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Principles of Management & Organisational Behaviour

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1 Principles of Management & Organisational Behaviour
College of Information Technology CISB233 Principles of Management & Organisational Behaviour Chapter 1 What is Organizational Behavior?

2 Chapter1: What is management & Organizational Behavior?
Learning objectives: DESCRIBE what managers do DEFINE organizational behavior (OB) EXPLAIN the value of the systematic study of OB IDENTIFY the contributions made by major behavioral science disciplines to OB LIST the major challenges and opportunities for managers to use OB concepts CHARACTERIZE the nature of the field of OB today Topic One

3 Definition of Management
According to Lawrence A Appley - "Management is the development of people and notthe direction of things". According to Joseph Massie - "Management is defined as the process by which a co-operative group directs action toward However, the definition given by James A.F. Stoner covers all the important facets of management. According to him: “Management is the process of planning, organizing, leading and controlling the efforts of organization members and of using all other organizational resources to achieve stated organizational goals”.

4 The definition suggests:
Management is a continuous process; Several interrelated activities have to be performed by managers irrespective of their levels to achieve the desired goals; Managers use the resources of the organization, both physical as well as human, to achieve the goals; Management aims at achieving the organisation’s goals by ensuring effective use of resources in the best interests of the society the emphasis is on achieving the objectives by using material, machinery, money and the services of men.

5 Management Key Concepts
Organizations: People working together and coordinating their actions to achieve specific goals. Goal: A desired future condition that the organization seeks to achieve. Management: The process of using organizational resources to achieve the organization’s goals by... Planning, Organizing, Leading, and Controlling

6 Additional Key Concepts
Resources are organizational assets and include: People, Machinery, Raw materials, Information, skills, Financial capital. Managers are the people responsible for supervising the use of an organization’s resources to meet its goals.

7 Achieving High Performance
Organizations must provide a good or service desired by its customers. David Johnson of Campbell Soup manages his firm to provide quality food products. Physicians, nurses and health care administrators seek to provide healing from sickness. McDonald’s restaurants provide burgers, fries and shakes that people want to buy.

8 Organizational Performance
Measures how efficiently and effectively managers use resources to satisfy customers and achieve goals. Efficiency: A measure of how well resources are used to achieve a goal. Usually, managers must try to minimize the input of resources to attain the same goal. Effectiveness: A measure of the appropriateness of the goals chosen (are these the right goals?), and the degree to which they are achieved. Organizations are more effective when managers choose the correct goals and then achieve them.

9 What Managers Do MANAGERS
Individuals who achieve goals through other people. Key activities: make decisions allocate resources direct activities of others Working in: ORGANISATIONS A consciously 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.

10 Four Functions of Management
Planning Decide on organizational goals and allocate and use resources to achieve those goals Organizing Establish the rules and reporting relationships that allow people to achieve organizational goals Controlling Evaluate how well the organization is achieving goals and take action to maintain, improve, and correct performance Leading Encourage and coordinate individuals and groups so that they work toward organizational goals OB and Planning: The study of OB reveals how decisions are made in organizations and how politics and conflict affect the planning process. It shows how group decision making and biases can affect planning. OB and Organizing: OB offers guidelines on how to organize employees to make the best use of their skills and capabilities. OB and Leading: The study of different leadership methods and of how to match leadership style to the characteristics of the organization and all its components is a major concern of OB. OB and Controlling: The theories and concepts of organizational behavior allow managers to understand and accurately diagnose work situations in order to pinpoint where corrective action may be needed. 7

11 Levels of Management TOP MANAGEMENT
Consists of owners/shareholders, Board of Directors, its Chairman, Managing Director, GM. MIDDLE MANAGEMENT Consists of heads of functional departments, purchase manager, production manager, marketing manager LOWER LEVEL or operative management Superintendents, Foremen, Supervisors

12 Top mangaement a)To establish the objectives or goals of the enterprise. b) To make policies and frame plans to attain the objectives laid. (c) To set up an organizational frame work to conduct the operations as per plans. (d) To assemble the resources of money, men, materials, machines and methods to put the plans into action. (e) To exercise effective control of the operations. (f) To provide overall leadership to the enterprise.

13 Middle Management To interpret the policies chalked out by top management. To prepare the organizational set up in their own departments for fulfilling the objectives implied in various business policies. To recruit and select suitable operative and supervisory staff. To assign activities, duties and responsibilities for timely implementation of the plans. To compile all the instructions and issue them to supervisor under their control. To motivate personnel to attain higher productivity and to reward them properly. To cooperate with the other departments for ensuring a smooth functioning of the entire organization. To collect reports and information on performance in their departments. To report to top management (j) To make suitable recommendations to the top management for the better execution of plans and policies.

