1 / 35

Chapter 1 Managers & Managing

Chapter 1 Managers & Managing. 1.1 The Role and Work of Managers 1.2 The Historical Development of Management 1.3 Managing in the 21 st Century. Reality Check discussion. Key facts Key terms Company considerations Erik’s considerations Erik’s concerns

Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 1 Managers & Managing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 1 Managers & Managing 1.1 The Role and Work of Managers 1.2 The Historical Development of Management 1.3 Managing in the 21st Century

  2. Reality Check discussion • Key facts • Key terms • Company considerations • Erik’s considerations • Erik’s concerns • How would you help Erik make a decision about applying for a position?

  3. Moving into Management • “I am in charge. I make the decisions. No one can tell me what to do.” • “I’m responsible. When problems occur, I have to fix them. If things go wrong, I’ll have to take the blame. Success or failure ultimately depends on me.”

  4. The Changing Nature of Management • Make decisions that determine what a company does and how well it performs • Choose resources needed to operate • Make ideas a reality • What differences do you see between managers and regular employees?

  5. Management Activities • Managers are in charge of all aspects of business • All managers perform very similar activities, regardless of the size, type of business and department • Management: the process of accomplishing the goals of an organization through the effective use of people and other resources. • Resources include all factors of production

  6. Primary Management Activities • Planning – involves analyzing information and making decisions about what needs to get done • Organizing – is concerned with determining how plans can be accomplished most effectively and arranging resources to complete work • Implementing – focuses on carrying out the plans and helping employees to work effectively • Controlling – involves evaluating results to determine if the company’s objectives have been accomplished as planned

  7. Management Activities cont’d • Planning examples: creating a vision, creating goals/standards, creating a list of resources needed and available, deciding how to best achieve goals • Organizing examples: delegating work, grouping tasks, designing job roles, designing the system to reach goals • Implementing examples: carrying out tasks, leading and motivating employees, communicating, conflict resolution • Controlling examples: monitoring plan, creating alternatives when plan is deviated from, evaluating effectiveness of plan, ensure goals are met

  8. The Work of Managers • Many non-managers perform managerial functions • This is very beneficial to employees – why?? • Manager: completes all four management functions on a regular basis • Final authority and responsibility always remains with the manager

  9. The Work of Managers cont’d • Most companies have more than 1 level of management • Pending the size, companies can have 2-6 management classifications • Management pyramid: describes the levels of management in an organization • Usually more managers at lower levels and fewer at higher levels

  10. The Work of Managers cont’d • Supervisor: manager whose main job is to direct the work of employees. • First level of management in a company • In addition to overseeing, they often perform non-managerial functions • Middle Manager: completes all functions of management but spends most of the time completing specialized work in one management functions or is responsible for a specific part of operations

  11. The Work of Managers cont’d • Executive: top-level manager who spends almost all time on management functions and decisions that affect the entire company • Other managers report to executives • Rarely work directly with non-managerial employees • Board of Directors: Non-employed leaders of a corporation. Elected officials who govern major company policies and decisions

  12. The Work of Managers cont’d • Supervisors work more directly with regular employees on day to day tasks • Supervisors implement • Executives and middle managers work towards long-term direction and overall success of business • Executives and middle managers plan and organize • All managers control • Figure 1-2

  13. Earliest Forms of Management • First managers had no precedent set for them • Think of the feats of engineering and construction the Egyptians and Romans had to conquer and accomplish!! • Emphasis was placed on completing the job over concern for workers • Manual labor ensued until the end of the 17th century • Governments provided public wants and individual/small businesses developed goods/services for private wants • Automation

  14. The Industrial Revolution • Came from the invention of advanced machines that allowed for the faster processing of raw materials • Transformed the way we worked and how businesses were ran • Era between 1700s-1800s in which automation developed • Machine workers replaced artisans • Big inventions = steam engine, water power • What are the positive results?

