managemnet
Frank and Lillian Gilbreth used "_________ __________" to identify and remove wasteful movements so workers could be more efficient and productive
"motion studies"
What are some things Managers often do
-Hire people who are like them -Think they are immune to conflicts of interest -Take more credit than they deserve -Blame others when they deserve some blame themselves
Taylor's Four Principles of Scientific Management
-Management should develop a precise, scientific approach for each element of one's work. -Management should scientifically select, train, teach, and develop each worker. -Management should cooperate with workers. -Management should ensure an appropriate division of work and responsibility.
Each organization functions in a close, immediate competitive environment consisting of:
-The rivalry among existing competitors -The threat of new entrants -The threat of substitute and complementary products -The bargaining power of suppliers -The bargaining power of buyers
market culture ex: oil and natural gas companies
-external oriented and focus on control -primary objectives are productivity, planning, and efficiency -members motivated by rewards
adhocracy culture Ex: apple
-externally oriented and flexible -emphasizes change in which growth, resource acquisition, and innovations are stressed -leaders tend to be entrepreneurial and risk takers
Clan culture
-internally oriented and flexible -based on the values and norms associated with the firm -leaders tend to act as mentors and facilitators -member development and values participation in decision making
hierarchy culture ex: U.S army force
-internally oriented by more focus on control and stability -values and norms associated with a bureaucracy -
Five components of an organization's competitive environment
1.Impact of new competitors 2.Power of customers 3.Impact of substitute or complement services or products 4.Power of suppliers 5.Competition between existing rivals in the industry
Three Criteria Help You Choose the Best Approach
1.managers need to change what can be changed 2.managers should use the appropriate response 3. Managers should choose responses that offer the most benefit at the lowest cost.
As early as ________, the Chinese applied the managerial concepts of delegation, cooperation, efficiency, organization, and control.
1100bc
Around ________, the Venetians standardized production through the use of an assembly line..
1436
In ______, Adam Smith discussed control and the principle of specialization with regard to manufacturing workers.
1776
Around ___________, the Greeks recognized management as a separate art and advocated a scientific approach to work.
400-350bc
Around _______, the Egyptians used planning, organizing, leading, and controlling to build their great pyramids
4000bc
In ________, Sun Tzu discussed the importance of planning and leading in his book The Art of War.
500bc
what is the Philanthropic level of corporate social responsibility
Additional behaviors and activities that society finds desirable and that the values of the business support
Scientific management
Applied scientific methods to analyze and determine the "one best way"
The process of comparing an organization's practices and technologies with those of other companies
Benchmarking
Creating supplies of excess resources in case of unpredictable needs
Buffering
Responding to the environment includes
Buffering, smoothing, flexible processes
Ethical dilemmas
CEO Pay Commercialization in schools Religion at work Sweatshops Raising min. wage
Ethical principles established by international executives based in Caux, Switzerland, in collaboration with business leaders from Japan, Europe, and the United States
Caux principles
Who Published The Functions of the Executive in 1938 outlining the role of the senior executive:
Chester Barnard
Organizational culture includes
Clan, adhocracy, hierarchy, market
"level 5 leaders" Good to Great
Collins
What are some Ethics Programs
Compliance-based ethics programs Integrity-based ethics programs
Proposes that the managerial strategies, structures, and processes that result in high performance depend on the characteristics, or important contingencies, or the situation in which they are applied
Contingency perspective (Contemporary Approaches )
which of the four functions of management Monitoring and reacting to performance
Controlling
leader's success Seven Habits of Highly Effective People
Covey
Characteristics of an Effective Bureaucracy
DIVISION OF LABOR-Tasks, assignments, and authority are specified AUTHORITY-A chain of command or hierarchy is well established QUALIFICATIONS-Employees are selected and promoted based on merit OWNERSHIP-Managers, not owners, should run the organization RULES-Impersonal rules should be applied consistently and fairly.
need for organizations to set clear objectives Popularized concepts such as MBO, decentralization, humans as assets, and knowledge workers
Drucker
Sustainable growth
Economic growth and development that meet present needs without harming the needs of future generations
Levels of corporate social responsibility are
Economic, legal, ethical, philanthropic
An ethical principle holding that individual self-interest is the actual motive of all conscious action
Egoism
decisional role
Entrepreneur, disturbance handler-finds solutions resource allocator- how to use the money negotiator
To keep up with the environment you could
Environmental scanning, scenarios, competitive intelligence, forecasting, benchmarking
Speed
Fast and timely execution, response, and delivery of results
which level of management are Lower-level managers who execute the operational activities of the organization
Frontline managers
gantt is also known for creating the ____________, which helps employees and managers plan projects by task and time to complete those tasks.
