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Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
Lesson
4.11
SYSTEM'S
VIEW OF MANAGEMENT AND
ORGANIZATION
Managing
Systems
Another
way to look at the manager's
job is from the perspective of
managing systems.
System:
A
system
is a
set of interrelated and interdependent
parts arranged in a manner
that produces a
unified
whole.
It's a concept taken from
the physical sciences and applied to
organizations.
The
two basic types of systems
are
Closed
systems are
not influenced by and do not interact
with their
environment.
Open
systems dynamically
interact with their
environment.
Today,
when we call organization systems, we
mean open systems, that is,
an organization that constantly
interacts
with its environment.
1.
The
systems theory approach
is based on the notion that
organizations can be visualized
as
systems
of interrelated parts or subsystems that
operate as a whole in pursuit of common
goals.
This
will be discussed in more detail in the
next session.
1.
The
major components of a system
are:
a.
Inputs:
the
various human, material, financial,
equipment, and
informational
resources required to produce goods
and services.
b.
Transformation
processes:
the
organization's managerial
and
technological
abilities that are applied to convert
inputs into outputs.
c.
Outputs:
the
products, services, and
other outcomes produced by the
organization.
d.
Feedback:
information
about results and organizational
status relative to
its
environment.
2.
Open
versus closed systems. These
are terms indicating the relative
degree with which a
system
interacts with its
environment. While there are
very few, if any, completely open
or
completely
closed systems, we usually
view open systems as those having
continual interaction
with
its
environment. Closed systems
are those with little
interaction and feedback
from their
environments.
3.
Two
major characteristics of open systems
are:
a.
Negative
entropy is the
ability of open systems to bring in
new energy in
the
form of inputs and feedback
from the environment in order
for the
organization
to delay or to arrest entropy, the
decaying process.
b.
Synergy
is the
ability of the whole to equal
more than the sum of
its
parts.
c.
The
systems viewpoint suggests
that managers are likely to
be more
successful
if they attempt to operate their units as open
systems rather
than
as closed system.
26
Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
The
Organization as an Open
System
Environment
System
Inputs
Transformation
Outputs
Raw
Materials
Employees'
Work
Products
and Services
Human
Resources
Activities
Financial
Results
Capital
Management
Activities
Information
Technology
Technology
and
Human
Results
Information
Feedback
Operations
Methods
Environment
Answer
to Test Yourself on Management Viewpoints
and Theories!!!!
What
are some early evidences of
management practice?
1.
Some
early evidences of management
practice are the Egyptian
pyramids, the Great Wall of
China,
and
the status of Venice as a major economic
trade center in the
1400s.
Explain
why division of labor and
the Industrial Revolution
were important to the study
of
2.
management.
Division
of labor increases productivity by
increasing each worker's skill
and dexterity, saves
time
that
is commonly lost in changing tasks, and
creates labor-saving inventions and
machinery. During
the
Industrial Revolution, business
owners were creating large
businesses that required
formalized
management
practice.
What
are the four major
approaches to the study of
management?
3.
The
four major approaches to the study of
management are scientific, general
administrative,
quantitative,
and organizational behavior. Each is
correct and makes an
important contribution to
our
overall understanding of
management.
What
relevance does scientific
management have to current
management practice?
4.
27
Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
Scientific
management is the use of scientific
methods to define the "one
best way" for a job to
be
done.
Its relevance to current management
practice is that managers
still use many of the
techniques
developed by Taylor, the Gilbreth, and
other practitioners.
Describe
Frederick W. Taylor's contributions to
scientific management?
5.
Frederick
Taylor defined four principles of
management--develop a science for each
element of an
individual's
work; scientifically select, train,
teach, and develop each worker;
cooperate with
workers
to ensure that all work is
done in accordance with the principles of
science; and divide
work
and responsibility almost equally
between management and
workers.
Explain
Frank and Lillian Gilbreth's
contributions to scientific
management?
6.
Frank
and Lillian Gilbreth studied
work arrangements to eliminate wasteful
hand and body
motions.
They also experimented with the
design and use of proper
tools and equipment
for
optimizing
work performance.
Describe
Fayol's principles of management
and how they compare
with Taylor's?
7.
Henri
Fayol's principles of management were
division of work, authority, discipline,
unity of
command,
unity of direction, subordination of
individual interests, remuneration,
centralization,
scalar
chain, order, equity,
stability of tenure of personnel,
initiative, and esprit de
corps. In contrast
to
Taylor's principles, Fayol's focused on
the entire organization and not just the
individual worker.
What
did Weber contribution to
the general administrative
theories of management?
8.
Max
Weber described an ideal type of
organization called a bureaucracy,
characterized by division
of
labor, a clearly defined hierarchy,
detailed rules and regulations,
and impersonal
relationships.
Rules
and controls were to be applied
uniformly, avoiding involvement
with individual
personalities
and
preferences of employees.
Explain
how the quantitative
approach evolved and how it
has contributed to the field
of
9.
management.
