Introduction to Management Midterm 1
Environmental Scanning
Searching the environment for important events or issues that might affect and organization
Exporting
Selling domestically produced products to customers in foreign countries
Proximal Goals
Short-term goals or subgoals
Latham & Baldes Study
Showed that a goal, well conceived and executed, can have a huge impact on performance
Barling Study
Showed that everyone can learn to be to be transformational. Workers who were trained worked harder and sold more.
Greenburg Study
Showed that people would steal to get back at a company when their pay was cut. When treated well, stealing was less likely to occur (Procedural & Interactive Justice). Mangers must consider both rewards and treatment when making decisions that effect people
Interpersonal Skills
Skills, such as listening, communicating, questioning, and providing feedback, that enable people to have effective working relationships with other
Expatriate
Someone who lives and works outside his or her native country
Rules and Regulations
Standing plans that describe how a particular action should be performed or what must happen or not happen in response to a particular event
Policies
Standing plans that indicate the general course of action that should be taken in response to a particular event or situation
Procedures
Standing plans that indicate the specific steps that should be taken in response to a particular event
Organizational Stories
Stories told by organizational members to make sense of organizational events and changes and to emphasize culturally consistent assumptions, decisions, and actions
The Hawthorne Studies
Study results showed that productivity was strongly related to worker attitude and social relationships
Employee Involvement Team
Team that provides advice or makes suggestions to management concerning specific issues
Groupthink
A barrier to good decision making caused by pressure within the group for members to agree with each other
Social Responsibility
A business's obligation to pursue policies, make decisions, and take actions that benefit society
Customs Classification
A classification assigned to imported products by government officials that affects the imposition of import quotas
Franchise
A collection of networked firms in which the manufacturer or marketer of a product or service, the franchisor, licenses the entire business to another person or organization, the franchisee
Consistent Organizational Culture
A company culture in which the company actively defines and teaches organizational values, beliefs, and attitudes
Cash Cow
A company with a large share of a slow-growing market
Question Mark
A company with a small share of a fast-growing market
Dog
A company with a small share of a slow-growing market
Company Mission
A company's purpose or reason for existing
Ethical Responsibility
A company's social responsibility not to violate accepted principles of right and wrong when conducting its business
Economic Responsibility
A company's social responsibility to make a profit by producing a valued product or service
Legal Responsibility
A company's social responsibility to obey society's laws and regulations
Social Responsiveness
A company's strategy to respond to stakeholders' economic, legal, ethical, or discretionary expectations concerning social responsibility
Gainsharing
A compensation system in which companies share the financial value of performance gains, such as increased productivity, cost savings, or quality, with their workers
sustainable Competitive Advantage
A competitive advantage that other companies have tried unsuccessfully to duplicate and have, for the moment, stopped trying to duplicate
Multinational Corporation
A corporation that owns businesses in two or more countries
Slack Resources
A cushion of extra resources that can be used with options-based planning to adapt to unanticipated changes, problems, or opportunities
Devil's Advocacy
A decision-making method in which an individual or a subgroup is assigned the role of critic
Dialectical Inquiry
A decision-making method in which decision makers state the assumptions of a proposed solution (a thesis) and generate a solution that is the opposite (antithesis) of the solution
Brainstorming
A decision-making method in which group members build on each others' ideas to generate as many alternative solutions as possible
Electric Brainstorming
A decision-making method in which group members use computers to build on each others' ideas and generate as many alternative solutions as possible
Delphi Technique
A decision-making method in which members of a panel of experts respond to questions and to each other until reaching agreement on an issue
Nominal Group Technique
A decision-making method that begins and ends by having group members quietly write down and evaluate ideas to be shared with the group
Tariff
A direct tax on imported goods
Production Blocking
A disadvantage of face-to-face brainstorming in which a group member must wait to share an idea because another member is presenting an idea
Strategic dissonance
A discrepancy between a company's intended strategy and the strategic actions managers take when implementing that strategy
Management By Objectives
A four-step process in which managers discuss and select goals, develop tactical plans, and meet regularly to review progress toward goal accomplishment
Problem
A gap between a desired state and an existing state
Protectionism
A government's use of trade barriers to shield domestic companies and their workers from foreign competition
Traditional Work Group
A group composed of two or more people who work together to achieve a shared goal
Strategic Groups
A group of companies within an industry against which top managers compare, evaluate, and benchmark strategic threats and opportunities
Semi-Autonomous Work Group
A group that has the authority to make decisions and solve problems related to the major tasks of producing a product or service
Quota
A limit on the number or volume of imported products
Direct Foreign Investment
A method of investment in which a company builds a new business or buys an existing business in a foreign country
Strategic Objective
A more specific goal that unifies company-wide efforts, stretches and challenges the organization, and possesses a finish line and a time frame
Action Plan
A plan that lists the specific steps, people, resources, and time period needed to attain a goal
Competitive Analysis
A process for monitoring the competition that involves identifying competition, anticipating their moves, and determining their strengths and weaknesses
Relative Comparisons
A process in which each decision criterion is compared directly with every other criterion
Absolute Comparisons
A process in which each decision criterion is compared to a standard or ranked on its own merits
Work Team
A small number of people with complementary skills who hold themselves mutually accountable for pursuing a common purpose, achieving performance goals, and improving interdependent work processes
Accommodative Strategy
A social responsiveness strategy in which a company accepts responsibility for a problem and does all that society expects to solve that problem
Defensive Strategy
A social responsiveness strategy in which a company admits responsibility for a problem but does the least required to meet societal expectations
Positive Strategy
A social responsiveness strategy in which a company anticipates a problem before it occurs and does more than society expects to take responsibility and address the problem
Reactive Strategy
A social responsiveness strategy in which a company does less than society expects
Government Import Standard
A standard ostensibly established to protect the health and safety of citizens but, in reality, is often used to restrict imports
Purpose Statement
A statement of a company's purpose or reason for existing
Joint Venture
A strategic alliance in which two existing companies collaborate to form a third, independent company
Retrenchment Strategy
A strategy that focuses on turning aounrd very poor company performance by shrinking the size or scope of the business
Rational Decision Making
A systematic process of defining problems, evaluating alternatives, and choosing optimal solutions
Cross-Functional Team
A team composed of employees from different functional areas of organization
Virtual Team
A team composed of geographically and/or organizationally dispersed coworkers who use telecommunication and information technologies to accomplish an organizational task
