Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

MPOB

Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
Download as ppt, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 251

Management Nature, Purpose and Scope

Who Are Managers?


A Manager is the person responsible for planning and directing the work of a group of individuals, monitoring their work, and taking corrective action when necessary. Someone who coordinates and oversees the work of other people so that organizational goals can be accomplished. Examples: An Accounting Manager supervises the Accounting function. The Production Manager Developed a staffing plan for the factory.

Classifying Managers
First-line Managers
Individuals who manage the work of non-managerial employees.

Middle Managers
Individuals who manage the work of first-line managers.

Top Managers
Individuals who are responsible for making organization-wide decisions and establishing plans and goals that affect the entire organization.

Exhibit 12Managerial Levels

What Is Management?
Management involves coordinating and overseeing the work activities of others so that their activities are completed efficiently and effectively.

What Is Management?
Managerial Concerns
Efficiency
Doing things right Getting the most output for the least inputs

Effectiveness
Doing the right things Attaining organizational goals

Exhibit 13 Effectiveness and Efficiency in Management

What Managers Do?


Three Approaches to Defining What Managers Do.
Functions they perform Roles they play Skills they need

What Managers Do?


Functions Managers Perform
Planning
Defining goals, establishing strategies to achieve goals, developing plans to integrate and coordinate activities.

Organizing
Arranging and structuring work to accomplish organizational goals.

Leading
Working with and through people to accomplish goals.

Controlling
Monitoring, comparing, and correcting work.

Exhibit 14Management Functions

What Managers Do?


Roles Managers Play
Roles are specific actions or behaviors expected of a manager. Mintzberg identified 10 roles grouped around interpersonal relationships, the transfer of information, and decision making.

What Managers Do?


Management Roles (Mintzberg)
Interpersonal Roles
Figurehead, leader, liaison

Informational Roles
Monitor, disseminator, spokesperson

Decisional Roles
Entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator

Exhibit 1.5 Mintzbergs Managerial Roles


Interpersonal Roles
Figurehead Leader Liaison

Informational Roles
Monitor Disseminator Spokesperson

Decisional Roles
Entrepreneur Disturbance handler Resource allocator Negotiator

What Managers Do?


Skills Managers Need
Technical Skills
Knowledge and proficiency in a specific field

Human Skills
The ability to work well with other people

Conceptual Skills
The ability to think and conceptualize about abstract and complex situations concerning the organization

Exhibit 16 Skills Needed at Different Management Levels

What Is An Organization?
An Organization Defined
A deliberate arrangement of people to accomplish some specific purpose (that individuals independently could not accomplish alone).

Common Characteristics of Organizations


Have a distinct purpose (goal) Composed of people Have a deliberate structure

Exhibit 19 Characteristics of Organizations

Why Study Management?


The Value of Studying Management
The universality of management
Good management is needed in all organizations.

The reality of work


Employees either manage or are managed.

Rewards and challenges of being a manager


Management offers challenging, exciting and creative opportunities for meaningful and fulfilling work. Successful managers receive significant monetary rewards for their efforts.

Exhibit 110 Universal Need for Management

Exhibit 111 Rewards and Challenges of Being A Manager

SCHOOLS OF MANAGEMENT
Theoretical frameworks for the study of management.

Each of the schools of management thought are based on somewhat different assumptions about human beings and the organizations for

CLASSICAL SCHOOL NEO CLASSICAL SCHOOL MODERN SCHOOL

THE CLASSICAL SCHOOL


Its roots pre-date the twentieth century. Concerns ways to manage work and organizations more efficiently. Three areas of study :

1. scientific management, 2. administrative management, 3. bureaucratic management.

SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT.
Frederick Winslow Taylor (18561915) is the father of scientific management. Scientific management discovered how important scientific selection of workers was. Pioneers of scientific management tried to determine the best way to perform a job.

TAYLORS PRINCIPLES
A scientific way to perform each job. Workers should be scientifically selected and trained to do work. There should be good cooperation between management and workers. There should be division of labor between managers and workers.

ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGEMENT
Focuses on how a business should be organized and the practices an effective manager should follow. The main focus is on finding "the best way " to run organizations. Henry Fayol is the father of the administrative management theory. Other prominent exponenets include Chester I. Barnard, Colnel

FayolS five functions of managers


Plan Organize Command Coordinate Control. Fayol developed fourteen principles of management.

FAYOLS fourteen principles


Division of work: Authority and responsibility: Responsibility is closely related to authority and it arises wherever authority is implemented. Discipline: obedience to authority, adherence to the rules of service and norms of performance. Unity of command: Every

Unity of direction: complete congruency between departmental and organizational goals. Subordination of individual interest to general interest: The interests of an employee should not take precedence over the interests of the organization Remuneration: The remuneration paid to the employees of the firm should be fair.

Scalar chain: As per this principle, the orders or communications should pass through proper channels of authority. Order: 'right place for everything and for every man'. Equity: management should do equally just with everybody. Stability of tenure: security of job by the management.

Initiative: Managers should give their employees ample scope to take the initiative.
Esprit de Corps: This means team strength. According to Fayol the motto of divide and rule should be avoided and verbal communication should be used for removing misunderstandings.

BUREAUCRATIC MANAGEMENT.
'Bureau', is a French word meaning desk, or by extension, an office; thus, 'Bureaucracy' is rule through a desk or office, that is, a form of organization built on the preparation and dispatch of written documents.

Max Weber was the major

He proposed that a form of organization, called a bureaucracy, characterized by division of labor, hierarchy, formalized rules, and the selection of based on ability, would lead to more efficient management.
Bureaucracy is the most efficient form of organization. The organization has a well-defined line of authority. It has clear rules and

NEOCLASSICAL THEORIES

Human Relations theory

Behaviora l theory

HUMAN RELATIONS THEORY


Elton mayo is considered as the father of human relations movement. Organizations always involve interrelationship among members and managers should try to make these relations conflict free. Satisfaction of physiological needs should be the primary concern of

If best work environment can be determined , workers would be more efficient.


Existence of strong informal groups.

Employees behavior at work is affected by non-economic factors.

HAWTHORNE EXPERIMENTS
Relay Assembl y test room Experim ent

Illuminat ion Experim ent

Mass Intervie wing program me

Bank Wiring Observation Room experiment

CONTRIBUTION OF HAWTHORNE STUDY


People are social beings, their social characteristics determine the efficiency and output in the organization. Workers create groups which may be different from their official groups. Supervisory climate plays an

BEHAVIORAL APPROACH
This theory as stated by Robert Owens. Focused on trying to understand the factors that affect human behavior at work. Behavioral scientists consider organizations as groups of individuals with objectives. Different people react differently to the same situation or react the same way to different situations.