14 Lower Management It consists of foreman, supervisors, sales officers, accounts officers and so on. They are in direct touch with the rank and file or workers. Their authority and responsibility is limited. They pass on the instructions of the middle management to workers. They interpret and divide the plans of the management into short-range operating plans. They are also involved in the process of decisions-making. They have to get the work done through the workers. They allot various jobs to the workers, evaluate their performance and report to the middle level management. They are more concerned with direction and control functions of management. They devote more time in the supervision of the workers.

15 Mintzberg’s Managerial Roles

16 Mintzberg’s Managerial Roles (cont)
Source: Adapted from The Nature of Managerial Work by H. Mintzberg. Copyright © 1973 by H. Mintzberg. Reprinted by permission of Pearson Education.

17 Management Skills Technical skills The ability to apply specialized knowledge or expertise. Human relations 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.

18 Skill-mix of different management levels
Top Management Conceptual Skills Middle Management Human Relations Skills Low Management Technical Skills

19 Effective Versus Successful Managerial Activities (Luthans)
Traditional management Decision making, planning, and controlling Communication Exchanging routine information and processing paperwork Human resource management Motivating, disciplining, managing conflict, staffing, and training Networking Socializing, politicking, and interacting with others

20 Allocation of Activities by Time
Source: Based on F. Luthans, R.M. Hodgetts, and S.A. Rosenkrantz, Real Managers (Cambridge, MA: Ballinger, 1988).

21 Enter 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 organization’s effectiveness.

22 Replacing Intuition with Systematic Study
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.

23 Importance of OB research
Understand organisational events Organisational behaviour research Influence organisational events Predict organisational events

24 Toward an OB Discipline

25 Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field
Psychology (Chapters 1 – 8) The science that seeks to measure, explain, and sometimes change the behavior of humans and other animals.

26 Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)
Sociology (Chapters 9 – 11) The study of people in relation to their fellow human beings.

27 Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)
Social Psychology (Chapters 9 – 11) An area within psychology that blends concepts from psychology and sociology and that focuses on the influence of people on one another.

28 Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)
Anthropology (Chapters12, 13 & 17) : The study of societies to learn about human beings and their activities. E X H I B I T 1–3 (cont’d)

29 Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)
Political Science (Chapters 14 & 15) The study of the behavior of individuals and groups within a political environment. E X H I B I T 1–3 (cont’d)

30 BUT There Are Few Absolutes in OB
Contingency variables: “It Depends!” Situational factors that make the main relationship between two variables change—e.g., the relationship may hold for one condition but not another x y May be related to In Country 1 x y In Country 2 May NOT be related to

31 Challenges and Opportunities for OB
Responding to Globalization Increased foreign assignments Working with people from different cultures Coping with anti-capitalism backlash Overseeing movement of jobs to countries with low-cost labor Managing Workforce Diversity Embracing diversity Changing world demographics Implications for managers Recognizing and responding to differences

32 Major Workforce Diversity Categories
Figure 1.6 illustrates the characteristics used to define the bases of diversity.

33 Challenges and Opportunities for OB (cont’d)
Improving Quality and Productivity Quality management (QM) Process reengineering Responding to the Labor Shortage Changing work force demographics Fewer skilled laborers Early retirements and older workers Improving Customer Service Increased expectation of service quality Customer-responsive cultures

34 Challenges and Opportunity for OB (cont’d)
Improving People Skills Empowering People Stimulating Innovation and Change Coping with “Temporariness” Working in Networked Organizations Helping Employees Achieve Work/Life Balance Improving Ethical Behavior

35 Basic OB Model Model An abstraction of reality. A simplified representation of some real-world phenomenon. Often looks at the how a response (dependent variable) is affected by an independent variable Three Levels of Analysis:

36 The Dependent Variables
Productivity A performance measure that includes effectiveness and efficiency. Effectiveness Achievement of goals. Efficiency The ratio of effective output to the input required to achieve it. Absenteeism The failure to report to work. Turnover The voluntary and involuntary permanent withdrawal from an organization.

37 The Dependent Variables (cont’d)
Organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) Discretionary behavior that is not part of an employee’s formal job requirements, but that nevertheless promotes the effective functioning of the organization. Job satisfaction A general attitude toward one’s job, the difference between the amount of reward workers receive and the amount they believe they should receive.

38 The Dependent Variables (cont’d)
Deviant Workplace Behavior Voluntary behavior that violates significant organizational norms and thereby threatens the well-being of the organization and/or any of its members

39 The Independent Variables
The presumed cause of some change in the dependent variable. Independent Variables Individual-Level Variables Organization System-Level Variables Group-Level Variables

40 Basic OB Model, Stage II E X H I B I T 1–8

41 THANK YOU


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