Project Team
A team created to complete specific, one-time projects or tasks within a limited time
Self-Designing Team
A team that has the characteristics of self-managing teams but also controls team design, work tasks, and team membership
Self-Managing Team
A team that manages and controls all of the major tasks of producing a product or service
Stakeholder Model
A theory of corporate responsibility that holds that management's most important responsibility, long-term survival, is achieved by satisfying the interests of multiple corporate stakeholders
Opportunistic Behavior
A transaction in which one party in the relationship benefits at the expense of the other
Shareholder Model
A view of social responsibility that holds that an organization's overriding goal should be profit maximization for the benefit of shareholders
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT)
A worldwide trade agreement that reduced and eliminated tariffs, limited government subsidies, and established protections for intellectual property
Overt Integrity Test
A written test that estimates job applicants' honesty by directly asking them what they think or feel about theft or about punishment of unethical behaviors
Personality-Based Integrity Test
A written test that indirectly estimates job applicants' honesty by measuring psychological traits, such as dependability and conscientiousness
McClelland Learned Needs Theory (Motivation Varies From Person to Person)
Affiliation, Achievement, and power
Social Concensus
Agreement on whether behavior is bad or good
External Environments
All events outside a company that have the potential to influence or affect it
Media Advocacy
An advocacy group tactic that involves framing issues as public issues; exposing questionable, exploitative, or unethical practices; and by forcing media coverage by buying media time or creating controversy that is likely to receive extensive news coverage
Product Boycott
An advocacy group tactic that involves protesting a company's actions by persuading consumers not to purchase its product or service
Public Communications
An advocacy group tactic that relies on voluntary participation by the news media and the advertising industry to get the advocacy group's message out
Licensing
An agreement in which a domestic company, the licensor, receives royalty payments for allowing another company, the licensee, to produce the licensor's product, sell its service, or use its brand name in a specified foreign market
Cooperative Contract
An agreement in which a foreign business owner pays a company a fee for the right to conduct that business in his or her country
Strategic Alliance
An agreement in which companies combine key resources, costs, risks, technology, and people
Motivation to Manage
An assessment of how enthusiastic employees are about managing the work of others
Dynamic Environment
An environment in which the rate of change is fast
Stable Environment
An environment in which the rate of change is slow
Simple Environment
An environment with few environmental factors
Complex Environment
An environment with many environmental factors
Principle of Personal Virtue
An ethical principle that holds that you should never do anything that is not honest, open, and truthful and that you would not be glad to see reported in the newspapers or on TV
Principle of Utilitarian Benefits
An ethical principle that holds that you should never take any action that does not result in a greater good for society
Principle of Distributive Justice
An ethical principle that holds that you should never take any action that harms the least fortunate among us: the poor, the uneducated, the unemployed
Principle of Individual Rights
An ethical principle that holds that you should never take any action that infringes on others' agreed-upon rights
Principle of Long-Term Self-Interest
An ethical principle that holds that you should never take any action that is not in your or your organization's long-term self-interest
Principle of Religious Injunctions
An ethical principle that holds that you should never take any action that is not kind and that does not build a sense of community
Principle of Government Requirements
An ethical principle that holds that you should never take any action that violates the law, for the law represents the minimal moral standard
Primary Stakeholder
Any group on which an organization relies for its long-term survival
Secondary Stakeholder
Any group that can influence or be influenced by a company and can affect public perceptions about the company's socially responsible behavior
Regional Trading Zones
Areas in which tariff and non-tariff barriers on trade between countries are reduced or eliminated
Luong & Rogelberg Study of 37 U.S. Administrators
Average meeting per day - 3. Average time in meetings - 158 Minutes. More meetings per day - More Tired
Social Loafing
Behavior in which team members withhold their efforts and fail to perform their share of the work
Ethical Behavior
Behavior that conforms to a society's accepted principles of right and wrong
Max Weber
Believed in exercising control through knowledge
Fredrick W. Taylor
Believed that studying and testing was the right way to identify the best, most efficient way to do a job
Satisficing
Choosing a "good enough" alternative
Planning (Chapter 5)
Choosing a goal and developing a strategy to achieve that goal
Maximize
Choosing the best alternative
Competitors
Companies in the same industry that sell similar products or services to customers
Suppliers
Companies that provide material, human, financial, and informational resources to other companies
Skill-Based Pay
Compensation system that pays employees for learning additional skills or knowledge
Advocacy Groups
Concerned citizens who band together to try to influence the business practices of specific industries, businesses, and professions
Related Diversification
Creating of acquiring companies that share similar products, manufacturing, marketing, technology, or cultures
Operational Plans
Day-to-day plans, developed and implemented by lower-level managers, for producing or delivering the organization's products and services over a thirty-day to six-month period
Organizing
Deciding where decisions will be made, who will do what jobs and tasks, and who will work for whom
Planning (Chapter 1)
Determining organizational goals and a means for achieving them
A-type Conflict (Affective Conflict)
Disagreement that focuses on individuals or personal issues
C-type Conflict (Cognitive Conflict)
Disagreement that focuses on problem- and issue-related differences of opinion
Employee Shrinkage
Employee theft of company merchandise
Top Managers
Executives responsible for the overall direction of the orgainization
Alderfer ERG Theory (People Motivation Moves Down Hierarchy)
Existence, Relatedness, and Growth
Uncertainty
Extent to which managers can understand or predict which environmental changes and trends will affect their businesses
Evaluation Apprehension
Fear of what others will think of your ideas
Personal Aggression
Hostile or aggressive behavior toward others
Business Confidence Indices
Indices that show managers' level of confidence about future business growth
Norms
Informally agreed-on standards that regulate team behavior
Leading
Inspiring and motivating workers to work hard to achieve organizational goals
Distal Goals
Long-term or primary goals
Options-Based Planning
Maintaining planning flexibility by making small, simultaneous investments in many alternative plans
Team Leaders
Managers responsible for facilitating team activities toward goal accomplishment
Local Adaptation
Modifying rules, guidelines, policies, and procedures to adapt to differences in foreign customers, governments, and regulatory agencies
Controlling
Monitoring progress toward goal achievement and taking corrective action when needed
Global New Ventures
New companies that are founded with an active global strategy and have sales, employees, and financing in different countries
Fast Company Weil (Article)
No matter how badly other people treat you, no matter how confident you are in your future, never burn your bridges. In the new world of business, story telling is the ultimate leadership tool. Leading is about change. It is about taking people from where they are to where they need to be. The best way to get people to venture into unknown terrain is to make it desirable by taking them there in their imaginations.
