MGMT 339 Vocabulary

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Strategy

A broad and general plan developed to reach long term objectives.

Jury of executive opinion method

A method of predicting future sales primarily by asking appropriate managers to give their opinions on what will happen to sales in the future.

Career plateauing

A period of little or no apparent progress in a career

Short range

A period of time about one year or less into the future

Long range

A period of time extending about three to five years into the future.

Management employability skills

A person's ability to gain and maintain a career as a manager.

Sales forecast

A prediction of how high or low sales of the organization's products or services will be over the period of time under consideration.

Gantt chart

A scheduling device developed by Henry L Gantt is essentially a bar graph with time on the horizontal axis and the resource to be scheduled on the vertical axis.

Program evaluation and review technique (PERT)

A scheduling tool that is essentially a network of project activities showing estimates of time necessary to complete each activity and the sequence of activities that must be followed to complete the project.

Career

A sequence of work related positions occupied by a person over the course of a lifetime.

Symptom

A sign that a problem exists

Strategic business unit

A significant organizational segment that is analyzed to develop organizational strategy aimed at generating future business or revenue.

Budget

A single use financial plan that covers a specified length of time

Program

A single use plan that is designed to carry out a special project within an organization

Activities

A specified set of behaviors within a project

Rule

A standing plan that designates specific required actions.

Policy

A standing plan that furnishes broad guidelines for taking action that is consistent with reaching organizational objectives

Procedure

A standing plan that outlines a series of related actions that must be taken to accomplish a particular task.

Swot analysis

A strategic development tool that matches internal organizational strengths and weaknesses with external opportunities and threats

Stability

A strategy adopted by management to maintain or slightly improve the amount of business that an SBU is generating

Growth

A strategy adopted my management to increase the amount of business that an SBU is generating

Divestiture

A strategy adopted to eliminate an SBU that is not generating a satisfactory amount of business and that has little hope of doing so in the near future.

Critical question analysis

A strategy development tool that consists of answering basic questions about the present purposes and objectives of the organization, present direction, and environment.

Focus

A strategy that emphasizes making an organization more competitive by targeting a segment of customers.

Cost leadership

A strategy that focuses on making an organization more competitive by producing products more cheaply than competitors can

Management by objectives (MBO)

A valuable tool and approach for nonprofit organizations such as libraries and community clubs.

Mission statement

A written document developed by management that describes and explains the mission of the organization.

Management Functions

Activities that make up the management process

Organizational resources

All assets available for activation during the production process like human resources, monetary, raw materials, and capital resources.

Business portfolio analysis

An organizational strategy formulation technique that is based on the philosophy that organizations should develop strategy much as they handle investment portfolios.

Problem

Any factor within an organization that is a barrier to organizational goal attainment

Murphy's Law

Anything that can go wrong will go wrong. This law reminds managers to remain alert for possible problems because even if management system appears to be operating well, it might be eroding under the surface.

Human skills

Build cooperation within the team being led. Ex: working with people

Strategic control

Consists of monitoring and evaluating the strategic management process as a whole to ensure that it is operating properly.

Control

Ensuring that an event occurs as it was planned to occur

Differentiation

Focuses on making an organization more competitive by developing a product or products that customers perceive as being different from products offered by competitors.

Delphi method

Gathers, evaluates, and summarizes expert opinions as the basis for a forecast, but the procedure is more formal than that for the jury of executive opinion method.

Star

Has a large share of a high growth market and needs large amounts of cash to support rapid and significant growth

Cash cow

Has a large share of a market that is growing only slightly.

Dog

Has a relative small share of a low growth market

Strategic workforce planning (SWP)

Helps organizations identify the workforce they need to achieve their strategic goals.

Establishment stage

Individuals about 25-45 years of age start to become more productive with higher performance. Employment sought during this stage is guided by what was learned during the exploration stage.

Maintenance stage

Individuals who are 45-65 years old show either increased performance, stabilized performance, or decreased performance.

Decline stage

Involves people about 65 years old whose productivity is declining. Individuals are close to retirement, semi retired, or fully retired. Some might have lost interest in their careers

Strategy implementation

Involves putting formulated strategies into action

Product life cycle

Is made up of the five stages through which most products and services pass.: introduction, growth, maturity, saturation, decline

Retrenchment

Management attempts to strengthen or protect the amount of business and SBU is generating

Task related activities

Management efforts aimed at carrying out critical management duties in organizations. Ex: short term planning and monitoring operations and performance is an example of task related activities

People related activities

Management efforts aimed at managing people in organizations. Ex: providing support and encouragement to others, developing skills and confidence of organization members. Empowering others to solve conflict.

