing
Strategic alliances and joint ventures
Direct foreign investment
Global startup (small firm that begins by serving an international market)
NAFTA
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) establishes liberal trade among United States, Canada, and Mexico.
CAFTA
The Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA) facilitates trade among six countries (Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Dominican Republic) and the U.S.
ASEAN
Association of Southeast Asian Nations
Involves a large association of countries in the region (Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand, Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar (Burma), and Vietnam).
It also have important partnerships with Australia, India, New Zeland and North Korea.
Challenges Facing the Global Managerial Worker
A) Developing global leadership skills
B) Currency fluctuations (strong currency makes exporting more difficult)
C) Balance of trade problems (in general, better to export than import)
D) Human rights violations, corruption, and violence (also, customers may object)
E) Cultural shocks
F) Difference in negotiating styles
G) Piracy and lack of aknowledgement to intelectual property rights.
H) Coping with dangerous and defective products.
Sources of Unethical Decisions and Behavior
Individual characteristics
Self-interest, including greed and gluttony
Unconscious bias leading to unjust treatment of others
Rationalization, or making up good excuses for unethical behavior
Job dissatisfaction
The nature of the moral issue
Moral intensity is driver of unethical behavior.
Many people willing to behavior unethically when issue does not appear serious.
Moral laxity—moral behavior slips because other issues seem more important at the time.
The ethical climate in the organization
Organizational climate might condone unethical
behavior, such as risk taking and illegal behavior.
Pressure from management to achieve goals can compromise ethics.
Too much emphasis on meeting financial targets can prompt poor ethics.
Examples of Unethical Behavior
Stealing from employers and customers
Illegally copying software
Treating people unfairly (discrimination and prejudice)
Sexual harassment
Conflict of interest (judgment or objectivity is
compromised
Accepting kickbacks or bribes for doing business with another company
Divulging confidential information (thereby violating trust)
Misuse of corporate resources
Extracting extraordinary compensation from the
organization
Corporateespionage
Poor cyberethics
Guide to Ethical Decision Making
Is it right?
Is it fair?
Who gets hurt?
Would you be comfortable if your decision were exposed publicly?
Would you tell your child (or young relative) to do it?
How does it smell?
Tools for Creating an Ethical and Socially Responsible Workplace
I) Formal mechanisms for monitoring ethics (ethics programs such as ethics committee, channels for raising questions and voicing concerns).
II) Written organizational codes of conduct (include general and specific suggestions).
III) Widespread communication about ethics and social responsibility (executive commentary, small group discussions).
IV) Leadership by example and ethical role models (executives behave ethically, and other managers also serve as models).
V) Encouragement of confrontation about ethical deviations (every employee confronts anybody behaving unethically).
VI) Training programs in ethics and social responsibility (such as executive messages, classes, e-learning, videos).
Reasons why we should try to do planning:
Planning provides a direction.
Planning reduces uncertainty
Planning avoids waste and saves costs.
Planning defines expected standards of performance.
A rational/deductive framework for planning
1. Define current situation
2. Define Goals (targets)
3. Evaluate the Environment and possible barriers
4. Develop operation plan to reach the Goals (targets)
5. Develop Budgets
6. Implement the plan
7. Control the plan
Vision and Strategy
• A vision is idealized picture of organization’sfuture.
• A mission identifies firm’s purpose, and where itfits into the world.
Three major levels of business strategy
• Corporate-level strategy concerned with total direction of enterprise and selection of businesses.
• Business-level strategy focuses on how to compete in each of the businesses.
• Functional-level strategy specifies actions to implement above two strategies [functional managers should support corporate- and business-level strategies].
What are the characteristics of a good objective?
1) to be clear, concise and not ambiguous.
2) To be precise in terms of intended state and conditions.
3) To be achievable by competent workers.
4) To be challenging and innovative
5) To encourage the participation of all team members
6) To be related with events that are real, not obscure and undefined.
7) to be specific as to i) what, ii) who, iii) when, and iv) how.
A rationalist model of MBO envolves 6 steps:
1. Establish goals
2. Establish accountable objectives
3. Review subordinates proposals
4. Negotiate or agree
5. Create plans to reach goals
6. Review performance
Product life cycle
i) launching,
ii) growth,
iii) maturity,
iv) decline.
Rational decision making model
1. Identify the problem
2. Develop alternative solutions
3. Evaluate alternative solutions
4. Decide
5. Implement the decision
6. Evaluate and control
characteristics for creative and innovative organizations
Challenge (optimum amount)
Freedom (in how to accomplish a goal)
Resources (time and money needed)
Rewards and recognition for creative ideas (supplement to internal rewards)
Allocating time for creative thinking
Building on ideas of others
Greater diversity in groups
programs to enhance creativity
1. Creativity training (flexible thinking)
2. Brainstorming
3. gathering ideas from inside and outside the company
4. appropriate physical surroundings (workplaces)
improving creativity
be curious
laugh at own mistakes
take risks
find the best time to be creative and stop if you face a blockade
stretch your imagination
make sport
Dimensions with which to observe an organization’s bureaucracy
1. Hierarchy of authority / chain of command (organizational units controlled by a higher one)
2. Unity of command (subordinates receive assigned duties from one superior, and only accountable to that superior)
3. Span of control (number of persons supervised by a supervisor)
4. Task specialization (each organizational unit and each employee concentrates on one function)
5. Responsibilities and job descriptions (each employee has precise job description; policy and procedure manuals kept current and accessible)
6. Line and staff functions (line deal with primary outputs of firm, staff deals with support activities, and advise line units)
Key Factors that Influence Selection of Organization Structure
Strategy and goals—structure follows strategy.
Technology—high technology firms rely more on flexible structures.
Size—bigness leads to centralized controls and some formalization.
Financial condition—flat costs less.
Environmental stability—flexible structure for unstable environment.
Four major dimensions of job design
Task Characteristics
- Autonomy, variety, significance, feedback
Knowledge Characteristics
- difficulty challegenge, using different skills, problem solving
Social Characteristics
- interaction with others, support and advice, feedback,
Contextual Characteristics
- environment of the job, ergonomics, physical demand, work condition, equipment
Culture can be trasmitted by:
Language
History
Rituals
Materials
Paperwork/Regulatories
How to change culture by management?
Be a role model
Using rewards for change
recruit the right people
Advantages of changing culture:
Productivity can increase
Maybe more talents want to join because of culture
more Innovation
people get out of their comfort zones, more creative thinking
Conditions for change:
- non satisfaction with the current situation
- possible alternatives with benefits
- Group has to be capable of changing
Components of CSR:
o Cognitive - Thinking about relationsship
o Linguistic - Explaining activities
o Conative - What the firm actually does
five basic variables in management of organizations:
Task
Technology
People
Environment
Structure
Management Typologies According to functions performed by managers
Functional managers:
- Supervise workers in special activities, such as accounting
General managers:
- Are responsible for groups performing a variety of functions
Administrators:
- Are managers in public and non-profit organizations
Entrepreneurs:
- And small-business owners
Teams leaders:
- Are catalysts and facilitators