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Chapter 1 Notes GMS 200

1. Intellectual capital and knowledge workers are crucial assets for organizations in today's globalized world. Organizations rely on the brainpower, skills, and commitment of their employees. 2. Managers at all levels are responsible for supporting employees' work, from board members who ensure lawful and ethical management, to top managers who set strategy, to middle managers who coordinate work across departments. 3. The core management processes involve planning work, organizing resources, leading and motivating employees, and controlling performance. Effective managers help employees achieve high performance and satisfaction through fulfilling these functions.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
231 views

Chapter 1 Notes GMS 200

1. Intellectual capital and knowledge workers are crucial assets for organizations in today's globalized world. Organizations rely on the brainpower, skills, and commitment of their employees. 2. Managers at all levels are responsible for supporting employees' work, from board members who ensure lawful and ethical management, to top managers who set strategy, to middle managers who coordinate work across departments. 3. The core management processes involve planning work, organizing resources, leading and motivating employees, and controlling performance. Effective managers help employees achieve high performance and satisfaction through fulfilling these functions.
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Chapter 1 Notes

1.1: Working Today

● People and their talents - what they know, what they learn, and what they
achieve - are the crucial foundations for organizational performance
● Intellectual capital: combined brain-power and shared knowledge of an
organization’s employees
○ Strategic asset - organizations use to transform human creativity, insight, and
decision-making into performance
○ Personal asset - should be nurtured and continually updated
● Intellectual capital equation:
○ Intellectual capital = competency * commitment
● Competency: represents your personal talents or job-related capabilities
● Commitment: represents how hard you work to apply your talents and
capabilities to important tasks
● Workplace talents in today’s age of information, technology, and change are
dominated by knowledge workers
● Knowledge workers: workers whose minds - their creativity and insights - are
critical assets to employers
● Because of the increased use of technology, it is critical to build and maintain a high
Tech IQ
● Tech IQ: the ability to use current technologies at work and in your personal life,
combined with the commitment to keep yourself updated as technology continues to
evolve
● Globalization: the worldwide interdependence of resource flows, product
markets, and business competition
○ Govt leaders worry about competitiveness of nations
○ Corporate leaders worry about business competitiveness
○ Countries and people interconnected through labour markets, employment
patterns, and financial systems
○ Job migration: shifting of jobs from one country to another
■ Controversial consequence of globalization
○ Reshoring: shift of manufacturing and jobs back home from overseas
■ Flip side of job migration
● Ethics: a code of moral principles that sets standards for conduct that is “good”
and “right” as well as “bad” and “wrong”
○ Depend on both individuals and employers to act ethically
● Corporate governance: active oversight of top management decisions, corporate strategy,
and financial reporting by a company’s board of directors
○ Ethics indicator
● Another indicator of ethics in organizations is the emphasis given to social
responsibility and sustainability practices
● Workforce diversity: composition of a workforce in terms of gender, age, race,
ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation.
● Prejudice: display of negative, irrational opinions and attitudes regarding
members of diverse populations
○ Becomes active discrimination when members of some groups are unfairly treated
and denied the full benefits of organizational membership
■ Subtle form of discrimination called the glass ceiling effect, an
invisible barrier or ceiling that prevents women and visible minorities
from rising to top jobs
● Careers and connections
○ Shamrock organization: an organization that operates with a core group of full-time
long-term workers supported by others who work on contracts
and part-time
○ Free-agent economy: where people change jobs more often and work on flexible
contracts with a shifting mix of employers over time
○ Self management: being able to assess yourself realistically, recognize strengths
and weaknesses, make constructive changes, and manage personal development
■ Early career survival skills
● Mastery
● Networking
● Entrepreneurship
● Technology
● Marketing
● Renewal
○ Connections are very important in a free-agent economy
■ Social networking: the use of dedicated websites and applications to
connect people having similar interests

