MS 01
MS 01
MS 01
ASSIGNMENT
Course Code : MS-01
Course Title : Management Functions and Behaviour
Assignment Code : MS- 01/TMA/SEM-I/2018
Coverage : All Blocks
Note: Attempt all the questions and submit this assignment on or before 30st April, 2018 to
the coordinator of your study centre.
1. Briefly describe the Management processes. Explain any one of them with respect to its
significance and importance in organisational performance and efficiency. Explain with your
organisational experience. Briefly describe the organisation, you are referring to.
2. What are the techniques used in different steps of Decision-making? Based on your
organisational experience, discuss the importance and rules of Brainstorming in the process.
Briefly describe the organisation and the situation, you are referring to.
3. What are the major antecedent conditions for change? Based on your organisational
experience, discuss the necessity or otherwise of ‘why all organisations must change’ in the
background of ‘how an organisation grows’. Explain the situation and organisational settings
you are referring to.
4. Base on your organisational experience/exposure critically discuss the role and impact of
formal and informal groups on ‘Management’. Briefly describe the organisational setting,
you are referring to.
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Answer
1. Briefly describe the Management processes. Explain any one of them with respect to
its significance and importance in organizational performance and efficiency. Explain
with your organizational experience. Briefly describe the organisation, you are referring
to.
Ans.: Management processes are the methods that aid the structuring, investigation, analysis,
decision-making and communication of business issues. Examples include the strategic
planning process, talent planning, expense and capital budgeting, performance management
systems, product planning and management cost accounting.
The purpose of a management process is to ensure a disciplined and consistent approach to
analysis and decision making. They facilitate the use of a logical thought process that is
consistent with the objectives of the firm. The capital budgeting process, for example, is
based on financial market disciplines that encourage wise investment. Product planning is
focused on both creating customer value and realizing the benefits of new products for the
firm’s investors, not one or the other.
Management processes should be seen as a support to and not a replacement for management
judgment. These processes require the development of expectations about the future and
provide guidance in light of the associated assumptions. The wise manager uses these tools
as inputs to decision making which, when combined with business acumen, provide a solid
basis for choice.
Managers today are enamored of processes. It’s easy to see why. Many modern organizations
are functional and hierarchical; they suffer from isolated departments, poor coordination, and
limited lateral communication. All too often, work is fragmented and compartmentalized, and
managers find it difficult to get things done. Scholars have faced similar problems in their
research, struggling to describe organizational functioning in other than static, highly
aggregated terms. For real progress to be made, the “proverbial ‘black box,’ the firm, has to
be opened and studied from within.”
Processes provide a likely solution. In the broadest sense, they can be defined as collections
of tasks and activities that together and only together transform inputs into outputs. Within
organizations, these inputs and outputs can be as varied as materials, information, and people.
Common examples of processes include new product development, order fulfillment, and
customer service; less obvious but equally legitimate candidates are resource allocation and
decision making.
Over the years, there have been a number of process theories in the academic literature, but
seldom has anyone reviewed them systematically or in an integrated way. Process theories
have appeared in organization theory, strategic management, operations management, group
dynamics, and studies of managerial behavior. The few scholarly efforts to tackle processes
as a collective phenomenon either have been tightly focused theoretical or methodological
statements or have focused primarily on a single type of process theory.
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Yet when the theories are taken together, they provide a powerful lens for understanding
organizations and management:
• First, processes provide a convenient, intermediate level of analysis. Because they
consist of diverse, interlinked tasks, they open up the black box of the firm without
exposing analysts to the “part-whole” problems that have plagued earlier research.3
Past studies have tended to focus on either the trees (individual tasks or activities) or
the forest (the organization as a whole); they have not combined the two. A process
perspective gives the needed integration, ensuring that the realities of work practice
are linked explicitly to the firm’s overall functioning.
• Second, a process lens provides new insights into managerial behavior. Most studies
have been straightforward descriptions of time allocation, roles, and activity streams,
with few attempts to integrate activities into a coherent whole.5 In fact, most past
research has highlighted the fragmented quality of managers’ jobs rather than their
coherence. A process approach, by contrast, emphasizes the links among activities,
showing that seemingly unrelated tasks a telephone call, a brief hallway conversation,
or an unscheduled meeting are often part of a single, unfolding sequence. From this
vantage point, managerial work becomes far more rational and orderly.