Non-tariff Barriers
Non-tax methods of increasing the cost or reducing the volume of imported goods
Strategic Plans
Overall company plans that clarify how the company will serve customers and position itself against competitors over the next two to five years
Organizational Heroes
People celebrated for their qualities and achievements within an organization
Stakeholders
Persons or groups with a stake, or legitimate interest, in a company's actions
Management gurus and best sellers
Peter Drucker, Michael Porter, Bill Gates, CK Prahalad, Tom Peters, Jack Welch, Jim Collins, Henry Mintzberg, and etc...
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs (People Motivated by Lowest Need)
Physiological, Safety, Belongingness, Esteem, Self Actualization
Tactical Plans
Plans created and implemented by middle managers that specify how the company will use resources, budgets, and people over the next six months to two years to accomplish specific goals within its mission
Single-Use Plans
Plans that cover unique, one-time-only events
Standing Plans
Plans used repeatedly to handle frequently recurring events
Budgeting
Quantitative planning through which managers decide how to allocate available money to best accomplish company goals
Structural Accommodation
The ability to change organizational structures, policies, and practices in order to meet stretch goals
Bureaucratic Immunity
The ability to make changes without first getting approval from managers or other parts of an organization
Conceptual Skills
The ability to see the organization as a whole, understand how the different parts affect each other, and recognize how the company fits into or is affected by its environment
Human Skills
The ability to work well with others
Resource Scarcity
The abundance or shortage of critical organizational resources in an organization's external enviornment
Team Level
The average level of ability, experience, personality, or any other factor on a team
Global Business
The buying and selling of goods and services by people from different countries
Probability of Effect
The chance that something will happen that results in harm to others
Specific Environment
The customers, competitors, suppliers, industry regulations, and advocacy groups that are unique to an industry and directly affect how a company does business
Entrepreneur Role
The decisional role managers play when they adapt themselves, their subordinates, and their units to change
Resource Allocator Role
The decisional role managers play when they decide who gets what resources and in what amounts
Negotiator Role
The decisional role managers play when they negotiate schedules, projects, goals, outcomes, resources, and employee raises
Disturbance Handler Role
The decisional role managers play when they respond to severe pressures and problems that demand immediate action
Ethical Intensity
The degree of concern people have about an ethical issue
Supplier Dependence
The degree to which a company relies on a supplier because of the importance of the supplier's product to the company and the difficulty of finding other sources of that product
Individualism-Collectivism
The degree to which a person believes that people should be self-sufficient and that loyalty to one's self is more important than loyalty to team or company
Buyer Dependence
The degree to which a supplier relies on a buyer because of the importance of that buyer to the supplier and the difficulty of finding other buyers for its product
Goal Commitment
The determination to achieve a goal
General Environment
The economic, technological, sociocultural, and political/legal trends that indirectly affect all organizations
Relationship Behavior
The establishment of mutually beneficial, long-term exchanges between buyers and suppliers
Internal Environment
The events and trends inside an organization that affect management, employees, and organizational culture
Cohesiveness
The extent to which team members are attracted to a team and motivated to remain in it
Pre-conventional Level of Moral Development
The first level of moral development, in which people make decisions based on selfish reasons
Forming
The first stage of team development, in which team members meet each other, form initial impressions, and begin to establish team norms
Performing
The fourth and final stage of team development, in which performance improves because the team has matured into an effective, fully functioning team
Monitor Role
The informational role managers play when they scan their environment for information
Disseminator Role
The informational role managers play when they share information with others in their departments or companies
Spokesperson Role
The informational role managers play when they share information with people outside their departments or companies
Liaison Role
The interpersonal role managers play when they deal with people outside their units
Leader Role
The interpersonal role managers play when they motivate and encourage workers to accomplish organizational objectives
Figurehead Role
The interpersonal role managers play when they perform ceremonial duties
Technology
The knowledge, tools, and techniques used to transform inputs into outputs
Environmental Complexity
The number and the intensity of external factors in the environment that affect organizations
Decision Making
The process of choosing a solution from available alternatives
Behavioral Substitution
The process of having managers and employees perform new behaviors central to the new organizational culture in place of behaviors that were central to the old organizational culture
Behavioral Addition
The process of having managers and employees perform new behaviors that are central to and symbolic of the new organizational culture that a company wants to create
Environmental Change
The rate at which a company's general and specific environments change
Purchasing Power
The relative cost of a standard set of goods and services in different countries
Policy Uncertainty
The risk associated with changes in laws and government policies that directly affect the way foreign companies conduct business
Political Uncertainty
The risk of major changes in political regimes that can result from war, revolution, death of political leaders, social unrest, or other influential events
Conventional Level of Moral Development
The second level of moral development, in which people make decisions that conform to societal expectation
Storming
The second stage of development, characterized by conflict and disagreement, in which team members disagree over what the team should do and how it should do it
Ethics
The set of moral principles or values that defines right and wrong for a person or group
National Culture
The set of shared values and beliefs that affects the perceptions, decisions, and behavior of the people from a particular country
Discretionary Responsibilities
The social roles that a company fulfills beyond its economic, legal, and ethical responsibilities
Proximity of Effect
The social, psychological, cultural, or physical distance between a decision maker and those affected by his or her decision
Technical Skills
The specialized procedures, techniques, and knowledge required to get the job done
Decision Criteria
The standards used to guide judgments and decisions
World Trade Organization (WTO)
The successor to GATT; the only international organization dealing with the global rules of trade between nations; its main function is to ensure that trade flows as smoothly, predictably, and freely as possible
Punctuated Equilibrium Theory
The theory that companies go through long periods of stability (equilibrium), followed by short periods of dynamic, fundamental change (revolutionary periods), and then a new equilibrium
Post Conventional Level of Moral Development
The third level of moral development, in which people make decisions based on internalized principles
Norming
The third stage of team development, in which team members begin to settle into their roles, group cohesion grows, and positive team norms develop
Temporal Immediacy
The time between an act and the consequences the act produces
Magnitude of Consequences
The total harm or benefit derived from an ethical decision
Concentration of Effect
The total harm or benefit that an act produces on the average person
Organizational Culture
The values, beliefs, and attitudes shared by organizational members
Team Diversity
The variances or differences in ability, experience, personality, or any other factor on a team
First-Line Managers
Train and supervise the performance of non-managerial employees who are directly responsible for producing the company's products or services
Cross-Training
Training team members to do all or most of the jobs performed by the other team members
Property Deviance
Unethical behavior aimed at the organization's property or products
Production Deviance
Unethical behavior that hurts the quality and quantity of work produced
Workplace Deviance
Unethical behavior that violates organizational norms about right and wrong
Stage 6 of moral development
Universal principle
Political Deviance
Using one's influence to harm others in the company
Visible Artifacts
Visible signs of an organization's culture, such as the office design and layout, company dress code, and company benefits and perks, like stock options, personal parking spaces, or the private company dining room
Voluntary Export Restraints
Voluntarily imposed limits on the number or volume of products exported to a particular country
Distinctive Competence
What a company can make, do, or perform better than it's competitors.
