17
Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Leadership and Management – Part 1

Business Organization and Management 120

Page 2: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Functions of Management

PLANNING• Setting organizational

goals• Developing strategies to

reach those goals• Determining resources

needed• Setting standards

LEADING• Guiding and motivating

employees to work effectively to accomplish organizational goals and objectives

• Giving assignments• Explaining routines• Clarifying policies• Providing feedback on

performance

Page 3: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Functions of Management

ORGANIZING• Allocating resources,

assigning tasks, and establishing procedures for accomplishing goals

• Preparing a structure (organization chart) showing lines of authority and responsibility

• Recruiting, selecting, training, and developing employees

• Placing employees where they’ll be most effective

CONTROLLING• Measuring results against

corporate objectives• Monitoring performance

relative to standards• Rewarding outstanding

performance• Taking corrective action

Page 4: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Planning: Creating a Vision for the Organization

Page 5: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Vision

• Planning involves setting the organizational vision, goals, and objectives.

• Top managers are expected to create a vision for the firm.

• A vision is a picture of what the company would like to become.

Page 6: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Mission Statement

• Usually employees work with managers to design a mission statement that reflects the organization’s vision and values.

• The mission statement becomes the foundation for setting goals and selecting and motivating employees.

• Establish Starbucks as the premier purveyor of the finest coffee in the world while maintaining our uncompromising principles as we grow. – Starbucks

• The mission of Merck is to provide society with superior products and services by developing innovations and solutions that improve the quality of life and satisfy customer needs, and to provide employees with meaningful work and advancement opportunities, and investors with a superior rate of return.

Page 7: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Goals

• Goals need to be mutually agreed upon by workers and management.

• Goals should be consistent with the values and mission of the organization.

• Inconsistent goals contribute to confusion, frustration, and poor employee morale.

Page 8: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Kinds of Goals

• Goals are characterized by their expected time horizons

• Long-term– five or more years

• Intermediate– one to five years

• Short-term– less than one year

Page 9: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Objectives

• Specific, short-term statements detailing how to achieve the goals– Example: goal is to obtain an 85% on the next

test, objective is to answer correctly the review questions

• Objectives must be measurable.

Page 10: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Planning

• Strategic planning – provides foundation for the policies, procedures, and strategies for obtaining and using resources to achieve those goals.– Company decides which customers to serve,

what goods or services to sell, geographic areas in which the firm will compete.

– Becoming more difficult in today’s rapidly changing environment

– Done by top managers of the firm

Page 11: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Planning

• Tactical planning – normally done by managers or teams of managers at lower levels of the organization– Setting annual budgets, deciding on details and

activities necessary to meet strategic objectives

• Operational planning – focuses on specific supervisors, department managers, and individual employees– Operational plan is departmental manager’s tool for

daily and weekly operations– Include dates departments must meet

Page 12: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Planning

• Contingency planning – back-up plans– Example: a company does not meet sales

goals, contingency plan may call for more advertising or to cut prices.

Page 13: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Organizing: Creating a Unified System

Page 14: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Organizing

• After managers have planned a course of action, they must organize the firm to accomplish their goals.

• Organizing means allocating resources, assigning tasks, and establishing procedures for accomplishing the organization’s objectives.

Page 15: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Top Management

• President and other key company executives:– CEO – chief executive officer– COO – chief operating office– CFO – chief financial officer– CIO – chief information officer– CKO – chief knowledge officer

• CEO is often president of the firm and is responsible for:– all top-level decisions– Introducing change

Page 16: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Top Management

• COO – responsible for putting changes into effect– Structuring work, controlling operations, and

rewarding people

• CFO – responsible for obtaining funds, planning budgets, collecting funds

• CIO/CKO – responsible for getting the right information to other managers so they can make correct decisions

Page 17: Leadership and Management – Part 1 Business Organization and Management 120

Middle and Supervisory Management

• Middle management – responsible for tactical planning and controlling– General managers, division managers, branch

and plant managers

• Supervisory management – first-line managers– Directly responsible for supervising workers

and evaluating daily performance