PlanningPlanning
Planning defines where the organization wants to be in
future and how to get there.
•Example:
•An example of good planning comes from walt Disney
Company, where its CEO and management decided to
revive the company by focusing on resources. Coordinated
planning of the management was they sell tons of CDs,
have their own Disney TV Channels, films and making T–
shirts
OrganizingOrganizing
•Organizing involves assigning tasks, grouping
tasks into Departments, delegating authority
and allocating resources across the
organization.
•Example:
•Organization Chart
•Process flow chart
•Jobs description
LeadingLeading
•Leading is the use of influence to motivate employees to
achieve organizational goals. Leading means creating
culture and values, communicating to the people through
the organization.
ControllingControlling
Controlling means
monitoring employees’
activities determining
whether the organization is
on target toward its goals,
and making corrections as
necessary.
OrganizationOrganization
•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
Organizational Resources Organizational Resources
–Organizational resources are all assets that are available
to use in production process.
•Human Resources
•Financial Resources
•Capital resources
•Physical resources
•Information resources
Efficiency & effectivenessEfficiency & effectiveness
–Efficiency
–Getting the most output for the least inputs
–Effectiveness
–Attaining organizational goals by doing right things
Organizational Goals Organizational Goals
•Vision-Dream of the organization
•Mission-reason of existing an
organization
Management Management
It is the process of planning, organizing, leading,
and controlling organizational resources
effectively and efficiently to meet organizational
goals.
Exhibit 2–1Development of Major Management Theories
Major Approaches to ManagementMajor Approaches to Management
•Classical Approach
–Scientific Management
–General Administrative Theory
•Quantitative Approach
•Behavioral Approach
•Contemporary Approach
–Systems Theory
–Contingency Approach
2–15
Classical ApproachClassical Approach
Scientific ManagementScientific Management
•Fredrick Winslow Taylor
–The “father” of scientific management
–Published Principles of Scientific Management (1911)
•The theory of scientific management
–Using scientific methods to define the “one best way” for a job to
be done:
»Putting the right person on the job with the correct tools and
equipment.
»Having a standardized method of doing the job.
»Providing an economic incentive to the worker.
2–16
Exhibit 2–2Taylor’s Four Principles of Management
1.Develop a science for each element of an individual’s
work, which will replace the old rule-of-thumb method.
2.Scientifically select and then train, teach, and develop the
worker.
3.Heartily cooperate with the workers so as to ensure that
all work is done in accordance with the principles of the
science that has been developed.
4.Divide work and responsibility almost equally between
management and workers. Management takes over all
work for which it is better fitted than the workers.
2–19
Exhibit 2–3Exhibit 2–3Fayol’s 14 Principles of ManagementFayol’s 14 Principles of Management
1.1.Division of work.Division of work.
2.2.Authority.Authority.
3.3.Discipline.Discipline.
4.4.Unity of command.Unity of command.
5.5.Unity of direction.Unity of direction.
6.6.Subordination of Subordination of
individual interests individual interests
to the general to the general
interest.interest.
7.7.Remuneration.Remuneration.
8.8.Centralization.Centralization.
9.9.Scalar chain.Scalar chain.
10.10.Order.Order.
11.11.Equity.Equity.
12.12.Stability of tenure Stability of tenure
of personnel.of personnel.
13.13.Initiative.Initiative.
14.14.Esprit de corps.Esprit de corps.
2–28
Contemporary Approach
•System Defined
–A set of interrelated and interdependent parts
arranged in a manner that produces a unified whole.
•Basic Types of Systems
–Closed systems
•Are not influenced by and do not interact with their
environment (all system input and output is internal).
–Open systems
•Dynamically interact to their environments by taking in
inputs and transforming them into outputs that are
distributed into their environments.
2–30
Implications of the Systems ApproachImplications of the Systems Approach
•Coordination of the organization’s parts is
essential for proper functioning of the entire
organization.
•Decisions and actions taken in one area of the
organization will have an effect in other areas of
the organization.
•Organizations are not self-contained and,
therefore, must adapt to changes in their
external environment.
2–32
Exhibit 2–8Popular Contingency Variables
•Organization size
•As size increases, so do the problems of coordination.
•Routineness of task technology
•Routine technologies require organizational structures,
leadership styles, and control systems that differ from
those required by customized or nonroutine technologies.
•Environmental uncertainty
•What works best in a stable and predictable environment
may be totally inappropriate in a rapidly changing and
unpredictable environment.
•Individual differences
•Individuals differ in terms of their desire for growth,
autonomy, tolerance of ambiguity, and expectations.