Unit (1) Introduction
Unit (1) Introduction
Unit (1) Introduction
Definitions and
Concepts
LEARNING OUTLINE
.
Who Are Managers?
Why Study Management?
What Is Management?
What Do Managers Do?
What Is An Organization?
Who Are Managers?
• Manager is Someone who works
with and through other people by
coordinating and integrating their work
activities in order to accomplish
organizational goals not by himself but
through the workers.
• Management Roles approach
Interpersonal roles
Figurehead, leader, liaison
Informational roles
Monitor, disseminator, spokesperson
Decisional roles
Disturbance handler, resource allocator,
negotiator
Why Study Management?
The universality of management
Good management is needed in all
organizations.
The reality of work
Employees either manage or are
managed.
Rewards and challenges of being
a manager
Management offers challenging,
exciting and creative opportunities
for meaningful and fulfilling work.
Successful managers receive
significant monetary rewards for their
efforts.
What Is Management?
Efficiency
“Doing things right”
– Getting the most output for the
least inputs
Effectiveness
“Doing the right things”
– Attaining organizational goals
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Classifying Managers( managerial levels)
• Top Managers
Are responsible for making
organization-wide decisions and
establishing plans and goals that
affect the entire organization.
• Middle Managers
Manage the work of first-line
managers.
• First-line Managers
Are at the lowest level of
management and manage the work
of non-managerial employees.
Skills Needed at Different Management Levels
Technical skills
Knowledge and proficiency in a specific
field
Human skills or (Communication skills)
The ability to work well with other people
•Ability to transform ideas into words and
actions
•Credibility among colleagues and peers,
•Listening and asking questions
•Presentation skills; spoken format
•Presentation skills; written and/or graphic
formats
Conceptual skills
The ability to think and conceptualize
about abstract and complex situations
concerning the organization
What Is An Organization?
• An Organization Defined
A deliberate arrangement of people to accomplish some specific
purpose
• Common Characteristics of Organizations
Have a distinct purpose (goal)
Composed of people
Have a deliberate structure
The Organization as an Open System
Not-for-profit organizations
1- Leading the managers toward earning money
for the company, while managers in not-for-profit
direct their efforts toward generating some kind of
social or environmental impact.
• Innovation
Doing things differently, exploring new territory, and taking
risks
Innovation is important not only in the high tech firms but in all
kinds of the organizations.
Managers should encourage employees to be aware of and
act on opportunities for innovation.
The Changing Organization
Managing Crises And Unexpected Events
Stay Calm
Be Visible
Put People before business
Tell the truth
Know when to get back to business
TRUE/FALSE QUESTIONS
1.Supervisors and foremen may both be considered first-line managers.
9.Technical skills become less important as a manager moves into higher levels of
management.
10. By using IT, managers can keep an eye on employees by maintaining a daily
authoritarian control over workers.
11. Managers get things done through the people of the organization.
12. Management is the art of getting things done through the manager himself.
13. Planning means defining goals for past organizational performance.
15. Leading is the use of influence, force employees to achieve the organizational
goals.
16. Providing leadership means discouraging other people to be and to do their
best for the organization.
17. Conceptual skills become less important as a manager moves into top
management.
18. Directing and motivating are part of the controlling function.
19. Effectiveness is the use of minimal resources, raw materials, money and
people to produce a desired volume of output.
20. Controlling means the assignment of tasks, the grouping of tasks into
departments and the assignment of authority and the allocation of all
resources across the organization.
MCQ
1. The lowest level of management is ____.
a. a non managerial employee
b. a department of research manager
c. a vice president
d. a first-line manager
17. The ability to work well with other people, both individually and in a group,
use _______.
a. technical skills
b. behavioral skills
c. planning skills
d. human skills
18. Technical skills include ______.
a. knowledge of and efficiency in a certain specialized field
b. knowledge of and proficiency in a certain specialized field
c. knowledge of and interest in a general field of endeavor
d. skill in and proficiency in a certain specialized field
19. Which of the following is true concerning technical and managerial skills?
a. Human skills and technical skills remain equally important as managers move
to higher levels.
b. Technical-skill needs remain necessary and human skills decrease as
managers move to higher levels.
c. Human skills remain necessary and technical-skill needs decrease as managers
move to higher levels.
d. Both human-skill and technical-skill needs decrease as managers move to
higher levels
20. A human resource manager attending a local Society for Human Resource
Management meeting would be functioning in which role?
a. informational
b. leader
c. liaison
d. disseminator
21. A manager’s success is typically _______________.
a.dependent on how hard the manager works
b.how closely the manager supervises the employees
c.based on how skilled the manager is at the technical elements of the
job
d.dependent on others’ work performance
22. Being a manager in today’s dynamic workplace…….
a. provides numerous rewards and rapid advancement
b. can be a tough and thankless job
c. offers few challenges, short workweeks, and high pay
d. provides clear work rules, permanent jobs, and flexible work hours
23. Organizations that are well managed ______.
a. choose the best suppliers for their products
b.compete on an international basis because they have the best products
c.always have the lowest-cost products
d. develop a loyal customer base, grow, and prosper
24. A difference between traditional organizations and new organizations
is that the new organizations will be more
a.stable
b.command oriented
c.rules oriented
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