Global Consistency
When a multinational company has offices, manufacturing plants, and distribution facilities in different countries and runs them all using the same rules, guidelines, policies, and procedures
standards
a basis of comparison for measuring the extent to which various kinds of organizational performance are satisfactory or unsatisfactory
Grand strategy
a broad corporate-level strategic plan used to achieve strategic goals and guide the strategic alternatives that managers of individual businesses or subunits may use
s-corporation
a closely held corporation that makes a valid election to be taxed under Subchapter S of Chapter 1 of the Internal Revenue Code. It does not pay any federal income taxes but instead, the corporation's income or losses are divided among and passed through to its shareholders. The shareholders must then report the income or loss on their own individual income tax returns.
interorganizational process
a collection of activities that take place among companies to transform inputs into outputs that customers value
Shadow-Strategy Task force
a committee within a company that analyzes the company's own weaknesses to determine how competitors could exploit them for competitive advantage
Star
a company with a large market share of a fast-growing market
Profit sharing
a compensation system in which a company pays a percentage of its profits to employees in addition to their regular compensation.
Piecework
a compensation system in which employees are paid a set rate for each item they produce
Commission
a compensation system in which employees earn a percentage of each sale they make.
Employee stock ownership plan (ESOP)
a compensation system that awards employees shares of company stock in addition to their regular compensation.
Stock options
a compensation system that gives employees the right to purchase shares of stock at a set price, even if the value of the stock increases above that price.
Response
a competitive countermove, prompted by a rival's attack, to defend or improve a company's market share or profits
Attack
a competitive move designed to reduce a rival's market share or profits
Human resource information system (HRIS)
a computerized system for gathering, analyzing, storing, and disseminating information related to the HRM process.
self-control (self-management)
a control system in which managers and workers control their own behavior by setting their own goals, monitoring their own progress, and rewarding themselves for goal achievement
Firm-level strategy
a corporate strategy that addresses the question "how should we compare against a particular firm?"
Industry-level strategy
a corporate strategy that addresses the question, "how should we compete in this industry?"
Portfolio strategy
a corporate-level strategy that minimizes risk by diversifying among various businesses or product lines
design iteration
a cycle of repetition in which a company tests a prototype of a new product or service, improves on that design, and then builds and tests the improved prototype
Technology cycle
a cycle that begins with the birth of a new technology and ends when that technology reaches its limits and is replace by a newer, substantially better technology
Executive information systems (EIS)
a data processing system that uses internal and external data sources to provide the information need to monitor and analyze organizational performance
Data warehouse
a database that stores huge amounts of data that have been prepared for data mining analysis by being cleaned of errors and redundancy
Sexual Harassment
a form of discrimination in which unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, or other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature occurs while performing one's job.
simple matrix
a form of matrix departmentalization in which managers in different parts of the matrix negotiate conflicts and resources
complex matrix
a form of matrix departmentalization in which mangers in different parts of the matrix report to matrix managers, who help them sort out conflicts and problems
Quid pro quo sexual harassment
a form of sexual harassment in which employment outcomes, such as hiring, promotion, or simply keeping one's job, depend on whether an individual submits to sexual harassment.
Hostile work environment
a form of sexual harassment in which unwelcome and demeaning sexually related behavior creates an intimidating and offensive work environment.
product prototype
a full-scare, working model that is being tested for design, function, and reliability
Gantt chart
a graphical chart that shows which tasks must be completed at which times in order to complete a project or task.
Rate buster
a group member whose work pace is significantly faster than the normal pace in his or her group.
Corporate portal
a hybrid of executive information systems and intranets that allows managers and employees to use a web browser to gain access to customized company information and to complete specialized transactions
matrix departmentalized
a hybrid organizational structure in which two or more forms of departmentalization, most often product and functional, are used together
Limited liability corporation
a hybrid type of legal structure that provides the limited liability features of a corporation and the tax efficiencies and operational flexibility of a partnership.
job specialization
a job composed of a small part of a larger task or process
Organizational decline
a large decrease in organizational performance that occurs when companies don't anticipate, recognize, neutralize, or adapt to the internal external pressures that threaten their survival
Wrongful discharge
a legal doctrine that requires employers to ave a job related reason to terminate employees.
unity of command
a management principle that workers should report to just one boss
Threat of new entrants
a measure of the degree to which barriers to entry make it easy or difficult for new companies to get started in an industry
Threat of substitute products or services
a measure of the ease with which customers can find substitutes for an industry's products or services
Bargaining power of buyers
a measure of the influence that customers have on a firm's prices
Bargaining power of suppliers
a measure of the influence that suppliers of parts, materials, and services to firms in an industry have on the prices of these inputs
Character of the rivalry
a measure of the intensity of competitive behavior between companies in an industry
Feedback control
a mechanism for gathering information about performance deficiencies after they occur
Concurrent control
a mechanism for gathering information about performance deficiencies as they occur, thereby eliminating or shortening the delay between performance and feedback
Feedforward control
a mechanism for monitoring performance inputs rather than outputs to prevent or minimize performance deficiencies before they occur
dominant design
a new technological design or process that becomes the accepted market standard
s-curve pattern of innovation
a pattern of technological innovation characterized by slow initial progress, then rapid progress, and then slow progress again as a technology matures and reaches its limits
360-degree feedback
a performance appraisal process in which feedback is obtained from the boss, subordinates, peers and coworkers, and the employees themselves.
