Sully Truin formed the Academic Recycling Company (ARC) 10 years ago. It has expanded rapidly and Sully implemented tight administrative processes to manage contracts. He believes workers are lazy and tells them exactly what to do. Some employees complained about his autocratic leadership style.
Sully took a management course advocating democratic leadership. On return, he empowered employees to make their own decisions on contracts instead of referring to him. However, problems arose as employees were fearful of mistakes. They asked Sully to return to his previous autocratic style. Reluctantly, he agreed but is now overworked and expansion is restricted.
Sully Truin formed the Academic Recycling Company (ARC) 10 years ago. It has expanded rapidly and Sully implemented tight administrative processes to manage contracts. He believes workers are lazy and tells them exactly what to do. Some employees complained about his autocratic leadership style.
Sully took a management course advocating democratic leadership. On return, he empowered employees to make their own decisions on contracts instead of referring to him. However, problems arose as employees were fearful of mistakes. They asked Sully to return to his previous autocratic style. Reluctantly, he agreed but is now overworked and expansion is restricted.
Sully Truin formed the Academic Recycling Company (ARC) 10 years ago. It has expanded rapidly and Sully implemented tight administrative processes to manage contracts. He believes workers are lazy and tells them exactly what to do. Some employees complained about his autocratic leadership style.
Sully took a management course advocating democratic leadership. On return, he empowered employees to make their own decisions on contracts instead of referring to him. However, problems arose as employees were fearful of mistakes. They asked Sully to return to his previous autocratic style. Reluctantly, he agreed but is now overworked and expansion is restricted.
Sully Truin formed the Academic Recycling Company (ARC) 10 years ago. It has expanded rapidly and Sully implemented tight administrative processes to manage contracts. He believes workers are lazy and tells them exactly what to do. Some employees complained about his autocratic leadership style.
Sully took a management course advocating democratic leadership. On return, he empowered employees to make their own decisions on contracts instead of referring to him. However, problems arose as employees were fearful of mistakes. They asked Sully to return to his previous autocratic style. Reluctantly, he agreed but is now overworked and expansion is restricted.
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ARC
Ten years ago Sully Truin formed the Academic Recycling
Company (ARC) to offer a specialised waste recycling service to schools and colleges. The company has been very successful and has expanded rapidly. To cope with this expansion, Sully has implemented a tight administrative process for operating and monitoring contracts. This administrative procedure is undertaken by the Contracts Office, who track that collections have been made by the field recycling teams. Sully has sole responsibility for obtaining and establishing recycling contracts, but he leaves the day-to-day responsibility for administering and monitoring the contracts to the Contracts Office. He has closely defined what needs to be done for each contract and how this should be monitored. I needed to do this, he said, because workers in this country are naturally lazy and lack initiative. I have found that if you dont tell them exactly what to do and how to do it, then it wont get done properly. Most of the employees working in the Contracts Office like and respect Sully for his business success and ability to take instant decisions when they refer a problem to him. Some of ARCs employees have complained about his autocratic style of leadership, but most of these have now left the company to work for other organisations. A few months ago, conscious that he was a self-taught manager, Sully enrolled himself on a weeks course with Gapminding, a training consultancy which actively advocates and promotes a democratic style of management. The course caused Sully to question his previous approach to leadership. It was also the first time, for three years, that Sully had been out of the office during working hours for a prolonged period of time. However, each night, while he was attending the course, he had to deal with emails from the Contracts Office listing problems with contracts and asking him what action they should take. He became exasperated by his employees inability to take actions to resolve these issues. He discussed this problem with his course tutors. They suggested that his employees would be more effective and
motivated if their jobs were enriched and that they were
empowered to make decisions themselves. On his return from the course, Sully called a staff meeting with the Contracts Office where he announced that, from now on, employees would have responsibility for taking control actions themselves, rather than referring the problem to him. Sully, in turn, was to focus on gaining more contracts and setting them up. However, problems with the new arrangements arose very quickly. Fearful of making mistakes and unsure about what they were doing led to employees discussing issues amongst themselves at length before coming to a tentative decision. The operational (field) recycling teams were particularly critical of the new approach. One commented that before, we got a clear decision very quickly. Now decisions can take several days and appear to lack authority. The new approach also caused tensions and stress within the Contracts Office and absenteeism increased. At the next staff meeting, employees in the Contracts Office asked Sully to return to his old management style and job responsibilities. We prefer the old Sully Truin, they said, the training course has spoilt you. Reluctantly, Sully agreed to their requests and so all problems are again referred up to him. However, he is unhappy with this return to the previous way of working. He is working long hours and is concerned about his health. Also, he realises that he has little time for obtaining and planning contracts and this is severely restricting the capacity of the company to expand. Required: (a) Analyse Sully Truins leadership style before and immediately after the training course and explain why the change of leadership style at ARC was unsuccessful. (15 marks)
(b) Describe the principles of job enrichment and evaluate its potential application in the Contracts Office at ARC. (10 marks) (25 marks)