Introduction To Management: Course Instructor
Introduction To Management: Course Instructor
Introduction To Management: Course Instructor
2,3
Course Instructor:
Learning Objectives
•Scientific Management
• Describe the important contributions made by Fredrick
W. Taylor and Frank and Lillian Gilbreth.
• Explain how today’s managers use scientific
management.
Learning Objectives
•Quantitative Approach
• Explain what the quantitative approach has contributed to
the field of management.
• Discuss how today’s managers use the quantitative
approach.
Learning Objectives
• Henri Fayol
Believed that the practice of management was distinct
from other organizational functions
Developed fourteen principles of management that
applied to all organizational situations
Henri Fayol contributions
• Identify & classify business activities
• Identify mngt. As a separate set of skills
• Classify mngt. Functions
• Forecasting & planning
• Organizing
• Commanding
• Co-ordinating
• controlling
•Experimental findings
Productivity unexpectedly increased under imposed
adverse working conditions.
The effect of incentive plans was less than
expected.
•Research conclusion
Social norms, group standards and attitudes more
strongly influence individual output and work behavior
than do monetary incentives.
The Systems Approach
• System Defined
A set of interrelated and interdependent parts
arranged in a manner that produces a unified whole.
• Basic Types of Systems
Closed systems
Are not influenced by and do not interact with their
environment (all system input and output is internal).
Open systems
Dynamically interact to their environments by taking in inputs
and transforming them into outputs that are distributed into
their environments.
Exhibit 2–6 The Organization as an Open System
Implications of the Systems Approach
• Coordination of the organization’s parts is
essential for proper functioning of the entire
organization.
• Decisions and actions taken in one area of the
organization will have an effect in other areas of
the organization.
• Organizations are not self-contained and,
therefore, must adapt to changes in their
external environment.
The Contingency Approach
• Contingency Approach Defined
Also sometimes called the situational approach.
There is no one universally applicable set of
management principles (rules) by which to manage
organizations.
Organizations are individually different, face different
situations (contingency variables), and require
different ways of managing.
Exhibit 2–7 Popular Contingency Variables
• Organization size
• As size increases, so do the problems of coordination.
• Routineness of task technology
• Routine technologies require organizational structures,
leadership styles, and control systems that differ from
those required by customized or nonroutine technologies.
• Environmental uncertainty
• What works best in a stable and predictable environment
may be totally inappropriate in a rapidly changing and
unpredictable environment.
• Individual differences
• Individuals differ in terms of their desire for growth,
autonomy, tolerance of ambiguity, and expectations.
Current Trends and Issues
• Globalization
• Ethics
• Workforce Diversity
• Entrepreneurship
• E-business
• Knowledge Management
• Learning Organizations
• Quality Management
Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)
• Globalization
Management in international organizations
Political and cultural challenges of operating in a
global market
Working with people from different cultures
Coping with anticapitalist backlash
Movement of jobs to countries with low-cost labor
• Ethics
Increased emphasis on ethics education in college
curriculums
Increased creation and use of codes of ethics by
businesses
Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)
• Workforce Diversity
Increasing heterogeneity in the workforce
More gender, minority, ethnic, and other forms of diversity in
employees
Aging workforce
Older employees who work longer and do not retire
The increased costs of public and private benefits for older
workers
An increasing demand for products and services related to
aging.
Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)
• Entrepreneurship Defined
The process of starting new businesses, generally in
response to opportunities.
• Entrepreneurship process
Pursuit of opportunities
Innovation in products, services, or business methods
Desire for continual growth of the organization
Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)
• E-Business (Electronic Business)
The work preformed by an organization using
electronic linkages to its key constituencies
E-commerce: the sales and marketing aspect of an e-
business
• Categories of E-Businesses
E-business enhanced organization
E-business enabled organization
Total e-business organization
Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)
• Learning Organization
An organization that has developed the capacity to
continuously learn, adapt, and change.
• Knowledge Management
The cultivation of a learning culture where
organizational members systematically gather and
share knowledge with others in order to achieve
better performance.
Exhibit 2–10 Learning Organization versus Traditional Organization
Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)
• Quality Management
A philosophy of management driven by continual
improvement in the quality of work processes and
responding to customer needs and expectations
Inspired by the total quality management (TQM) ideas
of Deming and Juran
Quality is not directly related to cost
Poor quality results in lower productivity
Terms to Know
• Division of labor (or job • closed systems
specialization) • open systems
• Industrial Revolution • contingency approach
• scientific management • workforce diversity
• general administrative theory • entrepreneurship
• principles of management • e-business (electronic
• bureaucracy business)
• quantitative approach • e-commerce (electronic
• organizational behavior (OB) commerce)
• Hawthorne Studies • intranet
• system • learning organization
• knowledge management
• quality management