Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Night 1 Tuesday April 28, 2015 An Overview of Management.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Management History Module
Advertisements

CPS ® and CAP ® Examination Review MANAGEMENT, Fifth Edition By Haney and Mazzola ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River,
The History of Management
Principles of Management Session. 2 Management Yesterday & Today
Management Theory: Essential Background for the Successful Manager
Management Theory Essential Background for the Successful Manager
History and Evolution Of Management Thought
The Pre-modern Era Ancient massive construction projects
MANAGEMENT RICHARD L. DAFT.
The Pre-modern Era Ancient massive construction projects
Management Theories Ch. 2 Management A Practical Introduction
The Evolution of Management Thinking
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Management History Module
The Pre-modern Era Ancient massive construction projects
Theories of Management
Management Yesterday and Today
Copyright ©2005 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved Chapter 2 1 Management Thought: Past and Present MANAGEMENT Meeting.
Our course web site: sciences/472a/
The Evolution of Management Thinking
Chapter 1 – THE CHALLENGE OF MANAGEMENT
Management Theories Pioneering Ideas In Management.
© 2016 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd. PowerPoint Slides t/a Management: A Pacific Rim Focus Enhanced Edition. Slides prepared by David Meacheam & George.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Copyright © 2006 Thomson Business and Economics. All rights reserved. Chapter 1.
WEEK 3: The evolutION OF MANAGEMENT THOUGHT
The Exceptional Manager What You Do, How You Do It.
Chapter Two Management Theory Essential Background for the Successful Manager McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All.
CHAPTER 2 PIONEERING IDEAS IN MANAGEMENT
Chapter 2 The Evolution of Management Thought Leanne Powers MHR301 From McGraw-Hill Irwin Contemporary Management.
Management: Arab World Edition Robbins, Coulter, Sidani, Jamali
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Evolving Management Approaches and Behavioral Management
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education
© Pearson Education Limited 2015HM-1 Chapter HM A Brief History of Management’s Roots.
Chapter 1/Part II History of Management.  Ancient Management ◦ Egypt (pyramids) and China (Great Wall) ◦ Venetians (floating warship assembly lines)
Copyright  2005 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Management: A Pacific Rim Focus 4e by Bartol, Tein, Matthews, Martin 2–1 CHAPTER 2 PIONEERING IDEAS.
8 th edition Steven P. Robbins Mary Coulter PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2005 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved.
Principles of Management and Applied Economics
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama Appendix A Copyright © 2009 South-Western/Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
Introduction to Management MGT 101
History of Management Thought
PRINCIPLES OF MANAGEMENT ADVANCED CERTIFICATE IN MANAGEMENT STUDIES.
HISTORY – Adam Smith Division of Labor or Job Specialization Late 18 th Century Industrial Revolution 1900 – Development of Management Theories.
Slide content created by Charlie Cook, The University of West Alabama Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter Two Traditional.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education MH-1 Looking Back: The History of Management.
Kinicki/Williams, Management: A Practical Introduction 3e ©2008, McGraw-Hill/Irwin Management A Practical Introduction Third Edition Angelo Kinicki & Brian.
Evolution of Management Appendix A MGMT 370. EARLY BEGINNINGS Four Management Functions Four Management Functions –Planning, organizing, leading, and.
MANAGEMENT RICHARD L. DAFT.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Principles of Management Learning Session # 7 Dr. A. Rashid Kausar.
Introduction to management
Pertemuan 2 (Second Meeting)
Chapter 2 The Evolution of Management Thinking Jeffrey Chung
Chapter 1: Management and Its History
THE HISTORY OF MANAGEMENT (Chapter 1)
The Evolution of Management Thinking
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
UNIT TWO MANAGEMENT THEORIES.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
Historical Background of Management
Management Management History Stephen P. Robbins Mary Coulter
Principles of Management
Historical Background of Management
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall
A Historical Review of Theories Example, ca 1976
Principles of management
Management Yesterday & Today
Presentation transcript:

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Night 1 Tuesday April 28, 2015 An Overview of Management

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management What is an Organization? Two or more persons engaged in a systematic effort to produce goods or services. Group of people intentionally organized to accomplish an overall, common goal or set of goals.

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management What is Management? The process of achieving organizational goals by engaging in the four major functions of planning, organizing, leading, and controlling. It characterizes the process of planning, leading, and directing all or part of an organization, through the deployment or manipulation of resources.