1.2: Organizations

● Organization: a collection of people working together to achieve a common


purpose
○ Unique social phenomenon that enables its members to perform tasks for
beyond the reach of individual accomplishments
○ Purpose is to provide goods or services of value to customers and clients
● Organizations as systems
○ Open systems: systems that transform resource inputs from the
environment into product outputs
● Organizational performance
○ Organizations create value when they use resources well to produce good
products and take care of their customers
○ Productivity: measures the quantity and quality of outputs relative to the cost
of inputs
■ Involves both performance effectiveness and performance
efficiency
○ Performance effectiveness: an output measure of task or goal
accomplishment
○ Performance efficiency: an input measure of the resource costs
associated with goal accomplishment
● Changing nature of organizations
○ Some organizational trends and transitions relevant to the study of
management:
■ Focus on valuing human capital
■ Demise of “command-and-control”
■ emphasis on teamwork
■ Pre-eminence of technology
■ Importance of networking
■ New workforce expectations
■ Concern for sustainability

1.3: Managers

● Managers: people in organizations who directly support, supervise, and help


activate the work efforts and performance accomplishments of others

● Levels of managers
○ Board of directors: members are elected by shareholders to represent their
ownership interests
○ Top managers: constitute an executive team that reports to the board and is
responsible for the performance of the organization as a whole or for one of its
larger parts
○ Middle managers: report to top managers; in charge of relatively large
departments or divisions consisting of several smaller work units
○ Team leader: someone in charge of a small work group composed of non-
managerial workers
● Responsibilities
○ Board of directors
■ Make sure that the organization is always being well run and
managed in a lawful and ethical manner
○ Top managers
■ Set strategy and lead the organization consistent with its purpose and
mission
■ Should pay special attention to the external environment
■ Be alert to potential long-run problems and opportunities
○ Middle managers
■ Working with top managers
■ Coordinating with peers
■ Supporting lower-level team members
● Types of managers:
○ Line managers: responsible for work that makes a direct contribution to the
organization’s outputs
○ Staff managers: use special techniques and expertise to advise and support the
efforts of line workers
○ Functional managers: have responsibility for a single area of activity such as
finance, marketing, production, HR, accounting, or sales
○ General managers: responsible for activities covering many functional areas
○ In public or non-profit organizations, managers may be called
administrators
● Managerial performance
○ Accountability: the requirement of one person to answer to a higher authority for
performance results in his or her area of work responsibility
■ Flows upward in the traditional organizational structure
○ Effective managers: successfully help others achieve both high
performance and satisfaction in their work
○ Quality of work (QWL): indicator of the overall quality of human
experiences at work
● Changing nature of managerial work
○ Upside-down pyramid: concept that fits well with the changing mindset of
managerial work today

1.4: The Management Process

● Management process: four functions of management


○ Planning
○ Organizing
○ Leading
○ Controlling
● Planning: the process of setting performance objectives and determining what
actions should be taken to accomplish them
● Organizing: the process of assigning tasks, allocating resources, and
coordinating the activities of individuals and groups to accomplish plans
● Leading: the process of arousing people’s enthusiasm and inspiring their efforts to
work hard to fulfill plans and accomplish objectives
● Controlling: the process of measuring work performance, comparing results, and taking
corrective actions as needed
● Managerial roles:
○ Mintzberg’s common roles filled by management
■ Interpersonal roles
● How a manger interacts with people
■ Informational roles
● How a manager exchanges and processes information
■ Decisional roles
● How a manger uses information in decision making
● Managerial activities
○ Must master key roles and implement them in intense and complex work
settings
○ Work is busy, demanding, and stressful
● Managerial agendas and networks:
○ Agenda setting: develop action priorities that include goals and plans spanning long and
short time frames
■ Implement agendas by networking
○ Networking: the process of building and maintaining positive relationships
with people whose help may be needed to implement one’s agendas
■ Creates social capital
○ Social capital: a capacity to attract support and help from others in order to get
things done

1.5: Learning How to Manage

● Learning: changing behaviour through experience


○ Begins with self-awareness - a real, unbiased understanding of your
strengths and weaknesses
● Lifelong learning: the process of continuous learning from all our daily
experiences and opportunities
● Skill: the ability to translate knowledge into action that results in desired
performance
● Essential skills of managers have three categories
○ Technical skill: the ability to use a special proficiency of expertise to
perform particular tasks
○ Human skill: the ability to work well in cooperation with other persons
■ Emotional intelligence: ability to manage ourselves and our
relationships effectively
○ Conceptual skill: the ability to think analytically

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