A better understanding of human behavior at work improved productivity. Douglas Mc Gregor recommended his very well known Theory X and Theory Y, illustrating the assessment of a manager on his employees. Abraham Maslow suggested five needs 1)Physiological 2) Safety 3) Belongingness or social 4) Esteem 5) Self-actualization

MODERN MANAGEMENT SCHOOL


Systems Approach,
Situational or Contingency theory

Quantitativ e theory

SYSTEMS APPROACH
A system is a set of inter-related parts, which work together to achieve certain goals. Ludwig von Bertalanffy is called the Father of the Systems Approach. A system has a boundary which classifies it into two parts: open system and closed system.

An open system is a system which continuously interacts with its environment. The open-system views an organization as an entity that takes inputs from the environment, transforms them, and releases them as outputs .
A closed systems refer to systems having relatively little interaction with the outside environment. The closedsystem conceives the organization as a system of management, technology, personnel,etc but exclude competitors,

CONTINGENCY THEORY
There is no one universally applicable set of management principles (rules) by which to manage organizations . The situational or contingency theory asserts that when managers make a decision, they must take into account all aspects of the current situation.

"The best way to organize depends on the nature of the environment to which the organization must relate. Effective organizations not only have a proper 'fit' with the environment but also between its subsystems.

QUANTITATIVE APPROACH
Emphasizes the use of mathematical and statistical techniques in management. Also referred as mathematical; approach, decision theory approach, operations research approach and management science approach. The theory came into focus during

This theory advocates the use of mathematical procedures to management problems.


Process of Management consists of a series of decision-making and the use of mathematical models enables a decision maker to better understand the problems.

What Is Planning?
Planning
A primary managerial activity that involves: Defining the organizations goals Establishing an overall strategy for achieving those goals Developing plans for organizational work activities Formal planning Specific goals covering a specific time period Written and shared with organizational members

Purposes of Planning

Why Do Managers Plan?

Provides Direction work unit, must contribute Reduces Uncertainty anticipate change and its impact Minimizes Waste inefficiencies, eliminate Sets the Standards for Controlling plan is carried out and goals met

Elements of Planning
Goals

How Do Managers Plan?

Desired outcomes for individuals, groups, or entire organizations


Provide direction and evaluation performance criteria Plans Documents that outline how goals are to be accomplished Describe how resources are to be allocated and establish activity schedules

Types of Goals
Financial Goals
Are related to the expected internal financial performance of the organization.

Strategic Goals
Are related to the performance of the firm relative to factors in its external environment (e.g., competitors).

Stated Goals versus Real Goals


Broadly-worded official statements of the organization (intended for public consumption) that may be irrelevant to its real goals (what actually goes on in the organization).

Exhibit 71Types of Plans

Types of Plans
Strategic Plans
Apply to the entire organization. Establish the organizations overall goals. Seek to position the organization in terms of its environment. Cover extended periods of time.

Operational Plans
Specify the details of how the overall goals are to be achieved. Cover a short time period.

Types of Plans
Long-Term Plans
Plans with time frames extending beyond three years

Short-Term Plans
Plans with time frames of one year or less

Specific Plans
Plans that are clearly defined and leave no room for interpretation

Directional Plans
Flexible plans that set out general guidelines and provide focus, yet allow discretion in implementation

Types of Plans
Single-Use Plan
A one-time plan specifically designed to meet the need of a unique situation.

Standing Plans
Ongoing plans that provide guidance for activities performed repeatedly.

Setting Goals and Developing Plans


Traditional Goal Setting
Broad goals are set at the top of the organization. Goals are then broken into sub-goals for each organizational level. Assumes that top management knows best because they can see the big picture. Goals are intended to direct, guide, and constrain. Goals lose clarity and focus as lower-level managers attempt to interpret and define the goals for their areas of responsibility.

Exhibit 72The Downside of Traditional Goal Setting

Setting Goals and Developing Plans


Maintaining the Hierarchy of Goals MeansEnds Chain
The integrated network of goals that results from establishing a clearly-defined hierarchy of organizational goals. Achievement of lower-level goals is the means by which to reach higher-level goals (ends).

Setting Goals and Developing Plans


Management By Objectives (MBO)
Specific performance goals are jointly determined by employees and managers. Progress toward accomplishing goals is periodically reviewed. Rewards are allocated on the basis of progress towards the goals. Key elements of MBO: Goal specificity, participative decision making, an explicit performance/evaluation period, feedback

Exhibit 7 Steps in a Typical MBO Program


1. The organizations overall objectives and strategies are formulated. 2. Major objectives are allocated among divisional and departmental units. 3. Unit managers collaboratively set specific objectives for their units with their managers. 4. Specific objectives are collaboratively set with all department members. 5. Action plans, defining how objectives are to be achieved, are specified and agreed upon by managers and employees.

6. The action plans are implemented.


7. Progress toward objectives is periodically reviewed, and feedback is provided. 8. Successful achievement of objectives is reinforced by performance-based rewards.

Reason for MBO Success

Does MBO Work?

Top management commitment and involvement

Potential Problems with MBO Programs (Not success)


Not as effective in dynamic environments that require constant resetting of goals. Overemphasis on individual accomplishment may create problems with teamwork. Allowing the MBO program to become an annual paperwork shuffle.

Exhibit 74 Well-Written Goals Written in terms of outcomes, not actions


Focuses on the ends, not the means.

Challenging yet attainable


Low goals do not motivate. High goals motivate if they can be achieved.

Measurable and quantifiable


Specifically defines how the outcome is to be measured and how much is expected.

Written down
Focuses, defines, and makes goals visible.

Clear as to time frame


How long before measuring accomplishment.

Communicated to all necessary organizational members


Puts everybody on the same page.

Steps in Goal Setting


1. Review the organizations mission statement.
Do goals reflect the mission?

2. Evaluate available resources.


Are resources sufficient to accomplish the mission?

3. Determine goals individually or with others.


Are goals specific, measurable, and timely?

4. Write down the goals and communicate them.


Is everybody on the same page?

5. Review results and whether goals are being met.


What changes are needed in mission, resources, or goals?

Three Contingency Factors in a Managers Planning


Managers level in the organization
Strategic plans at higher levels Operational plans at lower levels

Developing Plans

Degree of environmental uncertainty


Stable environment: specific plans Dynamic environment: flexible plans

Length of future commitments


Commitment Concept: current plans affecting future commitments must be sufficiently long-term to meet those commitments.