My aim here is to give a framework for thinking about processes, their impacts, and the
implications for managers. I begin at the organizational level, reviewing a wide range of
process theories and grouping them into categories. The discussion leads naturally to a
typology of processes and a simple model of organizations as interconnected sets of
processes. In the next section, I examine managerial processes; I consider them separately
because they focus on individual managers and their relationships, rather than on
organizations. I examine several types of managerial processes and contrast them with, and
link them to, organizational processes, and identify their common elements. I conclude with a
unifying framework that ties together the diverse processes and consider the implications for
managers.
2. What are the techniques used in different steps of Decision-making? Based on your
organizational experience, discuss the importance and rules of Brainstorming in the
process. Briefly describe the organisation and the situation, you are referring to.
Ans.: Decision-making is the act of making a choice among available alternatives. There are
innumerable decisions that are taken by human beings in day-to-day life. In business
undertakings, decisions are taken at every step. It is also regarded as one of the important
function of management. Managerial functions like planning, organizing, staffing, directing,
co-ordinating and controlling are carried through decisions. Decision making is possible
when there are two or more alternatives to solve a single problem or difficulty. If there is only
one alternative then there is no question of decision making. It is believed that the
management without a decision is a man without a backbone. Therefore, decision making is a
problem-solving approach by choosing a specific course of action among various alternatives.
The importance of decision making can be discussed under the following points:
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purposes only. We encourage you to use our material as a research and study aid only. Plagiarism is a crime,
and we condone such behavior. Please use our material responsibly, and avoid academic fraud.
3
Disclaimer: All material prewritten or custom written is intended for the sole purpose of research and examplary
purposes only. We encourage you to use our material as a research and study aid only. Plagiarism is a crime,
and we condone such behavior. Please use our material responsibly, and avoid academic fraud.
4
Disclaimer: All material prewritten or custom written is intended for the sole purpose of research and examplary
purposes only. We encourage you to use our material as a research and study aid only. Plagiarism is a crime,
and we condone such behavior. Please use our material responsibly, and avoid academic fraud.
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Disclaimer: All material prewritten or custom written is intended for the sole purpose of research and examplary
purposes only. We encourage you to use our material as a research and study aid only. Plagiarism is a crime,
and we condone such behavior. Please use our material responsibly, and avoid academic fraud.
6
Disclaimer: All material prewritten or custom written is intended for the sole purpose of research and examplary
purposes only. We encourage you to use our material as a research and study aid only. Plagiarism is a crime,
and we condone such behavior. Please use our material responsibly, and avoid academic fraud.
resistance. People must be motivated to shake off old habits. This must take place in stages
rather than abruptly so that "managed change" takes on the character of "natural change." In
addition to normal inertia, organization change introduces anxieties about the future. If the
future after the change comes to be perceived positively, resistance will be less.
Education and communication are therefore key ingredients in minimizing negative reactions.
Employees can be informed about both the nature of the change and the logic behind it before
it takes place through reports, memos, group presentations, or individual discussions. Another
important component of overcoming resistance is inviting employee participation and
involvement in both the design and implementation phases of the change effort. Organized
forms of facilitation and support can be deployed. Managers can ensure that employees will
have the resources to bring the change about; managers can make themselves available to
provide explanations and to minimize stress arising in many scores of situations.
Some companies manage to overcome resistance to change through negotiation and rewards.
They offer employees concrete incentives to ensure their cooperation. Other companies resort
to manipulation, or using subtle tactics such as giving a resistance leader a prominent position
in the change effort. A final option is coercion, which involves punishing people who resist
or using force to ensure their cooperation. Although this method can be useful when speed is
of the essence, it can have lingering negative effects on the company. Of course, no method is
appropriate to every situation, and a number of different methods may be combined as
needed.
4. Base on your organisational experience/exposure critically discuss the role and
impact of formal and informal groups on ‘Management’. Briefly describe the
organsational setting, you are referring to.
Ans.: The classical approach to organisation and management tended to ignore the
importance of group and the social factors at work. The ideas of people such as F.W. Taylor
popularized the concept of the rabble hypothesis and the assumption that people carried out
their work, and could be motivated, as solitary individuals unaffected by others.
