Managment
Mintzberg organizational envoirments
1. either simple or complex 2. either stable or dynamic
Corporation
A company with the ability to act as a single person. It is a legal entity, and has its own rights, privileges, and liabilities which are distinct from those of its members.
Expectancy Theory
A person's motivation is based on three factors: how likely he believes his effort will lead to desired performance, if he believes his effort will lead to a greater reward, and how much value he places in this reward. A worker has to believe he can achieve goals, expect that achieving the goals will give him a reward, and value that reward.
PERT Network
A planning tool which involves breaking down steps to achieving a goal into a series of events. The events are represented as circles, or nodes, and connected by arrows which represent the time required to reach that event. Takes into account employee motiviation.
Programs
A single use plan Broad and long term may be made up of short term projects.
Human Resource Planning
An Organization must decide on whether to adopt a policy of promoting from within or to simply promote the best canidates it can find. The advantage of promoting from within is that it increases morale, but it restricts the pool of canidates.
Legitimacy
An organizations only exists as long as society considers the organization acceptable and useful. To maintain legitimacy a company often shows ethics.
Stakeholder
Anyone who can affect an organization or can be affected by it
Controlling
Assuring the organizational and managerial objectives are accomplished, concidered opposite of planning. Managers measure and observe how well the plans are working.
Human Relations Movment
Began with Elton Mayo and Fritz Roethlisberger's work in the Hawthorne Studies
Profitability
Benifit resulting from an activity
Most popular way to generate solutions
Brainstorming
Classical Principles of managment results in
Bureacratic or mechanistic organizations
Mechanistic Form or Organizatoin
Centralized, Hierarchiacal guided by rules and written procedures
During decision making conditions are assigned to the possible results of a decision, These conditions are
Certainty, Risk, Uncertainty. These are based on the probability of the result. Risk is 0-1 is known as an estimate.
Follett
Classical Managment theorist who focoused on how managers resolve conflicts. Pioneer of scientiv Managment. Advocated a collaborative approach to problem solving that emphasized compromise in the workplace.
Forcasting
Companies depend on econimic, technological, and sales forcasting for their plans
Cost Benefit Analysis
Comparison of the cost of an activity to its benefits. The total costs are calculated and then compared to how much revenue or other benefit will be gained.
Planning Process
Consists of developing the organizations mission, goals, solutions/strategies/alternitive course of action.
Peter Drucker
Defined 8 key results areas which every business organization should define goals for
Internal Bases
Departmentalize a company by fuction or product
Line Positions
Directly Related to purpose of an organization. For example in marketing sales is a line positions
Decisional Roles
Disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator
Fourth Priciple of Scientific Managment
Dividing the work between managers and workers. Managers determine the best way to do work and would then tell the workers exactly what to do.
Unity of Command
Each suborddinate should report to and be accountable to only one superior
Acceptance Theory
Effectiveness depends on whether or not the subordinates accept the authority over them. Oposes classical idea that authority is ordained by position.
Scalar Principle
Every Organization needs to have a clear line of authority from the top of the organization to the bottom. Also known as chain of command priciple.
Theory X and Theory Y
Explains two contrasting ways managers can view how employees are motivated and how this affects their managing style. Theory X views man as lazy. Theory Y sees motiviation as internal.
Barnard
Famous managment theorist who saw organizations in terms of the systems approach as an open system.
Fredrick Taylor
Father of Scientfic Managment
14 Principles
Fayol include: Unity of command, unity of direction, esprit de corps, authority being equal to responsibility, and others
Interpersonal Roles
Figurehead, leader, and liaison
Fayol
First to identify managment as a separate activity in a business. First defined fuctions of managment. Father of modern management, 14 principles.
Fayol's Administrative Management (Classical Managment and Administrative Management)
Focuses at the top.
Delphi Method
For technological forcasting devoloped by Rand Corp.
Adhocracy
Form of organization most appropriate for the performance of complex and uncertain tasks in a rapidly changing envoirment. Adhocracies are frequently referred to as virtual teams. Industries that like these are R and D, movie industry, advertising
Departmentation
Grouping together positions with their fuctions and responsibilities under other parts of the organization structure
Directing
Guding and influencing the employees to seek organizational; objectives, also known as leading involves getting the employees to work towards the organizations goal.
Economic Man
He chooses what meets the critrea. Uses strategy of optimizing
First Line Level Managers
Head Nurse, Foreman, and section head. Also known as supervisory managment
Rationality Theory
Herbert Simon, individuals pick the first choice that meet a predetermined acceptance criteara.
Three Phases in decision making
Herbert Spencer 3 phases 1. Intelligence 2. Design 3. Choice
To figure out right structure one must
Identify the envoirment
Gillbreths
In movie Cheaper by the Dozen, only one best way to do job.
Info Roles
Include being a monitor, disseminator, and a spokesperson
Standing plans
Incluse rules, procedures, policies-plans that are always in effect.
3 managers roles
Interpersonal, Informational, decisional roles.
External Bases
Involve departments divided based on geography and customers
Contingency Approach
Involves coming up with a mangament approach or combo of approaches to fit the situation. Based on the idea there is no single approach to mangement which is suitable for every situation.