Exhibit 75 Planning in the Hierarchy of Organizations

MeansEnds Chain

Approaches to Planning
Establishing a formal planning department
A group of planning specialists who help managers write organizational plans.
Planning is a function of management; it should never become the sole responsibility of planners.

Involving organizational members in the process


Plans are developed by members of organizational units at various levels and then coordinated with other units across the organization.

1. Being aware of opportunities 2. Establishing objectives 3. Developing premises (premises is assumptions about the
environment in which the plan is to be carried out)

Steps in Planning

4. 5. 6. 7.

Determining alternative courses Evaluating alternative courses Selecting a course Formulating derivative plans (derivate plan is supportive
plan)

8. Quantifying plans by budgeting

Contemporary Issues in Planning


Criticisms of Planning
Planning may create rigidity. Plans cannot be developed for dynamic environments. Formal plans cannot replace intuition and creativity. Planning focuses managers attention on todays competition not tomorrows survival. Formal planning reinforces todays success, which may lead to tomorrows failure. Just planning isnt enough.

Contemporary Issues in Planning (contd)


Effective Planning in Dynamic Environments
Develop plans that are specific but flexible.
Understand that planning is an ongoing process. Change plans when conditions demand. Persistence in planning eventually pay off. (because it is reward and performance based). Flatten the organizational hierarchy to foster the development of planning skills at all organizational levels.

Strategic Management
What managers do to develop an organizations strategies

Strategies
The decisions and actions that determine the long-run performance of an organization.

Business Model
Is a strategic design for how a company intends to profit from its strategies, work processes, and work activities. Focuses on two things:
Whether customers will value what the company is providing. Whether the company can make any money doing that.

Why Is Strategic Management Important?


1. It results in higher organizational performance.

2. It requires that managers examine and adapt to business environment changes.


3. It coordinates diverse organizational units, helping them focus on organizational goals.

Exhibit 81The Strategic Management Process

6 Steps in Strategic Management Process

1. INFOSYS Mission To achieve our objective in an environment of fairness, honesty, and courtesy towards our clients, employees, vendors and society at large. 2. Traditional Colleges and Universities are doomed. 3. Resources and Capabilities. 4. External and Internal Environment 5. Effectively and Efficiently 6. Strategic Adjustment

Exhibit 82Components of a Mission Statement

Strategic Management Process


Step 1: Identifying the organizations current mission, goals, and strategies
Mission: a statement of the purpose of an organization
The scope of its products and services

Goals: the foundation for further planning


Measurable performance targets

Step 2: Doing an external analysis


The environmental scanning of specific and general environments
Focuses on identifying opportunities and threats

Strategic Management Process


Step 3: Doing an internal analysis
Assessing organizational resources, capabilities, and activities:
Strengths create value for the customer and strengthen the competitive position of the firm. Weaknesses can place the firm at a competitive disadvantage.

Analyzing financial and physical assets is fairly easy, but assessing intangible assets (employees skills, culture, corporate reputation, and so forth) isnt as easy.
Steps 2 and 3 combined are called a SWOT analysis. (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats)

Strategic Management Process


Step 4: Formulating strategies
Develop and evaluate strategic alternatives
Select appropriate strategies for all levels in the organization that provide relative advantage over competitors Match organizational strengths to environmental opportunities

Correct weaknesses and guard against threats

Strategic Management Process


Step 5: Implementing strategies
Implementation: effectively fitting organizational structure and activities to the environment. The environment dictates the chosen strategy; effective strategy implementation requires an organizational structure matched to its requirements.

Step 6: Evaluating results


How effective have strategies been?
What adjustments, if any, are necessary?

Exhibit 83 Types of Organizational Strategies

Types of Organizational Strategies


Corporate Strategies
Top managements overall plan for the entire organization and its strategic business units

Types of Corporate Strategies


Growth: expansion into new products and markets Wal-Mart to grow internationally Stability: maintenance of the status quo Cadbury Renewal: examination of organizational weaknesses that are leading to performance declines Retrenchment and Turnaround strategy (cost cutting)

Corporate Strategies
Growth Strategy
Seeking to increase the organizations business by expansion into new products and markets.

Types of Growth Strategies


Concentration - Focuses on its primary line business Vertical integration - Org. becomes its own supplier Horizontal integration - Combining with competitors Diversification - Variety of business

Corporate Strategies
Concentration
Focusing on a primary line of business and increasing the number of products offered or markets served.

Vertical Integration
Backward vertical integration: attempting to gain control of inputs (become a self-supplier).
Forward vertical integration: attempting to gain control of output through control of the distribution channel or provide customer service activities (eliminating intermediaries).

Corporate Strategies
Horizontal Integration
Combining operations with another competitor in the same industry to increase competitive strengths and lower competition among industry rivals.

Related Diversification
Expanding by combining with firms in different, but related industries that are strategic fits.

Unrelated Diversification
Growing by combining with firms in unrelated industries where higher financial returns are possible.

Corporate Strategies
Stability Strategy
A strategy that seeks to maintain the status quo to deal with the uncertainty of a dynamic environment, when the industry is experiencing slow- or no-growth conditions, or if the owners of the firm elect not to grow for personal reasons.

Corporate Strategies
Renewal Strategies
Developing strategies to counter organization weaknesses that are leading to performance declines.
Retrenchment: focusing of eliminating non-critical weaknesses and restoring strengths to overcome current performance problems. Turnaround: addressing critical long-term performance problems through the use of strong cost elimination measures and large-scale organizational restructuring solutions.

How are Corporate Strategy Managed (Corporate Portfolio Analysis)


Managers manage portfolio (or collection) of businesses using a corporate portfolio matrix such as the BCG Matrix. BCG Matrix
Developed by the Boston Consulting Group Considers market share and industry growth rate Classifies firms as:
Cash cows: low growth rate, high market share new investment Stars: high growth rate, high market share cash generated to invest

Question marks: high growth rate, low market share mature market
Dogs: low growth rate, low market share sold off

Exhibit 84The BCG Matrix

Competitive Strategies
Competitive Strategy
A strategy focused on how an organization will compete in each of its SBUs (Strategic Business Units). Strategic Business Units - When an org, is in several different business those single business that are independent and formulate their own competitive strategies are often called SBU.

The Role of Competitive Advantage


What organization does that other can not do Quality as a Competitive Advantage Sustainability as a Competitive Advantage

Five Forces Model

The Role of Competitive Advantage


Quality as a Competitive Advantage
Represents the companys focus on quality management to achieve continuous improvement and meet customers demand for quality.