Gantt chart
Major Challenges Facing Managers
Globalization Technological change The importance of knowledge and ideas Collaboration across organizational boundaries Increasingly diverse labor force
Ecocentric management
Goal is the creation of sustainable economic development and improvement of quality of life worldwide for all organizational stakeholder
management innovation Ranked as the "world's most influential business thinker"
Hamel -
who advocated administrative management, a classical management approach that attempted to identify major principles and functions that managers could use to achieve superior organizational performance.
Henri Fayol
Concerns the value of each person as an end, not a means to the fulfillment of others' purposes
Human dignity
A classical management approach that attempted to understand and explain how human psychological and social processes interact with the formal aspects of the work situation to influence performance
Human relations (Classical Approaches)
Ethical climate
In an organization, the processes by which decisions are evaluated and made on the basis of right and wrong
Strategies that an organization acting on its own uses to change some aspect of its current environment
Independent strategies
_____________is the introduction of new goods and services. Often the most important innovation is not the product itself, but how it is delivered
Innovation
Sources of Competitive Advantage
Innovation Quality Service Speed Cost competitiveness
Cost Competitiveness
Keeping costs low to achieve profits and be able to offer prices that are attractive to consumers
Five elements of an organization's macroenvironment
Laws and regulations, the economy, technology, demographics, and social values
interpersonal role
Leader- staffing communicating liaison-relationships you have outside the organization figurehead-being the face of the company
which of the four functions of management Stimulating people to be high performers
Leading
A process of analyzing all inputs and outputs, though the entire "cradle-to-grave" life of a product, to determine total environmental impact
Life-cycle analysis (LCA)
who Emphasized the continually changing situations that managers face
Mary Parker Follett
what is the ethical level of corporate social responsibility
Meeting other social expectations, not written as law
which level of management are Managers located in the middle layers of the organizational hierarchy, reporting to top-level executives
Middle-level managers
informational role
Monitor-person that seeks information disseminator-give information(external, internal) spokesperson
what are Ethical Decision Making
Moral awareness Moral judgment Moral character
Principles, rules, and values people use in deciding what is right or wrong
Moral philosophy
An approach that studies and identifies management activities that promote employee effectiveness by examining the complex and dynamic nature of individual, group, and organizational processes
Organizational behavior (Contemporary Approaches )
The set of important assumptions about the organization and its goals and practices that members of the company share
Organizational culture
which of the four functions of management Assembling and coordinating the resources needed to achieve goals
Organizing
which of the four functions of management Specifying goals and deciding the actions needed to achieve those goals
Planning
competitive strategy Published over 125 articles and 18 books on the subject and related topics
Porter -
Modern Contributors
Porter - Hamel - Drucker Senge - Covey - Collins -
___________ is the excellence of your product (goods or services). Historically, quality referred to attractiveness, lack of defects, reliability, and long-term dependability.
Quality
An approach that emphasizes the application of quantitative analysis to managerial decisions and problems
Quantitative management (Contemporary Approaches )
Philosophy that bases ethical behavior on the opinions and behaviors of relevant other people
Relativism
An act that established strict accounting and reporting rules to make senior managers more accountable and to improve and maintain investor confidence
Sarbanes-Oxley Act
learning organization The Fifth Dimension: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization
Senge
Theory of corporate social responsibility that holds that managers are agents of shareholders whose primary objective is to maximize profits
Shareholder model
Leveling normal fluctuations at the boundaries of the environment
Smoothing
An approach to job design that attempts to redesign tasks to optimize operation of a new technology while preserving employees' interpersonal relationships and other human aspects of the work
Sociotechnical systems theory (Contemporary Approaches )
Systematic management is
Specific procedures Achieve established goals and plans
Theory of corporate social responsibility that suggests that managers are obliged to look beyond profitability to help their organizations succeed by interacting with groups that have a stake in the organization
Stakeholder model
In an Ecocentric management there must be what kind of growth
Sustainable growth
A theory stating that an organization is a managed system that changes inputs into outputs
Systems theory (Contemporary Approaches )
Employees who are responsible for facilitating successful team performance are called
Team leader
Managers Need Three Broad Skills which are
Technical skills Conceptual and decision skills Interpersonal and communication skills
what is management?
