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POM-Chp1.ppt

28 Mar 2023
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POM-Chp1.ppt

  1. Chapter 1 Introduction to Management and Organizations Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 1
  2. OUTLINE • Who are managers? • What is management? • What do managers do? • What are the challenges of managing? • Why study management? Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 2
  3. Who Are Managers? • Manager • Someone who works with and through other people by coordinating their work activities in order to accomplish organizational goals (Robbins, et. Al, 2006, p. 7) Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 3
  4. Types of Managers Exhibit 1.2 Managerial Levels Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 4 Top Managers Middle Managers First-Line Managers Nonmanagerial Employees
  5. Where Do Managers Work? • Organization - A deliberate arrangement of people assembled to accomplish some specific purpose (that individuals independently could not accomplish alone). • Common Characteristics of Organizations • Have a distinct purpose (goal) • Are composed of people • Have a deliberate structure
  6. Exhibit 1-2: Characteristics of Organizations
  7. What Do Managers Do? • Management involves coordinating and overseeing the work activities of others so that their activities are completed efficiently and effectively.
  8. What Is Management? • Managerial Concerns • Efficiency • “Doing things right” • Getting the most output for the least input • Effectiveness • “Doing the right things” • Work activities that attain organizational goals Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 8
  9. Exhibit 1-3: Efficiency and Effectiveness in Management
  10. What Do Managers Do? Three Approaches to describe: • Management Functions • Management Roles (Mintzberg) • Management Skills Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 10
  11. Management Functions •Planning - Defining goals, establishing strategies to achieve goals, and 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.
  12. Exhibit 1.4 Management Functions Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 12 Planning Defining goals, establishing strategy, and developing sub-plans to coordinate activities Lead to Organizing Determining what needs to be done, how it will be done, and who is to do it Leading Directing and motivating all involved parties and resolving conflicts Controlling Monitoring activities to ensure that they are accomplished as planned Achieving the organization’s stated purpose
  13. Management Roles • 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.
  14. What Do Managers Do? (cont’d) • Mintzberg’s Management Roles Approach (Robbins, et. al., 2006, Exhibit 1.5, p. 12) • Interpersonal roles • Figurehead, leader, liaison • Informational roles • Monitor, disseminator, spokesperson • Decisional roles • Entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 14
  15. 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
  16. Exhibit 1.6 Skills Needed at Different Management Levels Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 16 Top Managers Middle Managers Low er-level Managers Importance Conceptual Skills Human Skills Technical Skills
  17. Exhibit 1-7: Important Managerial Skills
  18. The Importance of Customers • Customers: the reason that organizations exist • Managing customer relationships is the responsibility of all managers and employees. • Consistent high quality customer service is essential for survival.
  19. The Importance of Innovation • Innovation • Doing things differently, exploring new territory, and taking risks. • Managers should encourage employees to be aware of and act on opportunities for innovation.
  20. The Importance of Sustainability • Sustainability - a company’s ability to achieve its business goals and increase long- term shareholder value by integrating economic, environmental, and social opportunities into its business strategies.
  21. Exhibit 1-8: Changes Facing Managers
  22. Why Study Management? • Universality of Management • The reality that management is needed • in all types and sizes of organizations • at all organizational levels • in all organizational areas • in all organizations, regardless of location
  23. Exhibit 1-9: Universal Need for Management
  24. Exhibit 1-10: Rewards and Challenges of Being a Manager
  25. Exhibit 1.8 The Changing Organization Traditional • Stable • Inflexible • Job-focused • Work is defined by job positions • Individual-oriented • Permanent jobs • Command-oriented • Managers always make decisions • Rule-oriented • Relatively homogeneous workforce • Workdays defined as 9 to 5 • Hierarchical relationships • Work at organizational facility during specific hours New Organization • Dynamic • Flexible • Skills-focused • Work is defined in terms of tasks to be done • Team-oriented • Temporary jobs • Involvement-oriented • Employees participate in decision making • Customer-oriented • Diverse workforce • Workdays have no time boundaries • Lateral and networked relationships • Work anywhere, anytime Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 25
  26. Exhibit 1.9 Challenges Impacting the Manager’s Job Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 26 Ethics Manager E-Business Globalization Diversity Customers Innovation Knowledge Management
  27. Challenges to Managing • Ethics • Increased emphasis on ethics education in university and college curriculums • Increased creation and use of codes of ethics by businesses • Workforce Diversity • Increasing heterogeneity in the workforce • More gender, minority, ethnic, and other forms of diversity in employees (cultural values important) • Biggest immediate issue? (aging pop.) Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 27
  28. Challenges to Managing (cont’d) • Globalization • Management in international organizations • Political and cultural challenges of operating in a global market Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 28
  29. Challenges to Managing (cont’d) • E-business (electronic business) • The work performed by an organization using electronic linkages to its key constituencies • E-commerce: the sales and marketing component of an e-business Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 29
  30. Challenges to Managing (cont’d) • Importance of Customers • Customers have more opportunities than ever before • Delivering consistent high-quality service is essential • Managers need to create customer-responsive organizations Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 30
  31. Challenges to Managing (cont’d) • Innovation • Doing things differently, exploring new territory, and taking risks • Managers need to encourage all employees to be innovative Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 31
  32. Challenges to Managing (cont’d) • Knowledge Management • The cultivation of a learning culture where organizational members systematically gather and share knowledge with others in order to achieve better performance • Learning Organization • An organization that has developed the capacity to continuously learn, adapt, and change Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 32
  33. Exhibit 1.11 Learning Organization Vs. Traditional Organization Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 33
  34. 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 • Entrepreneurship • The organized effort to pursue opportunities to create value and grow through innovation and uniqueness Chapter 1, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Eighth Canadian Edition. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. 34
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