Sustainability as a Competitive Advantage


Continuing over time to effectively use resources and develop core competencies that enable an organization to keep its edge over its industry competitors.

Exhibit 85Five Forces Model Rules of Competition

Source: Based on M.E. Porter, Competitive Strategy: Techniques for Analyzing Industries and Competitors (New York: The Free Press, 198).

Five Competitive Forces


Threat of New Entrants
The ease or difficulty with which new competitors can enter an industry.

Threat of Substitutes
The extent to which switching costs and brand loyalty affect the likelihood of customers adopting substitutes products and services.

Bargaining Power of Buyers


The degree to which buyers have the market strength to hold sway over and influence competitors in an industry.

Five Competitive Forces


Bargaining Power of Suppliers
The relative number of buyers to suppliers and threats from substitutes and new entrants affect the buyer-supplier relationship.

Current Rivalry or Competition


Intensity among rivals increases when industry growth rates slow, demand falls, and product prices go down.

Types of Competitive Strategies


Cost Leadership Strategy
Seeking to attain the lowest total overall costs relative to other industry competitors.

Differentiation Strategy
Attempting to create a unique and distinctive product or service for which customers will pay a premium.

Focus Strategy
Using a cost or differentiation advantage to exploit a particular market segment rather a larger market.

Strategic Management Today


Strategic Flexibility New Directions in Organizational Strategies
e-business Customer service Innovation

Exhibit 86Creating Strategic Flexibility Know whats happening with strategies currently being used by monitoring and measuring results.

Encourage employees to be open about disclosing and sharing negative information.


Get new ideas and perspectives from outside the organization. Have multiple alternatives when making strategic decisions. Learn from mistakes.

Cost Leadership Differentiation

Strategies for Applying e-Business Techniques

On-line activities: bidding, order processing, inventory control, recruitment and hiring Internet-based knowledge systems, online ordering and customer support

Focus
Chat rooms and discussion boards, targeted Web sites

Customer Service Strategies


Giving the customers what they want. Communicating effectively with them. Providing employees with customer service training.

Innovation Strategies
Possible Events
Radical breakthroughs in products. Application of existing technology to new uses.

Strategic Decisions about Innovation


Basic research Product development Process innovation

First Mover
An organization that brings a product innovation to market or use a new process innovations

Exhibit 87First-Mover AdvantagesDisadvantages


Advantages
Reputation for being innovative and industry leader Cost and learning benefits Control over scarce resources and keeping competitors from having access to them Opportunity to begin building customer relationships and customer loyalty

Disadvantages
Uncertainty over exact direction technology and market will go Risk of competitors imitating innovations Financial and strategic risks High development costs

Decision Making
Decision
Making a choice from two or more alternatives.

Exhibit 61 The Decision-Making Process

Exhibit 63 Assessed Values of Laptop Computers Using Decision Criteria

Exhibit 64

Evaluation of Laptop Alternatives Against Weighted Criteria

Exhibit 65 Decisions in the Management Functions

Making Decisions
Rational Decision Making
Making decisions on the basis of reliability, valueminimization and maximizing, comparative analysis.

Intuitive Decision Making


Making decisions on the basis of experience, feelings, and accumulated judgment.

Exhibit 66 Decision Making Based on Intuition

Source: Based on L. A. Burke and M. K. Miller, Taking the Mystery Out of Intuitive Decision Making, Academy of Management Executive, October 1999, pp. 9199.

Structured Problems

Types of Problems and Decisions

Information about problem is available and complete. Most probably it is old

Programmed Decision
A repetitive decision

Unstructured Problems
Information about problem is ambiguous or incomplete. Most probably it is new.

Nonprogrammed Decision
Unique and nonrecurring decisions

Exhibit 67 Programmed Versus Nonprogrammed Decisions

Decision-Making Conditions

Certainty
A situation in which a manager can make an accurate decision because the outcome of every alternative choice is known.

Risk
A situation in which the manager is able to estimate the probability of outcomes that result from the choice of particular alternatives.

Uncertainty
A situation in which the manager is able to estimate of outcome probabilities for alternatives associated with the problem and may force managers to rely on intuition, guess.

Decision-Making Styles
Linear thinking style
A persons preference for using external data and facts and processing this information through rational, logical thinking

Nonlinear thinking style


A persons preference for internal sources of information and processing this information with internal insights, feelings, and hunches

Exhibit 611 Common Decision-Making Errors and Biases

Decision-Making Biases and Errors


Heuristics
Using rules of thumb to simplify decision making.

Overconfidence Bias
Holding unrealistically positive views of oneself and ones performance.

Immediate Gratification Bias


Choosing alternatives that offer immediate rewards and that to avoid immediate costs.

Decision-Making Biases and Errors


Anchoring Effect
Fixating on initial information and ignoring subsequent information.

Selective Perception Bias


Selecting organizing and interpreting events based on the decision makers biased perceptions.

Confirmation Bias
Seeking out information that reaffirms past choices and discounting contradictory information.

Decision-Making Biases and Errors (contd)


Framing Bias
Selecting and highlighting certain aspects of a situation while ignoring other aspects.

Availability Bias
Losing decision making objectivity by focusing on the most recent events.

Representation Bias
Drawing analogies and seeing identical situations when none exist.

Randomness Bias
Creating unfounded meaning out of random events.

Decision-Making Biases and Errors


Sunk Costs Errors
Forgetting that current actions cannot influence past events and relate only to future consequences.

Self-Serving Bias
Taking quick credit for successes and blaming outside factors for failures.

Hindsight Bias
Mistakenly believing that an event could have been predicted once the actual outcome is known (afterthe-fact).

Exhibit 612 Overview of Managerial Decision Making

Decision Making for Todays World


Guidelines for making effective decisions:
Understand cultural differences. Know when its time to call it quits. Use an effective decision making process.

Habits of highly reliable organizations (HROs)


Are not tricked by their success. Defer to the experts on the front line. Let unexpected circumstances provide the solution. Embrace complexity. Anticipate, but also anticipate their limits.

Characteristics of an Effective Decision-Making Process


It focuses on what is important.

It is logical and consistent.


It acknowledges both subjective and objective thinking and blends analytical with intuitive thinking.

It requires only as much information and analysis as is necessary to resolve a particular dilemma.
It encourages and guides the gathering of relevant information and informed opinion. It is straightforward, reliable, easy to use, and flexible.

