Organizational Management (Chapter 3)
Groups of concerned citizens who band together to try to influence the business practices of specific industries, businesses, and professions.
Advocacy Groups
Because economic statistics can be such poor predictors, some managers try to predict future economic activity by keeping track of __________________.
Business Confidence
An environment in which the rate of change is fast
Dynamic Environment
True/False: Opportunistic behavior between buyers and suppliers will be completely eliminated.
False (will never)
Visible artifacts, tangible things that have have impact, things that speak volumes, but do not "speak"
Material Symbols
What type of Advocacy Group do PETA's actions represent?
Media Advocacy
A higher degree of buyer or seller dependence can lead to ________________.
Opportunistic Behavior
Stories told by organizational members to make sense of organizational events and changes and to emphasize culturally consistent assumptions, decisions, and actions
Organizational Stories
The degree to which managers focus on results or outcomes rather than on the techniques and processes used to achieve those outcomes
Outcome Orientation
In contrast to general environments that indirectly influence organizations, changes in an organization's ____________ environment directly affect the way a company conducts its business.
Specific
The customers, competitors, suppliers, industry regulations, and advocacy groups that are unique to an industry and directly affect how a company does business
Specific Environment
An environment in which the rate of change is slow
Stable Environment
What is one reactive customer monitoring strategy?
To listen closely to customer complaints and respond to customer concerns
What does the difference between business success and failure often come down to?
Whether your company is doing a better job of satisfying customer wants and needs than the competiton
What are 5 dimensions of culture?
-Innovation, risk taking, and aggressive -Attention to detail -Outcome orientation -People orientation -Team orientation
What are 2 characteristics of organizational rituals?
-Organization language -Material symbols
What are 2 characteristics of the company founder?
-Organizational stories -Organizational heroes
What are 2 examples of technology outputs?
-Products -Services
What 3 categories do customer responses fall into?
-Promoters -Passives -Detractors
What are 3 types of techniques Advocacy Groups use to try to influence companies?
-Public Communications -Media Advocacy -Product Boycotts
What are 2 examples of technology inputs?
-Raw materials -Information
What are the 2 basic strategies for monitoring customers?
-Reactive customer monitoring -Proactive customer monitoring
What are the 4 components of the General Environment?
-Sociocultural trends -Technology trends -Economy -Political/Legal trends
How are values, attitudes, and beliefs sustained in organizational cultures? (2)
-Stories -Heroes
What are 2 mistakes managers tend to make when they do their competitive analysis?
-They tend to focus on only two or three well-known competition with similar goals and resources -They underestimate potential competitors' capabilities
The degree to which employees are expected to exhibit precision, analysis, and attention to detail
Attention to Detail
Why are Internal Environments important?
Because they affect what people think, feel, and do at work
Why do managers prefer business confidence indices to economic statistics?
Because they know that other managers make business decisions that are in line with their expectations concerning the economy's futures
How do companies keep a close track of what their competitors are doing?
Competitive Analysis
Regulations and rules that govern the business practices and procedures of specific industries, businesses, and professions
Industry Regulation
The degree to which employees are encouraged to be innovative and take risks
Innovation, Risk Taking, and Aggressive
The events and trends inside an organization that affect management, employees, and organizational culture
Internal Environment
The degree to which management decisions take into consideration the effect on people within the organization
People Orientation
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
Punctuated Equilibrium Theory
Involves identifying and addressing customer trends and problems AFTER they occur
Reactive Customer Monitoring
The establishment of mutually beneficial, long-term exchanges between buyers and suppliers
Relationship Behavior
The abundance or shortage of critical organizational resources in an organization's external environment
Resource Scarcity
Refers to the demographic characteristics, general behavior, attitudes, and beliefs of people in a particular society
Sociocultural Component
The degree to which work activities are organized around teams rather than individuals
Team Orientation
The knowledge, tools, and techniques used to transform inputs into outputs
Technology
True/False: Changes in any sector of the general environment eventually affect most organizations.
True
True/False: In recent years, news laws and regulations have imposed additional responsibilities on companies. Unfortunately, many managers are unaware of these new responsibilities.
True
True/False: Overall, the number and cost of federal regulations has nearly tripled in the last 25 years.
True
True/False: the Dairy industry is a good example of a relatively simple external environment.
True
True/False: the culture at Foxconn pays attention to detail.
True
Extent to which managers can understand or predict which environment changes and trends will affect their businesses
Uncertainty
What are 2 ways sociocultural changes and trends influence organizations?
-Changes in demographic characteristics affect how companies staff their businesses -Sociocultural changes in behavior, attitudes, and beliefs affect the demand for a business's products and services
What are the 5 components of the Specific Environment?
-Customer -Competitor -Supplier -Industry Regulation -Advocacy Group
What are 4 characteristics of changing External Environments?
-Environmental change -Environmental complexity -Resource scarcity -Uncertainty
Indices that show managers' level of confidence about future business growth
Business Confidence Indices
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 products
Buyer Dependence
How do regulatory agencies affect businesses?
By creating and enforcing rules and regulations to protect consumers, workers, or society as a whole
A process of monitoring the competition that involves identifying competition, anticipating their moves, and determining their strengths and weaknesses
Competitive Analysis
Companies in the same industry that sell similar products or services to customers
Competitors
An environment with many environmental factors
Complex Environment
The rate at which a company's general and specific environments change
Environmental Change
The number and the intensity of external factors in the environment that affect organizations
Environmental Complexity
All events outside a company that have the potential to influence or affect it
External Environments
True/False: Today, with traffic congestion creating longer commutes and with both parents working longer hours, employees are much less likely to value products and services that allow them to recapture free time with their families.
False (more likely)
True/False: Like the industry regulation component of the specific environment, advocacy groups can force organizations to change their practices.
False (unlike industry regulation; cannot force organizations to change practices)
The economic, technological, sociocultural, and political/legal tends that indirectly affect all organizations
General Environment
In a __________ economy, more people are working and have more money to spend; provides an environment favorable to business growth.
Growing
An advocacy group tactic that involves framing issues as public issues; exposing questionable, exploitative, or unethical practices; and obtaining media coverage by buying media time or creating controversy that is likely to receive extensive news coverage.
Media Advocacy
A transaction in which one party in the relationship benefits at the expense of the other
Opportunistic Behavior
The values, beliefs, and attitudes shared by organizational members
Organizational Culture
What is the most important part of the Internal Environment?
Organizational Culture
People celebrated for their qualities and achievements within an organization
Organizational Heroes
This component of the general environment includes the legislation, regulations, and court decisions that govern and regulate business behavior
Political/Legal Component
From a managerial's perspective, what is the best medicine against legal risk?
Prevention
Involves identifying and addressing customer needs, trends, and issues BEFORE they occur
Proactive Customer Monitoring
An advocacy group tactic that involves protesting a company's actions by persuading consumers not to purchase its product or service
Product Boycott
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
Public Communiciations
In a __________ economy, consumers have less money to spend, and relatively fewer products, making growth for individual businesses more difficult.
Shrinking
An environment with few environmental factors
Simple Environment
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
Supplier Dependence
Companies that provide material, human, financial, and informational resources to other competitors
Suppliers