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Management & Entrepreneurial Cybernetics

Management & Entrepreneurial Cybernetics . By Alex Stuart , Ronny Bull , Chaitanya Pinnamaneni In order of presentation. What is Management Cybernetics?. Stafford Beer described Cybernetics as “the science of effective organization”

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Management & Entrepreneurial Cybernetics

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  1. Management & Entrepreneurial Cybernetics By Alex Stuart , Ronny Bull, ChaitanyaPinnamaneni In order of presentation

  2. What is Management Cybernetics? • Stafford Beer described Cybernetics as “the science of effective organization” • Tony Gill suggests that Management Cybernetics implies both effective organization and steersmanhip • This in turn implies that Management Cybernetics is the cybernetics of control and organization

  3. Wikipedia’s definition • Management cybernetics involves the study of what things do and how they interact with one another, not just what they are. • It is a field of knowledge which can help us to gain further knowledge in situations where we cannot obtain any concrete knowledge • It helps us achieve the right approach to complexity • It is the realization of one’s own responsibility, with which one can make others aware of their own responsibilities • It is an approach that does not completely eradicate complexity, but shows the ways in which it can be best handled • It provides the chance to maintain long-term acceptance • It is an approach that everyone understands when they apply it to their own situation • It is an approach that everyone has already practiced, whether they realize it or not

  4. The Father of Management Cybernetics • In 1959, Stafford Beer published Cybernetics and management which introduced this field of study • Management Cybernetics relies on the Viable System Model which he created in the 1960’s

  5. Management Cybernetics • Ashby in Introduction to Cybernetics remarks that cybernetics should exhibit parallels between society, the brain, and the machine • Beer focused on this idea and attracted the attention of managers and management scientists • Beer attempted to replicate what he observed in nature

  6. Management Cybernetics • Beer also incorporated ideas from Forrester’s systems dynamics, especially the concept of dynamical feedback loops • The Viable System model relies heavily on this and is able to describe entire systems • The Viable System model also relies on Ashby’s Law of Requisite Variety

  7. First and Second Order Cybernetics

  8. Ashby’s Law of Requisite Variety • Only variety absorbs variety • Three properties: Complexity, Variety, Adaptation • Goal: management of complexity

  9. Black Box • One or more inputs and one or more outputs • Gill explains “Process managers set performance targets, monitor the output against these targets and take corrective action (feedback) to alter the inputs so the output better meet the set requirements”

  10. Black Box Process Managers Performance Targets Disturbances Black Box Inputs Outputs Corrective Action Performance Monitoring

  11. Beer explains Feedback

  12. Ouroboros • Greek symbol that represented feedback • Defined as “Returning information to the origin to correct a system’s behavior”

  13. Reductionism • Wikipedia defines Reductionism as “an approach to understanding the nature of complex things by reducing them to the interactions of their parts, or to simpler or more fundamental things” • Examples: Physics, Chemistry, and Biology Descartes’ Duck

  14. Organizational Chart Orders Boss Obedience Peons Peons Peons

  15. Organizational Chart • Organization is based upon a hierarchical design where the man with the money is the man on top • Authoritarian design • Horizontal communication is difficult • Orders travel vertically downwards and obedience travels upwards • Blame is easily placed, and employees are only familiar with their local work area

  16. Traditional Business Organization Method • Decide objective • Make plan • Organize • Execute • Supervise

  17. Viable Systems Model

  18. Viable Systems Model

  19. Viable Systems Model

  20. Viable Systems Model Based on observations of nature • Identity • Planning • Management • Audit • Coordination • Operation Complexity

  21. Viable Systems Model

  22. Viable Systems Model • Recursive by nature • e.g. human body, cells->tissues->organs etc. • Management is separate from operations due to the difference between processing energy & materials and information • Information is the key to having control and thus the key to management

  23. Advantages over the Organizational Chart • All communication lines are accessible • Maximum desirable autonomy of the operations • Standardized model – everyone knows their part • Holistic and systematic approach • Works for any type of organization including government and businesses

  24. Examples of Viable Systems

  25. The U.S. Government • The government exhibits many traits of Management Cybernetics • The government was originally modeled from the bottom up; ‘for the people by the people’ The State Politics Economics Law

  26. Traffic Light Example

  27. Climate example

  28. US government

  29. References • Stafford Beers’ Lectures Presented by Javier Livasat http://wn.com/Stafford_Beer • Management Cybernetics by Tony Gill http://www.phrontis.com/syncho/MC1.pdf • http://www.worldlingo.com/ma/enwiki/en/Management_cybernetics

  30. References • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Management_cybernetics • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reductionism • CSC 551 Lecture Notes – Prof. Sengupta • http://www.pollsb.com/photos/60/27842-beating_dead_horse_what.jpg

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