Organizational Structure and Designing

Organizing
Arranging and structuring work to accomplish an organizations goals.

Purposes of Organizing Divides work to be done Assigns tasks and responsibilities Coordination Clusters jobs into units Establishes relationships among individuals, groups, and departments Establishes formal lines of authority Allocates and deploys organizational resources

Organizational Structure and Designing


Organizational Structure

The formal arrangement of jobs within an organization.


Designing Organizational Structure

A process involving decisions about six key elements:


1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Work specialization Departmentalization Chain of command Span of control Centralization and Decentralization Formalization

Designing Organizational Structure


Work Specialization
The degree to which tasks in the organization are divided into separate jobs with each step completed by a different person. Example Surgeon, Accountant etc. McDonalds uses high work specialization to get its products made and delivered to customers efficiently.

Departmentalization
The Five Common Forms of Departmentalization
Functional
Grouping jobs by functions performed

Product
Grouping jobs by product line

Geographical
Grouping jobs on the basis of territory or geography

Process
Grouping jobs on the basis of product or customer flow

Customer
Grouping jobs by type of customer and needs

Functional Departmentalization

Geographical Departmentalization

Product Departmentalization

Process Departmentalization

+ More efficient flow of work activities Can only be used with certain types of products

Customer Departmentalization

+ Customers needs and problems can be met by specialists


- Duplication of functions - Limited view of organizational goals

Organizational Structure (contd)


Chain of Command
The continuous line of authority that extends from upper levels of an organization to the lowest levels of the organization and clarifies who reports to whom.

Authority
To tell people what to do and to expect them to do it.

Responsibility
The expectation to perform.

Unity of Command
The concept that a person should have one boss and should report only to that person.

Organizational Structure (contd)


Span of Control
The number of employees who can be effectively and efficiently supervised by a manager. Width of span is affected by:
Skills and abilities of the manager Employee characteristics Characteristics of the work being done Similarity of tasks Complexity of tasks Physical proximity of subordinates Standardization of tasks Sophistication of the organizations information system Strength of the organizations culture Preferred style of the manager

Organizational Structure (contd)


Centralization
The degree to which decision making is concentrated at upper levels in the organization.
Organizations in which top managers make all the decisions and lower-level employees simply carry out those orders.

Decentralization
Organizations in which decision making is pushed down to the managers who are closest to the action.

Formalization
The degree to which jobs within the organization are standardized and the extent to which employee behavior is guided by rules and procedures.

Exhibit 94

Factors that Influence the Amount of Centralization and Decentralization

More Centralization
Environment is stable. Lower-level managers are not as capable or experienced at making decisions as upper-level managers. Lower-level managers do not want to have a say in decisions. Decisions are relatively minor. Organization is facing a crisis or the risk of company failure. Company is large. Effective implementation of company strategies depends on managers retaining say over what happens.

Exhibit 94 (contd) Factors that Influence the Amount of Centralization and Decentralization

More Decentralization
Environment is complex, uncertain.
Lower-level managers are capable and experienced at making decisions. Lower-level managers want a voice in decisions. Decisions are significant. Corporate culture is open to allowing managers to have a say in what happens. Company is geographically dispersed. Effective implementation of company strategies depends on managers having involvement and flexibility to make decisions.

Models of organizational Design - Mechanistic Versus Organic Organization

High specialization Rigid departmentalization Clear chain of command Narrow spans of control Centralization High formalization

Cross-functional teams Cross-hierarchical teams Free flow of information Wide spans of control Decentralization Low formalization

Formal and Informal Organizations


The formal organization is the system consciously created during the organizing activity. Represents the people-to-people and people-to-work systems that are constructed in order to accomplish organizational goals It forms through job descriptions, rules, policies, operating procedures The informal organization exists when two or more people interact for a purpose or in a manner beyond that specified by managers and the formal organization. Informal organizations emerge and evolve in a natural and unplanned manner. It forms through needs, norms, values, and standards of members

Organizational Coordination and Integration


Shared beliefs and values brings coordination and integration organizational behavior. For example rules, policies, are created to guide and govern organizational activities Mutual adjustment between two or more organizational members Communication and human interaction Two types of Coordination can be Vertical and Horizontal Vertical Coordination links with organizational units separated by hierarchical level Horizontal Coordination occurs within a single hierarchical level

Organizational Differentiation
Organizational differentiation (differences) focuses on the differences that exist among individuals, groups, departments, and divisions. Differences are created as a result of time orientation, goal orientation, work performance The greater the organizational differentiation, the more complex and difficult the management process. The greater the organizational differentiation, the greater the need for integration (finding ways to coordinate the work of the different individuals or work units).

Common Organizational Designs


Traditional Designs
Simple structure
Low departmentalization, wide spans of control, centralized authority, little formalization

Functional structure
Departmentalization by function
Operations, finance, marketing, human resources, and product research and development

Divisional structure
Composed of separate business units or divisions with limited autonomy under the coordination and control the parent corporation.

Organizational Designs (contd)


Contemporary Organizational Designs
Team structures
The entire organization is made up of work groups or self-managed teams of empowered employees.

Matrix and Project structures


Specialists from different functional departments are assigned to work on projects led by project managers.
Matrix and project participants have two managers.

In project structures, employees work continuously on projects; moving on to another project as each project is completed.

Organizational Designs (contd)


Contemporary Organizational Designs (contd)
Boundary less Organization
An flexible and unstructured organizational design that is intended to break down external barriers between the organization and its customers and suppliers. Removes internal (horizontal) boundaries:
Eliminates the chain of command Has limitless spans of control Uses empowered teams rather than departments

Eliminates external boundaries:


Uses virtual, network, and modular organizational structures to get closer to stakeholders.

Organizational Designs (contd)


The Learning Organization
An organization that has developed the capacity to continuously learn, adapt, and change through the practice of knowledge management by employees. Characteristics of a learning organization:
An open team-based organization design that empowers employees Extensive and open information sharing Leadership that provides a shared vision of the organizations future. A strong culture of shared values, trust, openness, and a sense of community.

Removing External Boundaries


Virtual Organization
An organization that consists of a small core of full-time employees and that temporarily hires specialists to work on opportunities that arise.

Network Organization
A small core organization that outsources its major business functions (e.g., manufacturing) in order to concentrate on what it does best.

Modular Organization
A manufacturing organization that uses outside suppliers to provide product components for its final assembly operations.