The
quantitative approach, also
called operations research or management
science, is the use of
quantitative
techniques to improve decision
making, and it evolved out
of the development of
mathematical
and statistical solutions to military
problems during World War II.
After the war,
many
quantitative techniques that
had been used for
military problems were applied to the
business
sector.
The quantitative approach
has added another dimension to the
evolution of management
practice
and thinking and has
contributed most directly to
management decision making in
planning
and control.
What
is organizational behavior?
10.
Organizational
behavior is the field of study
concerned with the actions or
behavior of people at
work.
What
were some of the
contributions of the early
advocates of OB?
11.
Early
advocates of the OB approach were Robert
Owen, who proposed an idealized
workplace
where
work hours would be
regulated, child labor outlawed,
public education and meals
provided,
and
business involved in community projects;
Hugo Munsterberg, who created the
field of
industrial
psychology, the study of individuals at
work to maximize their
productivity and
adjustment;
Mary Parker Follett, who
thought that organizations should be
based on a group ethic
rather
than on individualism to release
individual potential; and
Chester Barnard, who
saw
organizations
as social systems that required
human cooperation.
Describe
the Hawthorne studies and
their contribution to management
practice.
12.
The
Hawthorne studies, conducted at the
Western Electric Company Works in
Cicero Illinois,
from
1924 through the early
1930s, exposed an experimental group of
workers to various
lighting
intensities
while providing a control
group with constant
intensity. As the level of light
was
increased
in the experimental group, the output of both
groups increased. The series
of studies led
28
Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
to
a new emphasis on the human
behavior factor and helped
change the dominant theme of
the
time
that employees were not
different from any other
machines the organization used.
How
is globalization affecting the
way managers do their
jobs?
13.
Management
is no longer constrained by national
borders, and managers in
organizations of all
sizes
and types around the world
are faced with the
opportunities and challenges of operating
in a
global
market.
What
is workforce diversity, and
what implications does it
have for
managers?
14.
Workforce
diversity exists when workers
are more heterogeneous in
terms of gender,
race,
ethnicity,
age, and other
characteristics that reflect their
differences. It's an important
issue because
as
more women, minorities, elderly, and
immigrants enter the job
market in the first part of the
21st
century,
monumental changes are predicted in the
workplace.
Discuss
the three important themes
in the definition of
entrepreneurship?
15.
First,
is the pursuit of opportunities, because
entrepreneurship is about pursuing
environmental
trends
and changes that no one
else has seen or paid
attention to.
Second,
is innovation, because entrepreneurship
involves changing, revolutionizing,
transforming,
and
introducing products or services or new
ways of doing
business.
Third,
is growth, because entrepreneurs
are not content to stay
small or to stay the same in
size.
How
is e-commerce different from
e-business, and what are
the main forms of
e-commerce
16.
transactions?
E-business
is more than e-commerce,
although e-business can include
e-commerce. E-business is a
comprehensive
term describing the way an organization
does its work by using
electronic linkages
with
its key constituencies. The
main forms of e-commerce transactions
are business-to-business,
business-to-consumer,
consumer-to-consumer, and government-to-business.
Describe
the three categories of
e-business involvement.
17.
The
three main categories of
e-business are: enhanced--using
the Internet to enhance but
not
replace
traditional ways of doing
business; enabled--using
the Internet to perform its
traditional
business
functions better, but not to
sell anything; total--whole
existence is made possible by
and
revolves
around the Internet.
Why
should managers be concerned
about innovation and
flexibility?
18.
Without
a constant flow of new ideas
an organization is doomed to obsolescence or failure.
Also,
flexibility
is required in a context where
customers/needs may change
overnight, where new
competitors
come and go quickly, and
where employees and their
skills are shifted as needed
from
project
to project
.
What
is TQM, and how is it
affecting manager's
jobs?
19.
TQM
is a philosophy of management driven by
continual improvement and
response to customer,
employee,
and supplier needs and
expectations. It encompasses employees
and suppliers as well
as
the
people who purchase the organization's
goods or services. The objective of
managers is to
create
an organization committed to continuous improvement in
work processes.
How
does knowledge management
fit into the concept of a
learning organization?
20.
A
learning organization is one that has
developed the capacity to continuously learn,
adapt, and
change.
Knowledge management involves
cultivating a learning culture where
organizational
members
systematically gather knowledge and
share it with others in the organization
in order to
achieve
better performance.
What
is workplace spirituality and
how is it an issue that
managers must deal
with?
21.
29
Principles
of Management MGT503
VU
Workplace
Spirituality is "a
recognition of an inner life
that nourishes and is nourished
by
meaningful
work that takes place in the
context of community." Workers,
and society in
general,
are
searching for a deeper understanding of
who they are and why they're
here on Earth. They want
more
than just a steady job
and a paycheck. Current research
studies looking at the
relationship
between
workplace spirituality and productivity
have shown interesting results.
Workplace
spirituality
is likely to be manifested in how
managers treat employees and
how employees'
contributions
are respected and
valued.
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