  15. Changing Approaches to Management • Industrial revolution proved long days, dangerous work conditions, poorly trained workers and child labor • As economy expanded, business operations needed to adapt to provide for more efficiency and effectiveness • Management science: the careful, objective study of management decisions and procedures in order to improve the operation of business and organizations • How can we pass on this knowledge?

  16. Classical Management (1800-1920) • First effort of management science • Classical management:studies the way work is organized and the procedures used to complete a job in order to increase worker productivity • Work areas are arranged to make parts and materials readily accessible • Most competent employees learn best way to work and train others

  17. Classical Management • Very experimental until the most efficient work procedure is found • Frederick W. Taylor hypothesized time and motion measurements to evaluate what the “best” way to perform a work task was • He observed workers to see who took the least amount of steps in the least amount of time wasting the least amount of resources • Piece rate compensation = pay based on output and productivity

  18. Administrative Management • Works to improve the overall management of a growing business • Administrative management: identifies the most effective practices for organizing and managing a business • Management pyramid stemmed from this science • All managers must have a defined type of work to complete • Henri Fayol – early proponent • Identified 14 characteristics such as authority, responsibility, unity of command and purpose, compensation and good work relations

  19. Behavioral Management • Focuses on recognizing dissatisfaction workers have at their job • Behavioral management: directed at organizational improvement through understanding employee motivation and behavior (human relations management) • Focuses on developing a work environment that promotes the value of the employee • Empower workers to do their best = productivity

  20. Behavioral Management • A positive relationship between managers and employees is motivating • Managers need to find ways to improve working conditions and increase workers’ satisfaction • Hawthorne effect • Theory X and Theory Y

  21. Quality Management (1950s on) • The first part of IR led to great productivity and in keeping up with that, efficiency started to give • TQM influenced by Japanese • W. Edward Deming learned practices from Japanese and brought back to U.S. • Quality management: a total commitment by everyone in an organization to improve the quality of procedures and products by reducing waste, errors and defects

  22. Changes and Challenges for Managers • Workers – workforce is more diverse in the 2000s • All people able to work looking for a job or employed • Age, ethnic background, gender, education • Indicators • Workforce will become much younger • Increase as people live longer • Increase as people need to work longer (laws/finance) • Increase as people need to stay busy

  23. Changes and Challenges for Managers cont’d • Over age 55 – 23% of WF by 2050 • Between 24-54 – 64% of WF by 2050 • Caucasian workers will decline to 50% by 2050 • Largest increase will be Hispanics (double) • Men and women will almost be treated 50/50 • By 2020s, over 60% of new job openings will require more than a HS diploma

  24. Changes and Challenges for Managers cont’d • Work will be more organized into teams • Technology will continue to take over work • More jobs will be less physically demanding and more intellectually stimulating • Job requirements to increase: • Creativity • Critical thinking • Decision making • Problem solving

  25. Changes and Challenges for Managers cont’d • Business competition will increase globally • Small businesses can even compete with large businesses on a global level through e-commerce • Businesses can create alliances through technology all over the globe • Distance and time zone changes are no longer barriers • More awareness of different cultures and values • Must be able to respond to these needs

  26. Changes and Challenges for Managers cont’d • Technology is necessary for businesses to survive • Advantages of websites? • Telecommunication • Technology is used to speed up work processes • Technology allows to collect, analyze, record, export, monitor and track data • Technology is used to evaluate work activities and performance

  27. Developing a Management Strategy • Management strategy: a carefully developed overall approach to leading an organization • Implements parts of various theories • Consider your business’s unique sets of characteristics • Cater to your resources • There are four major factors to consider in development

  28. Developing a Management Strategy cont’d • The business considerations: • Large/small • Old/new • Retail/industrial • Service or manufacturing • The work • What kind of workload needs to be complete • What kind of workers do you employ and how many

  29. Developing a Management Strategy cont’d • The business environment • Some can operate more freely • Some work in industries that are highly regulated • Some industries face critical competition because of similar products offered • Must demonstrate a level of social responsibility • The management • Levels of, numbers of, responsibilities of • How much of each theory will be implemented

More Related