11 - Engineers As Managers & Leaders
11 - Engineers As Managers & Leaders
11 - Engineers As Managers & Leaders
Managers/Leaders
Dr. C. M. Chang
Only to be used by instructors who adopt the
text:
C. M. Chang, Engineering
Management: Challenges in the New Millennium,
Pearson Prentice Hall (2005)
Copyright 2005 by Dr. Carl Chang
1
Chapter Contents
Introduction
Differences in Work Done be engineers and
Managers
Career Paths of a Typical Engineer
Factors Affecting the Promotion of Engineers
to Managers
Factors Causing Engineers to Fail as Managers
Leaders and Managers
Emotional Intelligence
Engineering Leadership
Only 26% of CEOs in the top 1000
companies had their first degrees in
Engineering (more in foreign countries)
Only 10% of university presidents are
engineers
Few engineers are in Congress
President Jimmy Carter was the only
engineer, but he did not get reelected
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Why So?
Engineering mindset and attitude not
compatible with management work?
Education preventing engineers from
becoming great leaders?
Strengths in engineering have
become weaknesses in
management?
Differences in work done by
engineers versus that by managers?
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CHARACTERISTICS
ENGINEERS
MANAGERS
Focus
Technical/scientific tasks
Decision Making
Basis
Involvement
Work Output
Quantitative, measurable
Effectiveness
CHARACTERISTICS
ENGINEERS
MANAGERS
Dependency
Autonomous
Interdependent of others
Responsibility
Creativity
Technology centered
Bottom Line
"How" (operational)
Concern
Adopted and revised from P. Morrison, "Making Managers of Engineers," Journal of Management in
Engineering, Vol. 2, No. 4 (1986)
Executives
Mid-Level Positions
Technical Contributor
Mid-level Positions
Dual Ladder System
(1) Technical (senior
engineer, consultant,
associate, fellow)
(2A) Managerial (section
engineer, supervisor,
manager, director)
(2B) Project
Management (project
engineer, project
manager, manager,
director)
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Dual Ladder
Vice President
Director
Director
Fellow
Manager
Manager
Associate
Supervisor
Project Manager
Consultant
Section Engineer
Project Engineer
Senior Engineer
Staff Engineer
Engineer
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Mid-level Positions
Mid-level positions are equivalent in
ranking, mid-point salary and prestige
Technical Ladder is capped at the
Corporate Fellow level
Managerial ladder, including Project
Management positions, leads to
Executive level positions (vice
president, CTO)
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Mid-level Technical
Larger responsibility for programs of high
technical contents but no managerial duty
Add value by technical contributions,
innovations, and technology applications
Fellows are typically well-renowned both
inside and outside of the company for
technical expertise demonstrated in
patents, publications and commercial
success
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Mid-level Managerial
Larger responsibility of managing people,
tasks, capabilities, functions and programs
Devote increasingly less time on
technology work and more on managerial
work
Success Factors (1) Established technical
expertise, (2) Proficient in all management
functions, (3) Problem solving and conflict
resolution, (4) Strategic planning abilities
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Remarks on Mid-level
Positions
Technical ladder positions are less
quota-limited than the corresponding
positions in managerial ladder
Transfer from positions in technical to
managerial ladder is somewhat more
easier than the other way around
13
Work Contents
Change of work contents with
engineering career progression
First-line
Supervisor
Mid
Manager
Executive
Technical
70%
25%
5%
Managerial
25%
50%
25%
Visionary
5%
25%
70%
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16
17
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Managerial Competency
Managerial Competency
Knowledge
Skills
Political
Aptitude
Strong Will
to Manage
Strong Need
for Power
Strong Capacity
for Empathy
Handling Power
& Enterprise Politics
Technical
Conflict Resolution
Administrative
Leadership
Managerial
Motivation
Communications
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Question # 10.1
Silverman, author of The Art of Managing
Technical Projects, Prentice Hall (1978),
argues that our college engineering
curriculums might be a hindrance to
engineers wanting to move into
management, as they typically emphasize an
orderly, predictable and pragmatic view of
the world. Judging from the University at
Buffalos 30-credit engineering curriculums at
the Masters degree level, do you agree or
disagree with Silverman, and why?
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Characteristics
Managers
Leaders
Focus
Direction setting
Reconcile differences
Seek compromises
Maintain balance of Power
Emphasis
Innovative Approach
Targets
Goals, resources,
Ideas
Structures, people
Orientation
Tasks, Affairs
Risk taking
Persistence
Imagination
Short-term view
Long-term perspective
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Success Factors
Tough-mindedness
Perceptual capability
Hard work
Tolerance
Goodwill
Analytical capability
Points of Inquiry
Preference
Order, harmony
Aspiration
Own person
Favor
Routine
Unstructured
Personality
Team-player
Individualist
Relevance
Necessary
Essential
Thrust
Blend in
Stand out
Lead Changes
Achieve win-win
Mentality
Emotional Intelligence
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Question # 10.12
Everyone works for a boss in industry.
The boss factor is extremely important,
as it directly affects a persons career
progression. On the other hand, every
one has specific values, basic beliefs
and certain fundamental principles,
which must be honored and upheld all
the time and under any circumstances.
Are there guidelines on how to
effectively manage own boss?
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Question # 10.14
Some engineers
and managers are
known to have
more difficulties in
interpersonal
relations than
other. How can
they improve their
interpersonal
skills?
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Performance
Communications
Skills
Success
Factors
Human
Relations
Decision
Making
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Success Factors
(A) Performance - Make sure that
each and everyone of assignment is
done well - You are only as good as
your last performance.
(B) Personality - How one acts and
behaves is important. One should
project a mature, positive,
reasonable and flexible personality
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(Source: James F. Kacena, New Leadership Directions, The Journal of Business Strategy,
March/April 2002)
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References
48
Question # 10.3
Hoffman, author of Prescription for Transitioning
Engineers Into Managers, Engineering Management
Journal (September 1989), believes that a management
education program should have three elements:
(1) Behavioral People skills (motivation, team building,
communications and delegation).
(2) Cognitive (production, marketing, finance, control).
(3) Environmental (markets, competition, customers,
political, social and economical environment in which the
organization operates)
The first two elements appear to be self-evident. Explain
why the third element, the environmental, is important?
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Question # 10.4
How is engineering management
different from management in
general?
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Question # 10.5
How to become
a good boss?
What are things
the boss should
and should not
do?
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