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Introduction to Management

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1 Introduction to Management
Welcome to MT140 Introduction to Management Unit 4 Seminar – Organizing

2 Agenda General Questions and Announcements Introduction
Organizational Structures Levels of Authority within a Business Delegation Conclusion of Seminar 2

3 What Managers Do: POLC P = Planning: The management function of systematically making decisions about goals and activities that an individual, a group, a work unit, or the overall organization will pursue. O = Organizing: The management function of assembling and coordinating human, financial, informational, and other resources needed to achieve goals. L = Leading: The management function that involves the manager’s efforts to stimulate high performance by employees. C = Control: The management function of monitoring performance and making needed changes. 3

4 Organizational Structures
Two Broad Structures: Mechanistic Structures: Intended to promote internal efficiency. A formal structure. Organic Structures: Depend heavily on informal structures of employee networks. A more flexible and changeable form. Differentiation versus Specialization: Differentiation is created by division of labor and job specialization. Work specialization refers to an organizational structure that is composed of many different units that work on many different kinds of tasks, using different skills and work method Two dimensions to an organization’s structure: Vertical and Horizontal Division of Labor is taking a large task and breaking it down into smaller pieces

5 Vertical Organizational Structure
Hierarchical Lines of Authority Board of Directors Chief Executive Officer Upper Management Team Middle Management Team First Line Managers Individual Contributors CEO SVP, Finance VP, Corporate Planning VP, Finance Initiatives SVP, Human Resources VP, Compensation

6 Vertical Organizational Structure
Span of Control: Determines a manager’s authority. Delegation: The assignment of authority and responsibility to a subordinate at a lower level in the hierarchy. Responsibility: Means that a person is assigned a task that they are supposed to complete. Accountability: The right of the subordinate’s manager to expect specific performance and to take corrective action if the subordinate fails to do so. Decentralization: Spreads the decision-making power to lower levels within the organization.

7 Horizontal Organizational Structure
Departmentalization: The subdividing of larger organizations into smaller subunits. Line Departments: Those that have responsibility for the primary activities of the firm. Staff Departments: Those that provide specialized or professional skills to support the line departments.

8 Organizational Structure
Line Departments: Those that have responsibility for the primary activities of the firm. Staff Departments: Those that provide specialized or professional skills to support the line departments. All firms Departmentalize which means they subdivide their organizations into smaller subunits. The basic approaches to Departmentalization are: Functions: Like production, human resources, accounting, etc. Divisions: To reflect diverse firm needs. Each division having its own functional subunits. Matrix: A hybrid form combining both functional and divisional characteristics. Involves multiple reporting relationships. Network: A collection of mostly single-function firms that collaborate to produce a good or service. Functional organization: jobs (and departments) are specialized and grouped according to business functions and the skills they require: finance, etc Advantages: 1. Economies of scale can be realized, 2.Monitoring of the environment is more effective, 3.Performance standards are better maintained, 4.People have greater opportunity for specialized training and in-depth skill development, 5.Decision making and lines of communication are simple and clearly understood Disadvantages: 1.Care more about their own function then the company as a whole, 2.May reduce focus on overall product quality and customer satisfaction, 3.Expertise in one area vs total company, 4.Conflict between areas and communication falls off, 5.Promotes functional differentiation but not functional integration Divisional organization: which groups all functions into a single division and duplicates functions across all the divisions. Could be product, customer or geographical Advantage: ability to focus on customer needs and provide faster, better service Disadvantage: duplication of activities across many customer groups and geographic areas is expensive matrix organization :is a hybrid form of organization in which functional and divisional forms overlap. Managers and staff personnel report to two bosses—a functional mgr and a divisional manager—creating a dual line of command Advantages: 1.Decision making is decentralized to a level where information is processed properly and relevant knowledge is applied, 2. Extensive communications networks help process large amounts of information, 3.With decisions delegated to appropriate levels, higher mgmtt levels are not overloaded with operational decisions, 4. Resource utilization is efficient bc key resources are shared across several program/products at the same time, 5. Employees learn the collaborative skills needed to function in an env characterized by frequent meetings and more informal interactions, 6. Dual career ladders are elaborated as more career options become available on both sides of the organization. Disadvantages: 1. Confusion can arise because people do not have a single superior to whom they feel primary responsibility, 2.The design encourages managers who share subordinates to jockey for power, 3.The mistaken belief can arise that matrix management is the same thing as group decision making—in other words, everyone must be consulted for every decision, 4.Too much democracy can lead to not enough action. network organization is: a collection of independent, mostly single-function firms that collaborate to produce a good or service. A very flexible version of the network organization is the dynamic network It is composed of temporary arrangements among members that can be assembled and reassembled to meet a changing competitive environment. The members of the network are held together by contracts that stipulate results expected rather than by hierarchy and authority. Poorly performing firms can be removed and replaced.