customer defections
a performance assessment in which companies identify which customers are leaving and measure the rate at which they are leaving
organizational development
a philosophy and collection of planned change interventions designed to improve an organization's long-term health and performance
BCG matrix
a portfolio strategy developed by the Boston Consulting Group that categorizes a corporation's businesses by growth rate and relative market share and helps managers decide how to invest corporate funds
Job evaluation
a process that determines the worth of each job in a company by evaluating the market value of the knowledge, skills, and requirements needed to perform it.
Virus
a program or piece of code that, without your knowledge, attaches itself to other programs on your computer and can trigger anything from a harmless flashing message to the reformatting of your hard drive to a system-wide network shutdown
Firewall
a protective hardware or software device that sits between the computers in an internal organizational network and outside networks, such as the internet
Flow
a psychological state of effortlessness, in which you become completely absorbed in what you're doing and time seems to pass quickly
Job analysis
a purposeful, systematic process for collecting information on the important work-related aspects of a job.
Control
a regulatory process of establishing standards to achieve organizational goals, comparing actual performance against the standards, and taking corrective action when necessary
Four-fifths (or 80 percent) rule
a rule of thumb used by the courts and the EEOC to determine whether there is evidence of adverse impact. A violation of this rule occurs when the selection rate for a protected group is less than 80 percent, or four-fifths, of the selection rate for a non protected group.
Interview
a selection tool in which company representatives ask job applicants job-related questions to determine whether they are qualified for the job.
Assessment centers
a series of managerial simulations, graded by trained observers, that are used to determine applicants capability for managerial work.
System
a set of interrelated elements or parts that function as a whole.
partnership
a single business where two or more people share ownership. Each partner contributes to all aspects of the business, including money, property, labor or skill. In return, each partner shares in the profits and losses of the business.
Diversification
a strategy for reducing risk by buying a variety of items (stocks or, in the case of a corporation, types of businesses) so that the failure of one stock or one business does not doom the entire portfolio
Stability strategy
a strategy that focuses on improving the way in which the company sells the same products or services to the same customers
Growth Strategy
a strategy that focuses on increasing profits, revenues, market share, or the number of places in which the company does business
Organization
a system of consciously coordinated activities or forces created by two or more people.
General Electric workout
a three-day meeting in which managers and employees from different levels and parts of an organization quickly generate and act on solutions to specific business problems
Cash flow analysis
a type of analysis that predicts how changes in a business will affect its ability to take in more cash than it pays out
bar code
a visual pattern that represents numerical data by varying the thickness and pattern of vertical bars
Job description
a written description of the basic tasks, duties, and responsibilities required of an employee holding a particular job.
Job specifications
a written summary of the qualifications needed to successfully perform a particular job.
Balance sheets
accounting statements that provide a snapshot of a company's financial position at a particular time
Income statements
accounting statements, also called "profit and loss statements" that show what has happened to an organization's income, expenses, and net profit over a period of time
line function
an activity that does not contribute directly to creating or selling the company's products
staff function
an activity that does not contribute directly to creating or selling the company's products but instead supports line activities
Compromise
an approach to dealing with conflict in which both parties give up some of what they want in order to reach agreement on a plan to reduce or settle the conflict.
Integrative conflict resolution
an approach to dealing with conflict in which both parties indicate their preferences and then work together to find an alternative that meets the needs of both.
Domination
an approach to dealing with conflict in which one party satisfies its desires and objectives at the expense of the other party's desires and objectives.
Experiential approach to innovation
an approach to innovation that assumes a highly uncertain environment and uses intuition, flexible options, and hands-on experience to reduce uncertainty and acerbate learning and understanding
compression approach to innovation
an approach to innovation that assumes that incremental innovation can be planned using a series of steps and that compressing those steps can speed innovation
job characteristics model (JCM)
an approach to job redesign that seeks to formulate hobs in ways that motivate workers and lead to positive work outcomes
Situational Analysis (SWOT)
an assessment of the strengths and weaknesses in an organization's internal environment and the opportunities and threats in its external environment
Electronic scanner
an electronic device that converts printed text into digital images
Bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ)
an exception in employment law that permits sex, age, religion, and the like to be used when making employment decisions, but only they are " reasonably necessary to the normal operation of that particular business." BFOQs are strictly monitored by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Expert system
an information system that contains the specialized knowledge and decision makers so that non experts can draw on this knowledge base to make decisions
Decision support system (DSS)
an information system that yeps manages understand specific kinds of problems and potential solutions
organic organization
an organization characterized by broadly defined jobs and responsibilities; loosely defined, frequently changing roles; and decentralized authority and horizontal communication based on task knowledge
mechanistic organization
an organization characterized by specialized jobs and responsibilities; precisely defined, unchanging roles; and a rigid chain of command based on centralized authority and vertical communication
virtual organization
an organization that is part of a network in which many companies share skills, costs, capabilities, markets, and customers to collectively solve customer problems or provide specific products or services
modular organization
an organization that outsources noncore business activities to outside companies, suppliers, specialists, or consultants
sole proprietorship
an unincorporated business owned and run by one individual with no distinction between the business and the owner. The owner is entitled to all profits and is responsible for all of the business's debts, losses and liabilities
Two-factor authentication
authentication based on what users know, such as a password and what they have in their possession, such as a secure ID card or key
Motion Study
breaking each task or job into its separate motions and then eliminating those that are unnecessary or repetitive.
