Fundamentals of Management Chapter 1
System- Inputs
Inputs are the material, human, financial, and information resources that an organization gets from its environment.
Effective
Making the right decisions and successfully implementing them.
Specialized Management (other)
Many organizations have specialized management positions in addition to those already described. Public relations managers, for example, deal with the public and media
Areas of Management
Marketing, Finance, Operations, Human Resources, Administration, Other
Controlling
Monitoring organizational progress toward goal attainment
Frederick W. Taylor
One of the first management consultants and helped create scientific management.
Levels of Managers
Top, Middle, Front-line
Synergy
Two or more subsystems working together to produce more than the total of what they might produce working alone
Marketing Manager
interested in getting consumers and clients to buy the organization's products or services (duties also include new-product development, promotion, and distribution.)
Outputs
Includes products & services, or both; profits & losses, or both, employee behaviors; and information.
Theory
A conceptual framework for organizing knowledge and providing a blueprint for action
Contingency Perspective
A contemporary perspective, which Suggests that appropriate managerial behavior in a given situation depends on, or is contingent on, unique elements in a given situation
Organization
A group of people working together in a structured and coordinated fashion to achieve a set of goals
Entropy
A normal process leading to system decline
Theory X
A pessimistic and negative view of workers consistent with the views of scientific management
Theory Y
A positive view of workers; it represents the assumptions that human relations advocates make
Management
A set of activities (including planning and decision making, organizing, leading, and controlling) directed at an organization's resources (human, financial, physical, and information), with the aim of achieving organizational goals in an efficient and effective manner
Open system
A system that interacts with its environment
Subsystem
A system within another system
Administrative Managers
Administrative, or general, managers are not associated with any particular management specialty. Probably the best example of an administrative management position is that of a hospital or clinic administrator. Administrative managers tend to be generalists; they have some basic familiarity with all functional areas of management rather than specialized training in any one area.
Universal Perspective
An attempt to identify the one best way to do something
System
An interrelated set of elements functioning as a whole
Quantitative management perspective
Applies quantitative techniques to management
Human relations movement
Argued that workers respond primarily to the social context of the workplace
Operations Managers
Concerned with creating and managing the systems that create an organization's products and services. (Typical responsibilities of operations managers include production control, inventory control, quality control, plant layout, and site selection.)
Scientific Management
Concerned with improving the performance of individual workers
Classical Management Perspective
Consists of two distinct branches—scientific management and administrative management
Organinzing
Determining how to best group activities & resources. Once a manager has set goals and developed a workable plan, his or her next management function is to organize people and the other resources necessary to carry out the plan.
Behavioral management perspective
Emphasizes individual attitudes and behaviors and group processes
Soldiering
Employees deliberately working at a slow pace
Financial Managers
Financial managers deal primarily with an organization's financial resources. They are responsible for activities such as accounting, cash management, and investments.
Administrative Management
Focuses on managing the total organization
Management science?
Focuses specifically on the development of mathematical models
Operations management techniques
Generally concerned with helping the organization produce its products or services more efficiently and can be applied to a wide range of problems.
Human Resource Managers
Human resources managers are responsible for hiring and developing employees. They are typically involved in human resource planning, recruiting and selecting employees, training and development, designing compensation and benefit systems, formulating performance appraisal systems, and discharging low-performing and problem employees. c..
Benefits of Planning & Decision Making
Planning and decision making help managers maintain their effectiveness by serving as guides for their future activities. In other words, the organization's goals and plans clearly help managers know how to allocate their time and resources.
Manager
Someone whose primary responsibility is to carry out the management process.
Closed system
Systems that do not interact with their environment.
Fundamental Management Skills
Technical, Interpersonal, Conceptual, Diagnostic, Communication, Decision-Making, Time Management Skills
System- Transformation Processes
Technological and managerial processes where inputs are transformed into outputs.
Interpersonal Skills
The ability to communicate with, understand, and motivate both individuals and groups
Feedback
The environment reacts to outputs and provides feedback to the system
Communication Skills
The manager's abilities both to effectively convey ideas and information to others and to effectively receive ideas and information from others
Decision making Skills
The manager's ability to correctly recognize and define problems and opportunities and to then select an appropriate course of action to solve problems and capitalize on opportunities
Time Management Skills
The manager's ability to prioritize work, to work efficiently, and to delegate appropriately
Conceptual Skills
The manager's ability to think in th abstract
Diagnostic Skills
The manager's ability to visualize the most appropriate response to a situation (the ability to analyze a problem in the organization by studying its symptoms and then developing a solution.)
Technical Skills
The skills necessary to accomplish or understand the specific kind of work done in a organization.
Efficient
Using resources wisely in a cost-effective way
Decision Making
a part of the planning process, involves selecting a course of action from a set of alternatives.
System Details
by viewing an organization as a system, we can identify four basic elements: inputs, transformation processes, outputs, and feedback.
Piecework Pay System
increasing the pay of each worker who met and exceeded the target level of output set for his or her job.
Planning
setting an organization's goals and deciding how best to achieve them.
Organizational behavior
takes a holistic view of behavior and addresses individual, group, and organization processes. (These processes are major elements in contemporary management theory. Important topics in this field include job satisfaction, stress, motivation, leadership, group dynamics, organizational politics, interpersonal conflict, and the structure and design of organizations.)
Time Management Skills
the ability to prioritize tasks, to work efficiently, and to delegate appropriately.
Leading
the set of processes used to get members of the organization to work together to further the interests of the organization.