Change related activities

Management efforts aimed at modifying organizational components. Ex: monitoring the organization's external environment, proposing new strategies and visions.

Managerial effectiveness

Management's use of organizational resources in meeting organizational goals

Corrective action

Managerial activity aimed at bringing organizational performance up to the level of performance standards.

Commitment principle

Managers should commit funds for planning only if they can anticipate in the foreseeable future, a return on planning expenses as a result of long range planning analysis.

Exploration stage

Occurs at the beginning of a career and explores jobs available. Individuals are about 15-25 years of age. Ex: cooking at McDonald's

Standing plan

Plans that are used over and over because they focus on organizational situations that occur repeatedly.

Regression method

Predicts future sales by analyzing the historical relationship between sales and time.

Product stages method

Predicts future sales by using the product life cycle to better understand the history and future of a product

Salesforce estimation method

Predicts future sales levels primarily by asking appropriate salespeople for their opinions

Competitor capability

Refers to a firm's ability to undertake an action.

Competitor awareness

Refers to how mindful a company is of its competitor's actions

Tactical planning

Short range planning that emphasizes the current operations of various parts of an organization.

Question mark

Small share of a high growth market

Demographics

Statistical characteristics of a population.

Planning tools

Techniques managers can use to develop plans.

Technical skills

The ability to apply knowledge and expertise to techniques and procedures. Ex: engineering, computer programming, accounting.

Management skill

The ability to carry out the process of reaching organizational goals by working with and through people and other organizational resources.

Organizing skill

The ability to create throughout the organization a network of people who can help solve implementation problems as they occur.

Interacting skill

The ability to manage people during implementation

Allocating skill

The ability to provide organizational resources necessary to implement a strategy.

Conceptual skills

The ability to see the organization as a whole. The ability to understand how the organization relates to the environment and how changes in one part affect the rest of the organization.

Monitoring skill

The ability to use information to determine whether a problem has arisen that is blocking strategy implementation

Five forces model

The best known tool for industry analysis, developed by internationally strategic management expert Michael E. Porter.

Event

The completion of major project tasks

Power

The extent to which an individual is able to influence others so that they respond to orders

Competitor motivation

The incentives that drive an organization to take action.

Standard

The level of activity established to serve as a model for evaluating organizational performance

Internal environment

The level of an organization's environment that exists inside the organization and normally has immediate and specific implications for managing the organization.

General environment

The level of an organization's external environment that contains components having broad, long term, implications for managing the organization. The components are economic, social, political, legal and technological.

Industry environment

The level of an organization's external environment that contains components normally having specific and immediate implications for managing the organization

Competitive dynamics

The process by which firms undertake strategic and tactical actions and how competitors respond to these actions.

Controlling

The process managers go though to control

Strategy formulation

The process of determining appropriate courses of action for achieving organizational objectives and thereby accomplishing the organizational purpose.

Planning

The process of determining how the organization can get where it wants to go and what it will do to accomplish its objectives

Strategic management

The process of ensuring that an organization possesses and benefits from the use of an appropriate organizational strategy.

Scheduling

The process of formulating a detailed listing of activities that must be accomplished to attain an objective, allocating the resources necessary to attain the objective, and setting up and following time tables for completing the objective

Forecasting

The process of predicting the likelihood of uncertain events or outcomes that will influence the operation of the organization.

Management

The process of reaching organizational goals by working with and through people and other organizational resources.

Managerial efficiency

The proportion of total organization resources used during the production process

Organizational mission

The purpose for which and the reason why an organization exists.

Social values

The relative degrees of worth that a society places on the ways in which it exists and functions.

Authority

The right to command or give orders

Critical path

The sequence of events and activities requiring the longest period of time to complete.

Environmental analysis

The study of the organizational environment to point environmental factors that can influence organizational operations.

Organizational objective

The target toward which the open management system is directed. It flows from the organization's mission.

Organizational objectives

The targets toward which the open management system is directed

Principle of the objective

This principle holds that before managers initiate any action, they should determine, understand, and state organizational objectives.

Single use plan

Used only once or a few times and focuses on rare situations within the organization

Moving Average Method

Utilizes historical data to predict future sales levels

Organizational purpose

What the organization exists to do, given a particular group of customers and customer needs,

Strategic planning

the process of determining the major goals of the organization and the policies and strategies for obtaining and using resources to achieve those goals


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