Exhibit 98 Contemporary Organizational Designs


Team Structure What it is: Advantages: Disadvantages: A structure in which the entire organization is made up of work groups or teams. Employees are more involved and empowered. Reduced barriers among functional areas. No clear chain of command. Pressure on teams to perform.

Matrix-Project Structure

What it is:

A structure that assigns specialists from different functional areas to work on projects but who return to their areas when the project is completed. Project is a structure in which employees continuously work on projects. As one project is completed, employees move on to the next project.
Fluid and flexible design that can respond to environmental changes. Faster decision making. Complexity of assigning people to projects. Task and personality conflicts.

Advantages: Disadvantages:

Exhibit 98 (contd

) Contemporary Organizational Designs

Boundaryless Structure
What it is: A structure that is not defined by or limited to artificial horizontal, vertical, or external boundaries; includes virtual and network types of organizations.

Advantages:
Disadvantages:

Highly flexible and responsive. Draws on talent wherever its found.


Lack of control. Communication difficulties.

Todays Organizational Design Challenges


Keeping Employees Connected
Widely dispersed and mobile employees

Building a Learning Organization Managing Global Structural Issues


Cultural implications of design elements

HRM Staffing or Recruitment Selection

HRM is a management function to recruit, select, train and develop members for an organization HRM is planning, organizing, directing and controlling of procurement, development, compensation, integration, maintenance and separation human resources to end that individual, organizational and social objectives are accomplished

Human Resource Management

The Importance of Human Resource Management (HRM)


As a significant source of competitive advantage
People-oriented HR creates superior shareholder value

As an important strategic tool


Achieve competitive success through people by treating employees as partners

To improve organizational performance


High performance work practices lead to both high individual and high organizational performance.

Functions of the HRM Process

Ensuring that competent employees are identified and selected. Providing employees with up-to-date knowledge and skills to do their jobs. Ensuring that the organization retains competent and high-performing employees.

Exhibit 102Human Resource Management Process

Recruitment and Decruitment


Recruitment The process of locating, identifying, and attracting capable applicants to an organization Decruitment The process of reducing a surplus of employees in the workforce of an organization

Purpose and Importance


1. Determine the present and future requirements of the organization 2. Increase the pool of the at minimum cost 3. Meet the organizations legal and social obligations 4. Identifying the appropriate candidates 5. Increase organizational and individuals efficiency in the short term and long term 6. Evaluate the effectiveness of various recruiting techniques and sources for all types of job applicants

Sources of Recruitment
External source

Placement services Advertisements Employment Exchange Campus Recruitment Walk-ins Consultants Contractors Displaced Persons Radio and television Acquisition and Mergers Competitors E-recruitment

INTERNAL SOURCES

Recruitment

Present Employees Employee Referrals Former Employees Previous Applicants

Factors affecting
EXTERNAL FORCES
Supply and demand Unemployment rate Labor market Political-social Image

RECRUITMENT

Internal Forces Recruitment policy HRP Size of the firm Cost Growth and expansion

Recruitment Process
Recruiting Required Personnel Search for Perspective Employees

External Sources
Internal Sources Evaluating effectiveness of process

Selection
Selection is the process of picking individuals (out of the pool of job applicants) with necessary qualifications and capability to fill jobs in the organization.

Recruitment and selection are the two crucial steps in the HR process. Recruitment refers to the process of identifying and encouraging prospective employees to apply for jobs. Selection is concerned with picking the right candidates from a pool of applicants.

Recruitment is said to be positive in its approach as it seeks to attract as many candidates as possible. Selection is negative in its application inasmuch as it seeks to eliminate as many unqualified applicants as possible in order to identify the right candidates.

Selection Procedure
Preliminary Interview Application blank Selection Test Employment Interview Reference Check and Background Analysis Medical Examination Final Approval Evaluation

Test and Interview


Psychological tests -: Aptitude test Informal Interview Formal Interview Depth Interview Stress Interview

Exhibit 107 Selection Tools

Application Forms Written Tests Performance Simulations Tests Interviews Background Investigations Physical Examinations

Application Forms
Strengths and weaknesses:
Almost universally used Relevant biographical data and facts that can be verified Can predict job performance Weighted-item applications are difficult and expensive to create and maintain

Written Tests
Types of Tests Intelligence: how smart are you? Aptitude: can you learn to do it? Attitude: how do you feel about it? Ability: can you do it now? Interest: do you want to do it?

Performance Simulation Tests


Testing an applicants ability to perform actual job behaviors, use required skills, and demonstrate specific knowledge of the job.
Work sampling Requiring applicants to actually perform a task or set of tasks that are central to successful job performance. Assessment centers Dedicated facilities in which job candidates undergo a series of performance simulation tests to evaluate their managerial potential.

Other Selection Approaches


Interviews
Although used almost universally, managers need to approach interviews carefully.

Background Investigations
Verification of application data Reference checks:
Lack validity because self-selection of references ensures only positive outcomes.

Physical Examinations
Useful for physical requirements and for insurance purposes related to pre-existing conditions.

Controlling
Concept and Importance Planning- Control Relationship Process and Types of Control Control Tools/Techniques

Controlling

What Is Control?

The process of monitoring activities to ensure that they are being accomplished as planned and of correcting any significant deviations.

Why Is Control Important?


Planning Controls let managers know whether their goals and plans are on target and what future actions to take. Empowering employees Control systems provide managers with information and feedback on employee performance. Protecting the workplace Controls enhance physical security and help minimize workplace disruptions.

Exhibit 171

The PlanningControlling Link

The Process of Control


1. Measuring actual performance. 2. Comparing actual performance against a standard.

The Control Process

3. Taking action to correct deviations or inadequate standards.

Exhibit 172 The Control Process

Measuring:
How we Measure and What we Measure Sources of Information Control Criteria (What) (How)
Personal observation Statistical reports Employees
Turnover Absenteeism Satisfaction

Oral reports
Written reports

Budgets
Costs Output Sales

Exhibit 173 Common Sources of Information for Measuring Performance

Comparing
Determining the degree of variation between actual performance and the standard.
Significance of variation is determined by: The acceptable range of variation from the standard (forecast or budget). The size (large or small) and direction (over or under) of the variation from the standard (forecast or budget).

Exhibit 174

Defining the Acceptable Range of Variation

Exhibit 175

Example of Determining Significant Variation

Taking Managerial Action


Doing nothing -If deviation is judged to be insignificant.

Correcting actual performance - Immediate and basic corrective action


- Change strategy, structure, compensation scheme, or training programs; redesign jobs; or fire employees Revising the standard - Examining the standard Standard is realistic, fair, and achievable.