Financial ratios
calculations typically used to track a business's liquidity (cash), efficiency, and profitability over time compared to other businesses in its industry
Generational change
change based on incremental improvements to a dominant technological design such that that improved technology is fully backward compatible with the older technology
results-drive change
change created quickly by focusing on the measurement and improvement of results
Reactors
companies that do not follow a consistent adaptive strategy but instead react to changes in the external environment after they occur
Defenders
companies using an adaptive strategy aimed at defending strategic positions by seeking moderate, steady growth and by offering a limited range of high-quality products and services to a well-defined set of customers
Prospectors
companies using an adaptive strategy that seeks fast growth by searching for new market opportunities, encouraging risk taking, and being the first to bring innovative new products to a market
Analyzers
companies using an adaptive strategy that seeks to minimize risk and maximize profits by following or imitating the proven success of prospectors
Design competition
competition between old and new technologies to establish a new technological standard or dominate design
Unrelated diversification
creating or acquiring companies in completely unrelated businesses
Value
customer perception that the product quality is excellent for the price
Training
developing the skills, experience, and knowledge employees need to perform their jobs or improve their performance.
Phased retirement
employees transition to retirement by working reduced hours over a period of time before completely retiring.
Outplacement services
employment-counseling services offered to employees who are losing their jobs because of downsizing.
Biographical data (bio-data)
extensive surveys that ask applicants questions about their personal backgrounds and life experiences.
Raw data
facts and figures
empowerment
feeling of intrinsic motivation in which workers perceive their work to have impact and meaning and perceive themselves to be competent and capable of self-determination
Change Forces
forces that produce differences in the form, quality, or condition of an organization over time
resistance forces
forces that support the existing conditions in organization
Milestones
formal project review points used to assess progress and performance
reengineering
fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical measures of performance such as cost, quality, service, and speed
unfreezing
getting the people affected by change to believe that change is needed
Authorization
granting authenticated users approves access to data, software, and systems
Contingency approach
holds that there are no universal management theories and hat the most effective management theory or idea depends on the kinds of problems or situations that managers are facing at a particular time and place.
job enlargement
increasing the number of different tasks that a worker performs within one particular job
job enrichment
increasing the number of tasks in a particular job and giving workers the authority and control to make meaningful decision about their work
Stage 2 of moral development
instrumental change
Disparate treatment
intentional discrimination that occurs when people are purposely not given the same hiring, promotion, or membership opportunities because of their race, color, sex, age, ethnic group, national origin, or religious beliefs.
Secure sockets layer (SSL) encryption
internet browser-based encryption that provides secure off-site web access to some data and programs
Structured interviews
interviews in which all applicants are asked the same set of standardized questions, usually including situational, behavioral, background and job-knowledge questions.
Unstructured interviews
interviews in which interviewers are free to ask the applicants anything they want.
Authentication
making sure potential users are who they claim to be
balanced scorecard
measurement of organizational performance in four equally important areas: finances, customers, internal operations, and innovation and learning
Objective performance measures
measures of job performance that are easily and directly counted or quantified.
Subjective performance measures
measures of job performance that require someone to judge or asses a worker's performance.
internal motivation
motivation that comes from the job itself rather than from outside rewards
Extranets
networks that allow companies to exchange information and conduct transactions with outsiders by providing them direct, web-based access to authorize parts of a company's intranet or information system
Initial Expectations in management
o Be the Boss o Formal Authority o Job is Not Managing People but Tasks
Process losses
o Group Maintenance o Social Loafing (Slacking) o Production Blocking (Unwilling to Compromise)
Process gains
o Information Exchange o Load Balancing o Social Facilitation
After 6 months into management:
o Initial Expectations Wrong o Fast Paced o Heavy Workload o Job is to problem solve and troubleshoot for subordinates
After 1 year into management
o No longer a "doer" o Communicates and Listens o Reinforces o Adapts to Control Stress o Job is People Development
resistance to change
opposition to change resulting from self-interest, misunderstanding and distrust, and a general tolerance for change
geographic departmentalization
organizing work and workers into separate units responsible for doing business particular geographic areas
functional departmentalization
organizing work and workers into separate units responsible for particular business functions or areas of expertise
customer departmentalization
organizing work and workers into separate units responsible for particular kinds of customers
product departmentalization
organizing work and workers into separate units responsible for producing particular products or services
innovation streams
patterns innovation over time that can create sustainable competitive advantage
Predictive patterns
patterns that help identify database elements that are different
Suboptimization
performance improvement in one part of an organization but only at the expense of decreased performance in another part
job rotation
periodically moving workers from one specialized job to another to give them more variety and the opportunity to use different skills
empowering workers
permanently passing decision-making authority and responsibility from managers to workers by giving them the information and resources they need to make and carry out good decisions
Intranets
private company networks that allow employees to easily access, share, and publish information using Internet software
Background checks
procedures used to verify the truthfulness and accuracy of information that applicants provide about themselves and to uncover negative, job-related background information not provided by applicants.
Early retirement incentive programs (ERIPs)
programs that offer financial benefits to employees to encourage them to retire early.
Stage 1 of moral development
punishment and obedience
Budgets
quantitative plans through which managers decide how to allocate available money to best accomplish company goals
Behavior observation scales (BOSs)
rating scales that indicate the frequency with which workers perform specific behaviors that are representatives of the job dimensions critical to successful job performance.
Subsystems
smaller systems that operate within the context of a larger system.
Stage 5 of moral development
social contract
Virtual private network (VPN)
software that securely encrypts data sent by employees outside the company network, decrypts the data when they arrive within the company computer network, and does the same when data are sent back to employees outside the network
Web services
software that uses standardized protocols to describe data form one company in such a way that those data can automatically be read, understood, transcribed, and processed by different computer systems in another company
standardization
solving problems by consistently applying the same rules, procedures, and processes
Employment references
sources such as previous employers or coworkers who can provide job-related information about job candidates.
departmentalization
subdividing work and workers into separate organization units responsible for completing particular tasks
refreezing
supporting and reinforcing new changes so that they stick
Open systems
systems that can sustain themselves only be interacting with their environments , on which they depend for their survival.
Closed systems
systems that can sustain themselves without interacting with their environment.
radio frequency identification (RFID) tags
tags containing minuscule microchips that transmit information via radio waves and can be used to track the number and location of the objects into which the tags have been inserted
Cognitive ability tests
tests that measure the extent to which applicants have abilities in perceptual speed, verbal comprehension, numerical aptitude, general reasoning, and spatial aptitude.