The process of working with people and resources to accomplish organizational goals
outputs
The products and services an organization creates
service
The speed and dependability with which an organization delivers what customers want
what is the legal level of corporate social responsibility
To obey local, state, federal, and relevant international laws
what is the Economic level of corporate social responsibility
To produce goods and services that society wants at a price that perpetuates the business and satisfies its obligations to investors
which level of management are Senior executives responsible for the overall management and effectiveness of the organization
Top-level managers
Emotional Intellegence
Understanding yourself Managing yourself Dealing effectively with others
The ethical system stating that all people should uphold certain values that society needs to function
Universalism
Different ethical perspectives are
Universalism, egoism, utilitarianism, relativism, virtue ethics
An ethical system stating that the greatest good for the greatest number should be the overriding concern of decision makers
Utilitarianism
Perspective that what is moral comes from what a mature person with "good" moral character would deem right
Virtue ethics
what is an example of philanthropic
an organization donating to charities
Max Weber advocated
bureaucracy
Scientific management is what kind of approach
classical
Systematic management is what kind of approach
classical
what is an example of outputs
cleaning houses
What are ways managers can influence their environment
competitive aggression competitive pacification public relations voluntary action legal action political action
Compliance-based ethics programs are
designed by corporate counsel to prevent, detect, and punish legal violations
The process of management need to be what and what?
effective and efficient
The moral principles and standards that guide the behavior of an individual or group
ethics
All relevant forces outside a firms boundaries is what kind of environment
external environment
max weber said instead of fixing the job to the person ....
find a person who fits the job
What is an example of middle-level managers
general managers, regional managers
Integrity-based ethics programs are
go beyond the mere avoidance of illegality; they are concern with the law but also with instilling in people a personal responsibility for ethical behavior
inputs
good and services that organizations take in and use to create products or services
What are the three roles managers perform?
interpersonal informational decisional
Lillian Gilbreth was interested in
job satifaction that could motivate workers
what is an example of technical skills
knowing how to use a software
Moral judgment
knowing what action are morally defensible
which cost gets the most from the attention from the executives
level 1
The Business Costs of Ethical Failure are
level 1 level 2 level 3
Which cost gets the least attention from the executives
level 3
level 3 cost
losing customers and reputation. shrinking employee morale and higher turnovers. increasing regulation by government
The general environment; Includes governments, economic conditions, and other fundamental factors that generally affect all organizations
macromanagement
what are the two Two key contributions Mary Parker Follett made about management
managers desire flexibility there is a difference in motivating group vs. individuals
What does it mean when a management is efficient
maximize success through the use of less resourse
open systems
organizations that are affected by and that affect their external environment
level one cost is
paying fines and receiving penalties from the government
Abraham Maslow triangle of needs and are motivated to satisfy unmet.
physiological safety social ego self actualization
identified five functions and 14 principles of management. The five functions are
planning organizing commanding coordinators controlling
What are The Four Functions of Management
planning organizing leading controling
Henry L. Gantt expanded on the _______________ by suggesting that frontline supervisors should receive a ______ for each of their workers who completed their assigned daily tasks.
price rate system , bonus
Conceptual and decision skills
pulling things together and making a decisions
what is an example of inputs
raw materials, human resources, money
Moral awareness
realizing the issue has ethical implications
level 2 cost is
spending time and money for audits and legal inquires.providing remedial education and taking corrective actions. being subject to government oversight
Moral character
the strength and persistence to act in accordance with your ethics despite the challenges
What does it mean when a management is effective
they are reaching their goals
strongly held and taken for granted beliefs that guide behaviors in a firm
unconsciously assumptions
the underlying qualities and desirable behaviors that are important to an organization
values
the components of an organization that can be seen and heard such as office layouts, dress, orientation, stories, and written material
visible artifacts
What is an example of smoothing
when sales are low you might put some things on sale