Exhibit 176 Summary of Managerial Decisions in the Control Process

Controlling for Organizational Performance


What Is Performance? The end result of an activity What Is Organizational Performance? The accumulated end results of an organizations work activities

How to measure Organizational Performance


Organizational Productivity Organizational Effectiveness Industry and Company Rankings

Organizational Performance Measures Organizational Productivity


The overall output of goods and/or services divided by the inputs needed to generate that output. Output: sales revenues Inputs: costs of resources (materials, labor expense, and facilities)

Organizational Effectiveness
Measuring how appropriate organizational goals are and how well the organization is achieving its goals.

Industry and Company Rankings


Industry rankings on:
Profits
Return on revenue Return on shareholders equity

Corporate Culture Audits

Compensation and benefits surveys


Customer satisfaction surveys

Growth in profits
Revenues per employee Revenues per dollar of assets

Revenues per dollar of equity

Types of Control
Feed forward Control - A control that prevents anticipated problems before actual occurrences of the problem. Example McDonald Moscow Potatoes Breads Concurrent Control - A control that takes place while the monitored activity is in progress. Direct supervision: management by walking around. Google online advisement Feedback Control - A control that takes place after an activity is done. Corrective action is after-thefact, when the problem has already occurred.

Exhibit 178 Types of Control

Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance 1. 2. 3. 4. Financial Controls Balanced Scorecard Approach Information Controls Benchmarking of Best Practices

Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance - Financial Controls


Traditional Controls
Ratio analysis Liquidity, Leverage, Activity, Profitability
Budget Analysis - Quantitative standards, Deviations

Managing Earnings - Timing income and expenses to enhance current financial results, which gives an unrealistic picture of the organizations financial performance. New laws and regulations require companies to clarify their financial information.

Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance - Balanced Scorecard


Is a measurement tool that uses goals set by managers in four areas to measure a companys performance: Financial Customer Internal processes People/innovation/growth assets Is intended to emphasize that all of these areas are important to an organizations success and that there should be a balance among them.

Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance - Information Controls


Managers need the right information at the right time and in the right amount. Management Information Systems (MIS) used to provide management - Data: an unorganized collection of raw, unanalyzed facts. Information: data that has been analyzed and organized such that it has value and relevance to managers. Managers must have comprehensive and secure controls in place to protect the organizations important information

Tools for Measuring Org. Performance Benchmarking of Best Practices


Benchmark
The standard of excellence against which to measure and compare.

Benchmarking
Is the search for the best practices among competitors or non competitors that lead to their superior performance.

Is a control tool for identifying and measuring specific performance gaps and areas for improvement.

Contemporary Issues in Control


Cross-Cultural Issues Workplace Concerns Customer Interactions Corporate Governance

Contemporary Issues in Control


Cross-Cultural Issues
The use of technology to increase direct corporate control of local operations
Legal constraints on corrective actions in foreign countries Difficulty with the comparability of data collected from operations in different countries

Contemporary Issues in Control


Workplace Concerns
Workplace privacy versus workplace monitoring:
E-mail, telephone, computer, and Internet usage Productivity, harassment, security, confidentiality, intellectual property protection

Employee theft
The unauthorized taking of company property by employees for their personal use.

Workplace violence
Anger, rage, and violence in the workplace is affecting employee productivity.

Contemporary Issues in Control


Customer Interactions
Service profit chain
Is the service sequence from employees to customers to profit.

Service capability affects service value which impacts on customer satisfaction that, in turn, leads to customer loyalty in the form of repeat business (profit).

Contemporary Issues in Control


Corporate Governance
The system used to govern a corporation so that the interests of the corporate owners are protected.
Changes in the role of boards of directors
Increased scrutiny of financial reporting (SarbanesOxley Act of 2002)
More disclosure and transparency of corporate financial information Certification of financial results by senior management

Roles and Functions of Managers

Manager - What Managers Do


Individuals who achieve goals through other people.
Make Decisions
Allocate Resources Direct and control activities of others To attain or achieve organizational goals

Where Managers Work - Organization


Organization
A purposely coordinated social unit, composed of two or more people, that functions on a relatively continuous basis to achieve a common goal or set of goals.

Management Functions - POLC


Planning Organizing

Management Functions

Controlling

Leading

Management Functions - Planning

A process that includes defining goals, establishing strategy, and developing plans to coordinate activities.

Management Functions- Organizing

Determining what tasks are to be done, who is to do them, how the tasks are to be grouped, who reports to whom, and where decisions are to be made.

Management Functions - Leading

A function that includes motivating employees, directing others, selecting the most effective communication channels, and resolving conflicts.

Management Functions - Controlling

Monitoring activities to ensure they are being accomplished as planned and correcting any significant deviations.

Roles of Managers - Mintzbergs 1. Interpersonal 2. Informational 3. Decisional

Mintzbergs Managerial Roles

Mintzbergs Mintzbergs Managerial Managerial Roles Roles (contd)

Mintzbergs Managerial Roles Mintzbergs Managerial Roles (contd)

Management Skills Robert Katz


Technical skills The ability to apply specialized knowledge or expertise. Human skills The ability to work with, understand, and motivate other people, both individually and in groups.

Conceptual Skills The mental ability to analyze and diagnose complex situations.

There Are Few Absolutes in OB


Contingency variables
Situational factors: variables that moderate the relationship between two or more other variables and improve the correlation.

Contingency Variables

Controlling

What Is Control?

The process of monitoring activities to ensure that they are being accomplished as planned and of correcting any significant deviations.

Why Is Control Important?


Planning Controls let managers know whether their goals and plans are on target and what future actions to take. Empowering employees Control systems provide managers with information and feedback on employee performance. Protecting the workplace Controls enhance physical security and help minimize workplace disruptions.

Exhibit 171

The PlanningControlling Link

The Process of Control


1. Measuring actual performance. 2. Comparing actual performance against a standard.

The Control Process

3. Taking action to correct deviations or inadequate standards.

Exhibit 172 The Control Process

Measuring:
How we Measure and What we Measure Sources of Information Control Criteria (What) (How)
Personal observation Statistical reports Employees
Turnover Absenteeism Satisfaction

Oral reports
Written reports

Budgets
Costs Output Sales

Exhibit 173 Common Sources of Information for Measuring Performance

Comparing
Determining the degree of variation between actual performance and the standard.
Significance of variation is determined by: The acceptable range of variation from the standard (forecast or budget). The size (large or small) and direction (over or under) of the variation from the standard (forecast or budget).

