Module 1 - Introduction To Organization and Management
Module 1 - Introduction To Organization and Management
(1) First, organizations need their managerial skills and abilities in uncertain, complex, and
chaotic times.
(2) Second, managers are critical to getting things done in organizations.
(3) Finally, managers contribute to employee productivity and loyalty; the way employees
are managed can affect the organization’s financial performance, and managerial ability
has been shown to be important in creating organizational value.
B. Who is a Manager?
A manager is someone who coordinates and oversees the work of other people so
organizational goals can be accomplished. A manager’s job is not about personal
achievement—it’s about helping others do their work.
Note: Line managers differ from staff managers in such a way that line managers are
responsible for the manufacturing and marketing departments that make or sell the product
or service while staff managers are in charge of departments, such as finance and human
resources that support line departments.
C. Where do Managers work?
Simply speaking, management is what managers do. But that simple statement doesn’t tell
us much does it? Let’s look first at what management is before discussing more specifically
what managers do.
(1) Planning means identifying goals for future organizational performance and
deciding on the tasks and use of resources needed to attain them. In other words,
managerial planning defines where the organization wants to be in the future and
how to get there.
(2) Organizing involves assigning tasks, grouping tasks into departments, delegating
authority, and allocating resources across the organization. It typically follows
planning and reflects how the organization tries to accomplish the plan.
(4) Controlling is the fourth function in the management process. Controlling means
monitoring employees’ activities, determining whether the organization is moving
toward its goals, and making corrections as necessary.
What types of skills do managers need? Robert L. Katz proposed that managers need three
critical skills in managing: technical, human, and conceptual.
(1) Technical skills include mastery of the methods, techniques, and equipment involved
in specific functions such as engineering, manufacturing, or finance. Technical skills also
include specialized knowledge, analytical ability, and the competent use of tools and
techniques to solve problems in that specific discipline.
(2) Human skills involve the manager’s ability to work with and through other people and
to work effectively as a group member. Human skills are demonstrated in the way that a
manager relates to other people, including the ability to motivate, facilitate, coordinate,
lead, communicate, and resolve conflicts.
(3) Conceptual skills include the cognitive ability to see the organization as a whole
system and the relationships among its parts. Conceptual skills involve knowing where
one’s team fits into the total organization and how the organization fits into the industry,
the community, and the broader business and social environment.
Management has been practiced a long time. Organized endeavors directed by people
responsible for planning, organizing, leading, and controlling activities have existed for
thousands of years.
A. Classical Approach
Classical approach refers to the first studies of management, which emphasized rationality
and making organizations and workers as efficient as possible. Three major theories
comprise the classical approach: scientific management, bureaucratic organizations and
general administrative theory.
(1) Scientific Management
B. Humanistic Approach
(3) Behavioral Sciences Approach – draws from psychology, sociology, and other social
sciences to develop theories about human behavior and interaction in an organizational
setting.
Management science became popular based on its successful application in solving military
problems during World War II.
Management science, also called the quantitative perspective, uses mathematics, statistical
techniques, and computer technology to facilitate management decision making, particularly
for complex problems. The Walt Disney Company uses management science to solve the
problem of long lines for popular rides and attractions at its theme parks.
The systems approach says that an organization takes in inputs (resources) from the
environment and transforms or processes these resources into outputs that are distributed
into the environment. This approach provides a framework to help managers understand
how all the interdependent units work together to achieve the organization’s goals and that
decisions and actions taken in one organizational area will affect others. In this way,
managers can recognize that organizations are not self-contained, but instead rely on their
environment for essential inputs and as outlets to absorb their outputs.
The contingency approach says that organizations are different, face different situations, and
require different ways of managing. It helps us understand management because it stresses
there are no simplistic or universal rules for managers to follow. Instead, managers must
look at their situation and determine that ―if this is the way my situation is, then, this is the
best way for me to manage‖.
III. The Environment of the Organization
The external organizational environment includes all elements existing outside the boundary of
the organization that have the potential to affect the organization. The environment includes
competitors, resources, technology, and economic conditions that influence the organization. It
does not include those events so far removed from the organization that their impact is not
perceived.
The external environment
of an organization can be
conceptualized further as
having two components:
task and general
environments.
The task environment
is much closer to the
organization and includes
the sectors that conduct
day-to-day transactions
with the organization and
directly influence its basic
operations and performance. It is generally considered to include competitors, suppliers,
customers, and the labor market.
The general environment affects an organization indirectly. It includes socio-cultural,
economic, legal-political, natural, and technological factors that influence all organizations
about equally.
Reference: Daft, R. (2016). Management (12th ed.). Boston, MA: Cengage Learning.
Robbins, S. & Coulter, M. (2017). Management (13th ed.). Essex, England: Pearson Education Limited.