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Four Functions of Management (1 of 2) Planning – the process of setting goals and deciding how best to achieve them. Organizing – the process of allocating and arranging human and nonhuman resources so that plans can be carried out successfully.

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Four Functions of Management (2 of 2) Leading – the process of influencing others to engage in the work behaviors necessary to reach organizational goals. Controlling – the process of regulating organizational activities so that actual performance conforms to expected organizational standards and goals.

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Work Agenda Work Methods and Roles Management Functions: Planning Organizing Leading Controlling Knowledge Base and Key Management Skills Performance (Goal Achievement)

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Work Agenda A loosely connected set of tentative goals and tasks that a manager is attempting to accomplish. Influencing factors –Job demands –Job constraints –Job choices

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Do you need Management Skills? In the new work environment: –Entrepreneurship –Downsizing and Delayering –Job enrichment and Empowerment –Self-Managed work teams –Hiring for the second job –Networking

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management

Effectiveness vs. Efficiency Effectiveness – the ability to choose appropriate goals and achieve them. Efficiency – the ability to make the best use of available resources in the process of achieving goals.

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Effectiveness vs. Efficiency Effectiveness – Ability to achieve stated goals or objectives, judged in terms of both output and impact. Efficiency – producing the desired result with the least waste

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Creative Organization (1 of 2) Idea Champion – is a member of the organization who is assigned responsibility for the successful implementation of a change. Sponsor – a middle manager who recognizes the organizational significance of an idea, helps obtain the necessary funding for development of the innovation, and facilitates its actual implementation.

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Creative Organization (2 of 2) Orchestrator – a high-level manager who articulates the need for innovation, provides funding for innovating activities, creates incentives for middle managers to sponsor new ideas, and protects idea people.

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management What makes an Effective Manager? Managerial Education Managerial Experience Is Management an Art or a Science?

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Historical Development of Management

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management Historical Developments of Management Sumerian traders from Mesopotamia Egyptian Pyramid builders An off-shoot of Economics in the 19 th century (Adam Smith) Innovation (Eli Whitney and James Watt)

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Birth of Management (1 of 6) Preclassical Contributors –Robert Owen (Entrepreneur-Human Resources) –Charles Babbage (Mathematician-Work specialization and profit-sharing plan) –Henry R. Towne (Mechanical Engineer- Management as a science and development of management principles)

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Birth of Management (2 of 6) Classical Viewpoint –Scientific Management Fredrick Winslow Taylor (Engineer-Science of management, Time-and-motion study) Frank and Lilian Gilbreth (Bricklayer and Psychologist-Psychology in the workplace) Henry L. Gantt (Gantt chart for decision making) –Bureaucratic Management Max Weber (Consultant, Professor, and Author- Bureaucracy)

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Birth of Management (3 of 6) –Administrative Management Henri Fayol (Mining Engineer-Functional approach to management) –Coordination vs. Cooperation Chester Bernard (Statistician-Authority) –Authority, behavior, comunication

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Birth of Management (4 of 6) Behavioral Viewpoint –Early Behaviorists Hugo Munsterberg (Medicine and Psychology- Industrial Psychology) Mary Parker Follet (Political Science- Significance of Groups and their integration) –Hawthorne Studies –Human Relations Movement Abraham Maslow (Psychologist-Theory of motivation) Douglas McGregor (Industrial Manager- Assumptions managers make about workers) –Behavioral Science Approach

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management

The Birth of Management (5 of 6) Quantitative Management Viewpoint –Management Science-Decision making through the use of sophisticated mathematical models and statistical methods. –Operations Management-Managing the production and delivery of an organization’s products and services. –Management Information Systems-Use of computer-based information systems for management.

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Birth of Management (6 of 6) Contemporary Viewpoints –Systems Theory-Organizations can be visualized as systems –Contingency Theory-Managerial actions is situation specific. (Joan Woodward-Sociologist) –Emerging Views Japanese Management Theory Z

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management

The Knowing-Doing Gap (1 of 2) The Problems: –Emphasis on technology and transfer of codified information –Knowledge as a tangible thing –Can’t easily store or transfer tacit knowledge –Focus on practices, not philosophy

Prof. Roy Philip Systems Management The Knowing-Doing Gap (2 of 2) The Solutions: –Why before how –Knowing comes from doing and teaching others how –There is no doing without mistakes –Drive out fear –Fight the competition, not each other