Specific ability tests ( aptitude tests)
tests that measure the extent to which applicants possesses the particular kind of ability needed to do a job well.
Work Sample tests
tests that require applicants to perform tasks that are actually done on the job.
optical character recognition
the ability of software to convert digitalized documents into ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) text that can be searched, read, and edited by word processing and other kinds of software
Economic value added (EVA)
the amount by which company profits (revenues minus expenses minus taxes) exceed the cost of capital in a given year
feedback
the amount of information the job provides to workers about their work performance
Resources
the assets, capabilities, processes, employee time, information, and knowledge that an organization controls
delegation of authority
the assignment of direct authority and responsibility to a subordinate to complete tasks for which the manager is normally responsible
Core Firms
the central companies in a strategic group
intraorganizational process
the collection of activities that take place within an organization to transform inputs into outputs that customers value
organizational process
the collection of activities that transform inputs into outputs that customers value
retrieval cost
the cost of accessing already-stored and processed information
Acquisition cost
the cost of obtaining data that you don't have
storage cost
the cost of physically or electronically archiving information for ayer retrieval and use
communication cost
the cost of transmitting information from one place to another
processing cost
the cost of turning raw data into usable information
regulation costs
the costs associated with implementing or maintaining control
autonomy
the degree to which a job gives workers the discretion, freedom, and independence to decide how and when to accomplish the job
task significance
the degree to which a job is perceived to have a substantial impact on others inside or outside the organization
task identity
the degree to which a job, from beginning to end, requires the completion of a whole and identifiable piece of work
Market commonality
the degree to which two companies have overlapping products, services, or customers in multiple markets
Bureaucracy
the exercise of control on the basis of knowledge, expertise, or experience.
Resource similarity
the extent to which a competitor has similar amounts and kinds of resources
task interdependence
the extent to which collective action is required to complete an entire place of work
Cybernetic feasibility
the extent to which it is possible to implement each step in the control process
Compensation
the financial and non-financial rewards that organizations give employees in exchange for their work.
secondary firms
the firms in a strategic group that follow strategies related to but somewhat different from those of the core firms
technological lockout
the inability of a company to competitively sell its products because it relies on old technology or a non dominant design
Core capabilities
the internal decision-making routines, problem-solving processes, and organizational cultures that determine how efficiently inputs can be turned into outputs
decentralization
the location of a significant amount of authority in the lower levels of the organization
centralization of authority
the location of most authority at the upper levels of the organization
skill variety
the number of different activities performed in a job
job design
the number, kind, and variety of tasks that individual workers perform in doing their jobs
Corporate-level strategy
the overall organizational strategy that addresses the question "What businesses are we in or should we be in?"
change agent
the person formally in charge of guiding a change effort
Discontinuous change
the phase of a technology cycle characterized by technological substitution and design competition
incremental change
the phase of a technology in which companies innovate by lowering costs and improving the functioning and performance of the dominant technological design
technological discontinuity
the phase of an innovation stream in which a scientific advance or unique combination of existing technologies creates a significant breakthrough in performance or function
Downsizing
the planned elimination of jobs in a company.
Cost leadership
the positioning strategy of producing a product or service of acceptable quality at consistently lower production costs than competitors can, so that the firm can offer the product or service at the lowest price in the industry
Differentiation
the positioning strategy of producing a product or service that is sufficiently different from competitors' offerings that customers are willing to pay a premium price for it
Focus Strategy
the positioning strategy of using cost leadership or differentiation to produce a specialized product or service for a limited, specially targeted group of customers in a particular geographic region or market segment
Moore's laws
the prediction that about every two years, computer processing power would double and its costs would drop by 50 percent
Performance appraisal
the process of assessing how well employees are doing their jobs.
Validation
the process of determining how well a selection test or procedure predicts future job performance, the more valid a test is said to be.
External recruiting
the process of developing a pool of qualified job applicants from outside the company.
Internal recruiting
the process of developing a pool of qualified job applicants from people who already work in the company.
Recruiting
the process of developing a pool of qualified job applicants.
Data mining
the process of discovering unknown patterns and relationships in large amounts of date
protecting information
the process of ensuring that data are reliably and consistently retrievable in a usable format for authorized users but no one else
Human resource management (HRM)
the process of finding, developing, and keeping the right people to form a qualified work force.
Selection
the process of gathering information about job applicants to decide who should be offered a job
Needs assessment
the process of identifying and prioritizing the learning needs of employees.
Benchmarking
the process of identifying outstanding practices, processes, and standards in other companies and adapting them to your company
cybernetic
the process of steering or keeping on course
change intervention
the process used to get workers and managers to change their behaviors and work practices
unsupervised data mining
the process when the user simply tells the data mining software to uncover whatever patterns and relationships it can find in a data set
supervised data mining
the process when the user tells the dat mining software to look and test for specific patterns and relationships in a data set
Acquisition
the purchase of a company by another company
technological substitution
the purchase of new technologies to replace older ones
normative control
the regulation of workers behavior and decisions through widely shared organizational values and beliefs
output control
the regulation of workers results or outputs through rewards and incentives
concertive control
the regulation of workers' behavior and decisions through work group values and beliefs
staff authority
the right to advise, but not command, others who are not subordinates in the chain of command
line of authority
the right to command immediate subordinates in the chain of command
authority
the right to give commands, take action, and make decisions to achieve organizational objectives
direct competition
the rivalry between two companies that offer similar products and services, acknowledge each other as rivals, and act and react to each other's strategic actions
control loss
the situation in which behavior and work procedures do not conform to standards
Recovery
the strategic actions taken after retrenchment to return to a growth strategy
First-mover advantage
the strategic advantage that companies earn by being the first to use new information technology to substantially lower costs or to make a product or service different from that of competitors
Strategic reference points
the strategic targets managers use to measure whether a firm has developed the core competencies it needs to achieve a sustainable competitive advantage
Organizational innovation
the successful implementation of creative ideas in organizations
Testing
the systematic comparison of different product designs or design iterations
Data encryption
the transformation of data into complex, scrambled digital codes that can be decrypted only by authorized users who possess unique decryption keys
Knowledge
the understanding that one gains from information
coercion
the use of formal power and authority to force others to change
bureaucratic control
the use of hierarchical authority to influence employee behavior by rewarding or punishing employees for compliance or non compliance with organizational policies rules, and procedures
Objective control
the use of observable measures of worker behavior or outputs to assess performance and influence behavior
organizational structure
the vertical and horizontal configuration of departments, authority, and jobs within a company
chain of command
the vertical line of authority that clarifies who reports to whom throughout the organization
Employee Separation
the voluntary or involuntary loss of an employee.