Organizing
Involves dividing up work, establishing structure of authority and responsibilitiy grouping the resources and coming up with ways to coordinate parts. Dividing up woork, grouping resources, establishing a structure of authority, and coming with ways to coordinate the parts
Planning
Keeping things going according to plan. Defining goals and a purpose for the organization planning alternative courses of action and prepping for the future.
System 4
Leader of a group is often a subordinate ina higher decision making group. He is known as linking.
Strategic planning
Long Range planning comes after setting the goals. Highest levels of mangment does this
Strategic Plan
Long term plans, no set time bust usually happen more than one year into the future. The length of the peroid depends on how accurate the forcasting of the future business envoirment proves to be.
Systems Approach
Looks at an organizations in terms of its parts and how to interact with achother and the envoirment. An organization is divided into sub-systems and either classifies as an open systen which interacts with the envoirment or a closed system. Theorist s who believe in this typically think organizations are open systems.
Exception
Management should deal only with the exceptions, when the cases where their employees dont meet standards. By: Henri Fayol
8 Key Results Areas
Market Share, productivity, profitability, innovation, resources, worker performeance, manager performance, and social responsibility.
5 Types of Organization
Mintzberg-Machine Bureaucracy, divisionalized form, professional bureaucracy, the simple structure and adhocracy. Made because diffrent types are needed for different enviorments
Order of things
Mission statment 2. Setting of goals 3. Hiearchy of Plans
Functional Departmentation
Most common form of deparmentation. Positions are grouped based on a common organizational purpose or fuction. For example marketing, finance is fuctionally organized.
Hawthorne Studies
Most extensive investigations in managment ever performed. Experiment which six women were set to work assembling phone relay equipments, and lasted 2.5 years. Performence dependent on Psychological and social factors
Front Line Managers
Most technical knowledge, they supervise non-managment employees. Known as supervisionary managers.
Organic organization
No hierarchy less rigid informal
Scientific Mangment
Oldest type, associated with Taylor, Gantt, Gibrath. Finding the most efficient way to do a job through scientific analysis. Focuses primarily on the physical work instead of higher level managment
Mission
One of the first things done in the company sets an overall purpose for the organization.
Multi-National
Operates in more than one country
Productivity
Output divided by imput
Contingency Plan
Part of the operational planning process, involves anticipating what could wrong and preparing for it
Managment By Objectives
Participative style of management. Managers and employees establish objectives together.
Frank Gibreth
Pioneers of Scientific Manaagment Believed in determining the best, most efficient, fastest, and easiest way to do any job
Budget
Plan for use of reasources and expected results, usually based on a specific time peroid. Type of single use plans
Managment Fuctions
Planning, Organizing, Staffing, Controlling
Decion Making tools
Playoff Matrix, allows you to compare the possible benifits
Decision making part of the planning process consists of two part
Problem Solving and Decision Making
Reporting Relationship
Relationship between a superior and his subordinate
Four Types of Oganization based on Managment style
Rensis Likert stating that Sytem 4 organization should be the most efficient in achieving its goals.
Behavioral Approach
Revolves around human relations, emphasizes treatment of employees more than outfut or performance. Started with Hawthorne Studies
Line Authority
Right to act, ti make decisions, and to command. Wields authority over direct subordinates.
Staff Authority
Right to advise, or reccoment line personnel
First Principe of Scientific Mangment
Scientific Study of the work involved. A scientific study involves studying and observing the work to determine the most efficient way to accomplish it.
Second Priciple of Scientific mangement
Selecting the workers in a scientific manner for the kind of work to be done
Staffing
Selecting, placing, utilizing, and taking care of employees. Known as personnel managment
Performence Appraisals
Should evaluate employees in an objective sonsistent and fair way.
Organization Chart
Shows the authority relationships between the various psotions and departments in an organization.
Global Company
Specializes in one product which is sold all over the world
Two plans
Standing and single use
Primacy of Planning
States that planning bmust occur before other managment fuctions can take place
Staff Positions
Supposrt line positions ie Human reasources
Managers Skills
Technical, Interpersonal, Conceptual
Administrative Man Theory
The economic man is all knowing completely rational decision maker who finds the best possible choice. By Herbert Simon
Hierachy of Plans
The idea that planning is top-down
Unity of Direction
There should be one head and one plan for a group working towards an organizational objective. Everyone is working towards the same goal.
Third Principle of Scientific Mangement
Train workers in the most efficient methods for doing their work, and give them incentives for producing effciently.
Expectancy Instrumentality
Valence-Motiviation Forces=Expectancy x Intrumentality x Valance
Rolling plan
Variant of single use plan-involves log term plan which is updated at regular intervals
Fuctional Authority
Where staff managers have limited authority over subordinates of line mangers. Staff authority can only advise line positions.
Operational Planning
Where the detailed plans are made on how to execute the strategic planning. Also known as action planning, involves building on strategic plans. The strategic plans are broad and fairly general--the operational planning adds the specifics on how the strategy is to be carried out. Responsility is assigned to accomplish certain objectives.
Human Relations Approach
Workers treated as human beings.
Specialization
another term for division of labor, where employees carry out ativities thay are more qualified for and adept at performing. Also includes dividing work into simple tasks.
Managment by Objectives
is where an employees performance is determined by how well he achieves a number is set objectives. By: Peter Druker mangment does no necessarily tell the employee exatly what to do just what to accomplish.