Management+by+walking+around

RavirajPrasadKushwah 11,030 views 14 slides Mar 21, 2013
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 14
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14

About This Presentation

No description available for this slideshow.


Slide Content

MANAGEMENT BY
WALKING AROUND
“GET MANAGEMENT OUT OF THE OFFICE”

If you wait for people to come to you, you’ll only
get small problems. You must go and find
them. The big problems are where people
don’t realize they have one in the first place.
–W. Edwards Deming

WHAT IS MBWA?
Unstructured approach
Involves direct participation by the managers in the work-related affairs of
their subordinates, in contrast to rigid and distant management.
In MBWA practice, managers spend a significant amount of their time
making informal visits to work area and listening to the employees.
The purpose of this exercise is to collect qualitative information, listen to
suggestions and complaints, and keep a finger on the pulse of the
organization.
 Also called management by wandering around.

HOW DID IT START?
In the 1970s, when their company began
growing, Bill Hewlett and Dave Packard
created a management style.
This technique was marked by personal
involvement, good listening skills and the
recognition that everyone in an organization
wants to do a good job

Top Things About MBWA
1.In 1978 when Tom Peters first heard of Management by Walking
around, he called it “the technology of the obvious”.
2.Considered to be a leadership technique
3.Japanese managers use a similar strategy called the 3 G’s, which
stand for
Genba actual place
Genbutsu actual thing
Genjitsu actual situation
The 3 G’s originated at Honda.

Guidelines For MBWA
Do it to everyone
Do it as often as you can
Go by yourself
Ask questions
Watch and listen
Share your dreams with them

Management by Exception is a "policy by
which management devotes its time to
investigating only those situations in which
actual results differ significantly from planned
results. The idea is that management should
spend its valuable time concentrating on the
more important items (such as shaping the
company's future strategic course). Attention
is given only to material deviations requiring
investigation."

Guidelines For MBWA
Try out their work
Bring good news
Have fun
Catch them in the act of doing something
right
Don’t be critical

Benefits
Builds trust and relationships.
Motivates staff by suggesting that management takes an active
interest in people.
Encourages staff to achieve individual and collective goals.
Strengthens ability to drive cultural change for higher organizational
performance.
Refreshes organizational values.
Makes work less formal.
Creates a healthy organization.

Why Some Managers Fail?
lack purpose, they seem to walk around the business with no
specific goal in mind other than to walk around their business
don’t have a plan, just stopping by the usual people to say
hello
are reluctant to be repetitive in their actions and as such are
unwilling to adopt the required leader behaviour
get put off by early disappointments
talk to much and don’t listen enough

IS MBWA STILL RELEVANT?
In this era of the “www.” is there still room for
“MBWA?”
Management by Walking Around is still practiced
today. It is not seen as much in big corporations,
but some small companies practice it. Two big
corporations that do practice it are Hewlett-
Packard and Kingston Technologies.

The Return of Management by
Walking Around
It is the driving force behind the popular TV reality shows
Undercover Boss, Dirty Jobs.
In Undercover Boss, company executives work in disguise
and undercover in their own firms to explore how the
company really works, what can be improved, and the
challenges faced by employees.
The series Dirty Jobs is just that. Its host performs the
disgusting, smelly, messy and sometimes dangerous jobs
that people do.

MBWA is ...Total Success, Big Money and most
of all.....Happy Employees.
Tags