Organisations contain formal groups which have been put into place by the organisational
management to perform specific tasks in order to further the aims of the organisation. In
addition to the formal groups, there are informal groups which can assume an existence in
organisations as a result of the mutually shared interests of the individuals who are a part of
the organisation. Informal groups exist purely because of mutual interests and have no formal
mandate from the organisation. The membership of the informal groups seeks to satisfy some
need by belonging to these groups. These needs may include needs for security, knowledge
acquisition, informal attempts to shape organisational policy, family, social interaction etc.
A formal group can be a command group or a functional group that is relatively permanent is
composed of managers and their subordinates who meet regularly to discuss general and
specific ideas to improve product or service.
The formal groups usually work under a single supervisor, even though the structure of these
groups may vary. For example, in one form of group such as in production, the members of
the work group depend on each other as well as on the supervisor and in another form of
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Disclaimer: All material prewritten or custom written is intended for the sole purpose of research and examplary
purposes only. We encourage you to use our material as a research and study aid only. Plagiarism is a crime,
and we condone such behavior. Please use our material responsibly, and avoid academic fraud.
group, such as sales force, the members of the group work fairly independently and their
common contact may be the district sales manager.
Other types of formal groups include task forces and committees. The task forces are
temporary in nature and are set up for some special projects. The committees can be
permanent, such as a planning committee, a finance committee or a budget committee and
may become an integral part of the organizational structure.
Whereas formal groups are established by organizations to achieve some specific objectives,
informal groups are formed by the members of such groups by themselves. They emerge
naturally, in response to the common interests of organizational members. They are formed
spontaneously, without any formal designation, and with common interests such as self-
defense, work assistance and social interaction.
They exist outside the formal authority system and without any set rigid rules. Though
officially unrecognized, they exist in the shadow of the formal structure as a network of
personal and social relations that must be understood and respected by the management.
Informal work groups are based upon socio-psychological support and reasoning and depend
upon member’s interaction, communication, personal likings and dislikings and social
contacts within as well as outside the organization. How powerful these informal groups can
be seen from the fact that if one member of the group is fired, sometimes all workers go on
strike in support of that member of the group.
The bonds between members are very strong and bring in a sense of belonging and
togetherness. This togetherness can have a powerful influence on productivity and job
satisfaction, since employees motivate each other and share each others burden by training
those who are new and by looking up to old timers for guidance, advice and assistance.
By structure, we mean the framework around which the group is organized, the
underpinnings which keep the coalition functioning. It's the operating manual that tells
members how the organization is put together and how it works. More specifically, structure
describes how members are accepted, how leadership is chosen, and how decisions are made.
Teamwork in organizational settings is an important aspect of creating a well-oiled machine
to get tasks and projects done. A single team often has a team leader, who guides all members
to reach the company’s expectations. In addition, each team leader must include all workers
to boost motivation and workplace morale. However, the role of teams in organizations also
has a practical importance.
Teamwork is important in an organization because of the scope of the work it performs on a
daily basis. A single employee cannot take on all of the responsibilities of an organization,
according to Net Team. Each employee hired by the company has a certain skill set, which
contributes to a single department. In other words, a single department has a collection of
workers who each contribute something to reach the organization’s goals and objectives.
Some organizations have managers and executives who travel frequently, meaning they are
not in the office every day. These individuals communicate via email and telephone to stay
updated with tasks, assignments and production. Teamwork is important in these situations,
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Disclaimer: All material prewritten or custom written is intended for the sole purpose of research and examplary
purposes only. We encourage you to use our material as a research and study aid only. Plagiarism is a crime,
and we condone such behavior. Please use our material responsibly, and avoid academic fraud.
because modern technology allows all employees to stay in touch about tasks and
assignments despite being miles or time zones apart. Teamwork in these situations also shows
trust and reliability, because employees trust that other workers get the job done in their
absence.
Each organization is made up of various departments. Sometimes these departments must
work together in creating a project or task for the organization, such as the production
department working closely with the accounting department to create products on a budget.
These departments must work together as a team to meet the company’s goals and objectives,
despite having very different functions within the organization.
Another important reason for teamwork in an organization is the different backgrounds and
ethnicities of people working in a single organization. Each employee has a different
background or experience, meaning each of them can perform differently on any given tasks.
Teamwork is important as these differences get ironed out, so all employees think and
perform with the same goal in mind. In addition, all employees understand the methods used
to reach these goals.
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