Exhibit 174

Defining the Acceptable Range of Variation

Exhibit 175

Example of Determining Significant Variation

Taking Managerial Action


Doing nothing -If deviation is judged to be insignificant.

Correcting actual performance - Immediate and basic corrective action


- Change strategy, structure, compensation scheme, or training programs; redesign jobs; or fire employees Revising the standard - Examining the standard Standard is realistic, fair, and achievable.

Exhibit 176 Summary of Managerial Decisions in the Control Process

Controlling for Organizational Performance


What Is Performance? The end result of an activity What Is Organizational Performance? The accumulated end results of an organizations work activities

How to measure Organizational Performance


Organizational Productivity Organizational Effectiveness Industry and Company Rankings

Organizational Performance Measures Organizational Productivity


The overall output of goods and/or services divided by the inputs needed to generate that output. Output: sales revenues Inputs: costs of resources (materials, labor expense, and facilities)

Organizational Effectiveness
Measuring how appropriate organizational goals are and how well the organization is achieving its goals.

Industry and Company Rankings


Industry rankings on:
Profits
Return on revenue Return on shareholders equity

Corporate Culture Audits

Compensation and benefits surveys


Customer satisfaction surveys

Growth in profits
Revenues per employee Revenues per dollar of assets

Revenues per dollar of equity

Types of Control
Feed forward Control - A control that prevents anticipated problems before actual occurrences of the problem. Example McDonald Moscow Potatoes Breads Concurrent Control - A control that takes place while the monitored activity is in progress. Direct supervision: management by walking around. Google online advisement Feedback Control - A control that takes place after an activity is done. Corrective action is after-thefact, when the problem has already occurred.

Exhibit 178 Types of Control

Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance 1. 2. 3. 4. Financial Controls Balanced Scorecard Approach Information Controls Benchmarking of Best Practices

Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance - Financial Controls


Traditional Controls
Ratio analysis Liquidity, Leverage, Activity, Profitability
Budget Analysis - Quantitative standards, Deviations

Managing Earnings - Timing income and expenses to enhance current financial results, which gives an unrealistic picture of the organizations financial performance. New laws and regulations require companies to clarify their financial information.

Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance - Balanced Scorecard


Is a measurement tool that uses goals set by managers in four areas to measure a companys performance: Financial Customer Internal processes People/innovation/growth assets Is intended to emphasize that all of these areas are important to an organizations success and that there should be a balance among them.

Tools for Measuring Organizational Performance - Information Controls


Managers need the right information at the right time and in the right amount. Management Information Systems (MIS) used to provide management - Data: an unorganized collection of raw, unanalyzed facts. Information: data that has been analyzed and organized such that it has value and relevance to managers. Managers must have comprehensive and secure controls in place to protect the organizations important information

Tools for Measuring Org. Performance Benchmarking of Best Practices


Benchmark
The standard of excellence against which to measure and compare.

Benchmarking
Is the search for the best practices among competitors or non competitors that lead to their superior performance.

Is a control tool for identifying and measuring specific performance gaps and areas for improvement.

Contemporary Issues in Control


Cross-Cultural Issues Workplace Concerns Customer Interactions Corporate Governance

Contemporary Issues in Control


Cross-Cultural Issues
The use of technology to increase direct corporate control of local operations
Legal constraints on corrective actions in foreign countries Difficulty with the comparability of data collected from operations in different countries

Contemporary Issues in Control


Workplace Concerns
Workplace privacy versus workplace monitoring:
E-mail, telephone, computer, and Internet usage Productivity, harassment, security, confidentiality, intellectual property protection

Employee theft
The unauthorized taking of company property by employees for their personal use.

Workplace violence
Anger, rage, and violence in the workplace is affecting employee productivity.

Contemporary Issues in Control


Customer Interactions
Service profit chain
Is the service sequence from employees to customers to profit.

Service capability affects service value which impacts on customer satisfaction that, in turn, leads to customer loyalty in the form of repeat business (profit).

Contemporary Issues in Control


Corporate Governance
The system used to govern a corporation so that the interests of the corporate owners are protected.
Changes in the role of boards of directors
Increased scrutiny of financial reporting (SarbanesOxley Act of 2002)
More disclosure and transparency of corporate financial information Certification of financial results by senior management

Foundation of Organizational Behavior


Organizational behavior (OB)
A field of study that investigates the impact that individuals, groups, and structure have on behavior within organizations, for the purpose of applying such knowledge toward improving an organizations effectiveness.

Replacing Intuition with Systematic Study


Intuition
A feeling not necessarily supported by research.

Systematic study
Looking at relationships, attempting to attribute causes and effects, and drawing conclusions based on scientific evidence. Provides a means to predict behaviors.

Replacing Intuition with Systematic Study

Preconceived Notions

The Facts

Exhibit 1-2 Toward an OB Discipline


Behavioural science

Contribution
Learning Motivation Perception Training Leadership effectiveness Job satisfaction Individual decision making Performance appraisal Attitude measurement Employee selection Work design Work stress Group dynamics Work teams Communication Power Conflict Intergroup behaviour Formal organization theory Organizational technology Organizational change Organizational culture Behavioural change Attitude change Communication Group processes Group decision making Comparative values Comparative attitudes Cross-cultural analysis

Unit of analysis

Output

Psychology

Individual

Sociology

Group

Study of Organizational Behaviour

Social psychology

Organization system

Anthropology

Organizational culture Organizational environment


Conflict Intraorganizational politics Power

Political science

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field


Psychology
The science that seeks to measure, explain, and sometimes change the behavior of humans and other animals.

E X H I B I T 1 3 (contd)

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (contd)


Sociology
The study of people in relation to their fellow human beings.

EXHIBIT 13 (contd)

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (contd)


Social Psychology
An area within psychology that blends concepts from psychology and sociology and that focuses on the influence of people on one another.

EXHIBIT 13 (contd)

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (contd)


Anthropology
The study of societies to learn about human beings and their activities.

EXHIBIT 13 (contd)

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (contd)


Political Science The study of the behavior of individuals and groups within a political environment.

EXHIBIT 13 (contd)

Basic OB Model, Stage I


Model
An abstraction of reality. A simplified representation of some real-world phenomenon.

Challenges and Opportunities for OB


Responding to Globalization Managing Workforce Diversity Improving Quality and Productivity Responding to the Labor Shortage Improving Customer Service Improving People Skills Stimulating Innovation and Change Coping with Temporariness Working in Networked Organizations Helping Employees Balance Work/Life Conflicts Improving Ethical Behavior

You might also like