9 Organizational Chart Illustrated (Sandwich Blitz, Inc.)

10 Any questions ?

11 Organizational Integration
Critical for managers to consider integration and coordination so all parts of the business work together Standardization coordinates work through rules and routines Formalization Coordination by Plan Mutual Adjustment Coordination requires COMMUNICATION Standardization constrains actions and integrates various units by regulating what people do. People often know how to act—and how to interact—because standard operating procedures spell out what they should do. For example, managers may establish standards for which types of computer equipment the organization will use. This simplifies the purchasing and training processes (everyone is on a common platform) and helps the different parts of the org To improve coordination, organizations may also rely on formalization —the presence of rules and regulations governing how people in the organization interact. Simple, often written, policies regarding attendance, dress, and decorum, for example, may help eliminate a good deal of uncertainty at work. If laying out the exact rules and procedures by which work should be integrated is difficult, organizations may provide more latitude by establishing goals and schedules for interdependent units. Coordination by plan does not require the same high degree of stability and routinization required for coordination by standardization. Interdependent units are free to modify and adapt their actions as long as they meet the deadlines and targets required for working with others. Ironically, the simplest and most flexible approach to coordination may just be to have interdependent parties talk to one another. Coordination by mutual adjustment involves feedback and discussions to jointly figure out how to approach problems and devise solutions that are agreeable to everyone. The popularity of teams today is in part due to the fact that they allow for flexible coordination; teams can operate under the principle of mutual adjustment.

12 Organizational Agility
Agility: being able to act, and act fast, to meet customer needs and respond to other outside pressures The particular structure the organization adopts to accomplish agility will depend on its strategy its customers its technology

13 Organizational Structure - Strategy
Core competencies Strategic Alliance Learning Organization High Involvement Organization Organization size has a huge impact!!

14 Organizational Structure - Customers
To meet customer needs, organizations focus on quality improvement Total Quality Management - a way of managing in which everyone is committed to continuous improvement of his or her part of the operation. TQM is a comprehensive approach to improving product quality and thereby customer satisfaction. Six Sigma

15 Organizational Structure - Technology
Technology - can be viewed as the methods, processes, systems, and skills used to transform resources (inputs) into products (outputs) Mass Customization Lean manufacturing Just in Time lean manufacturing, - based on a commitment to making an operation both efficient and effective; it strives to achieve the highest possible productivity and total quality, cost-effectively, by eliminating unnecessary steps in the production process and continually striving for improvement. Rejects are unacceptable, and staff, overhead, and inventory are considered wasteful. In a lean operation, the emphasis is on quality, speed, and flexibility more than on cost, efficiency, and hierarchy. One way to compete based on time is to set up just-in-time (JIT) operations. JIT calls for subassemblies and components to be manufactured in very small lots and delivered to the next stage in the process precisely at the time needed, or just in time.” A

16 Week 4 Tasks Finish Chapter 6 reading - pgs 126-152
Participate in discussion Complete Homework assignment Complete Quiz ALL TASKS ARE TO BE COMPLETED BY TUESDAY NIGHT AT MIDNIGHT

17 Instructor Contact Information me at – I will return your within 24 hrs in most cases AOL Instant Messenger Screen Name: tnjhoov Office Hours – Monday nights 8 – 9 pm EST – Ask questions and get a response immediately. For more personal questions please send me an . 17

18 See you next week! After this seminar has concluded, there will be a recording in the archives located in the seminar room. It may be selected by date.

19 Thank You for Joining Me This Evening!
Good Night All!


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