Scientific Management
thoroughly studying and testing different work methods to identify the best, most efficient way to complete a job.
Time study
timing how long it takes good workers to complete each part of their jobs.
Rater training
training performance appraisal raters in how to avoid rating errors and increase rating accuracy.
Processing information
transforming raw data into meaningful information
Adverse impact
unintentional discrimination that occurs when members of a particular race,sex, or ethnic group are unintentionally harmed or disadvantaged because they are hired, promoted, or trained (or any other employment decision) at substantially lower rates than others.
Information
useful data that can influence people's choices and behavior
data clusters
when three or more database elements occur together (i.e. cluster) in a significant way
Electronic data interchange (EDI)
when two companies convert their purchase and ordering information to a standardized format to enable the direct electronic transmission of that information from one company's computer system to the other company's computer system
Sequence patterns
when two or more database elements occur together in a significant pattern in which one of the elements precedes the other
Association or affinity patterns
when two or more database elements tend to occur together in a significant way
Synergy
when two or more subsystems working together can produce more than they can working apart.
Soldiering
when workers deliberately slow their pace or restrict their work output.
pooled interdependence
work complete by having each job or department independently contribute to the whole
reciprocal interdependence
work completed by different jobs or groups working together in a back and forth manner
sequential interdependence
work completed in succession, with on group's or job's outputs becoming the inputs for the next group or job
multifunctional teams
work teams composed of people from different departments
creative work environments
workplace cultures in which workers perceive that new ideas are welcomed, valued, and encouraged
Managers as teachers:
• (TELL) Explain Basic Concepts • (SHOW) Demonstrate Performance • (WATCH) Solicit Practice • (ENCOURAGE) Provide Constructive Feedback
3 mistakes managers make
• Insensitive to others, Bullying Style • Cold and Arrogant • Betray Trust of Workers
Marshmallow principle
• It demands that we bring all of our best senses and thinking to complete a task • Allow for the Inputs of Others • Trial and Error
Hofstede's cultural dimensions
• Long-Term vs. Short-Term Orientation • Uncertainty Avoidance • Masculinity vs. Femininity • Individualism vs. Collectivism • Power Distance
Performance equation
• Performance = Ability (Can Do) x Motivation (Will Do)
Stages of moral development
• Stage 1 - Punishment and Obedience • Stage 2 - Instrumental Change • Stage 3 - Good Boy Nice Girl • Stage 4 - Law and Order • Stage 5 - Social Contract • Stage 6 - Universal Principle
Taylor's Four Principles of Scientific Management
1st - Develop a science for element of a man's work (Determine the "one best way" to do the job) 2nd - Scientifically select, train, and teach workers 3rd - Manager and Workers must get along and cooperate 4th - Equally divide the work between Management and the Workers
Weber's Seven Elements of Bureaucratic Organizations
1st - Qualification Based Hiring 2nd - Merit Based Promotion 3rd - Chain of Command 4th - Division of Labor 5th - Rules Apply to everyone regardless of stature 6th - Rules and Procedures are recorded in writing 7th - Owners should not run the organization
Employee turnover
loss of employees who voluntarily choose to leave the company.
Dysfunctional turnover
loss of high-performing employees who voluntarily chose to leave a company.
Functional turnover
loss of poor-performing employment who voluntarily choose to leave a company.
Trade Barriers
Government-imposed regulations that increase the cost and restrict the number of imported goods
Union of South American Nations (UNASUR)
A regional trade agreement between Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Venezuela, Bolivia, Columbia, Ecuador, Peru, Guyana, Suriname, and Chile
Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC)
A regional trade agreement between Australia, Canada, Chile, the People's Republic of China, Hong Kong, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Russia, South Korea, Taiwan, the United States, and all the members of ASEAN except Cambodia, Laos, and Myanmar
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
A regional trade agreement between Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam
Dominican Republic- Central America Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA-DR)
A regional trade agreement between Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and the United States
Maastricht Treaty of Europe
A regional trade agreement between most European countries
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
A regional trade agreement between the United States, Canada, and Mexico
Competitive inertia
A reluctance to change strategies or competitive practices that have been successful in the past
valuable resources
A resource that allows companies to improve efficiency and effectiveness
Imperfectly Imitable Resource
A resource that is impossible or extremely costly for other firms to duplicate
Rare Resource
A resource that is not controlled or possessed by many competing firms
Nonsubstitutable Resource
A resource that produces value or competitive advantage and has no equivalent substitutes or replacements
De-forming
A reversal of the forming stage, in which team members position themselves to control pieces of the team, avoid each other, and isolate themselves from team leaders
De-norming
A reversal of the norming stage, in which team performance begins to decline as the size, scope, goal, or members of the team change
De-storming
A reversal of the storming phase, in which the team's comfort level decreases, team cohesion weakens, and angry emotions and conflict may flare
Effectiveness
Accomplishing tasks that help fulfill organizational objectives
Team productivity equation
Actual Productivity = Potential Productivity + Process Gains - Process Losses
Cognitive Maps
Graphic depictions of how managers believe environmental factors relate to possible organizational actions
Wholly Owned Affiliates
Foreign offices, facilities, and manufacturing plants that are 100 percent owned by the parent company
Management
Getting work done through others
Efficiency
Getting work done with a minimum of effort, expense, or waste
S.M.A.R.T. Goals
Goals that are specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and timely
Stage 3 of moral development
Good boy nice girl
Subsidies
Government loans, grants, and tax deferments given to domestic companies to protect them from foreign competition
Industry Regulation
Regulations and rules that govern the business practices and procedures of specific industries, businesses, and professions
Whistleblowing
Reporting others' ethics violations to management or legal authorities
Middle Managers
Responsible for setting objectives consistent with top management's goals and for planning and implementing subunit strategies for achieving these objectives
Stage 4 of moral development
law and order