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Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By: Dr . Obi Berko School of Management University of Ghana

Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By: Dr . Obi Berko

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Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By: Dr . Obi Berko School of Management University of Ghana. 1) Quantitative Management. Introduction quantitative perspective of management focuses on the most efficient and effective ways of utilizing resources. In - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3Evolution of Management

Thinking – Part 2By:

Dr . Obi BerkoSchool of Management

University of Ghana

Page 2: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

1) Quantitative ManagementIntroductionquantitative perspective of management focuses on themost efficient and effective ways of utilizing resources. Inadopting this approach there are three main branches.

1. Management science management science uses statistics and mathematics

to advise managerial decision-making. this approach uses forecasting models, linear

programming, cost volume profit analysis, standard costing, marginal costing, and distribution models amongst other tools as a means of identifying options, assessing risk and determining the potential outcomes.

Page 3: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Management Science Cont.’

2. Operations managementThis branch of quantitative management considers those areas with primary responsibility for managing the production and delivery of products and services. It considers all aspects of the process from inventory through to distribution and looks for improving both the efficiency and the effectiveness.

Examples1)Reorder level2)Maximum and Minimum re-order level3)Economic order quantity

Page 4: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Management Science Cont.’

3. Management information systemsThis is perhaps the most rapidly-developing field of management science, largely due to the speed of technological developments and innovation. It focuses on the design and implementation of computer-based information systems.

1)JIP & Production2)E-Procurement

Page 5: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

2) The systems approach2) The systems approach

Attempts to reconcile the classical and human Attempts to reconcile the classical and human relations approachesrelations approaches

Attention is focused on:Attention is focused on:• the total work of the organisationthe total work of the organisation• the inter-relationships of structures & behaviourthe inter-relationships of structures & behaviour• the range of variables within the organisationthe range of variables within the organisation

The organisation is viewed within its total The organisation is viewed within its total environment and the importance of multiple environment and the importance of multiple channels in interaction is emphasisedchannels in interaction is emphasised

Page 6: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

System Approach Assumption1) The System Approach views the organization as a

unified, purposeful system composed of interrelated parts.

2) The focus of this system is that the managers cannot function only within their departments but they have to communicate and interact with departments and also with representatives of other organizations as well.

3) This approach analyzes the entire activities of an org. in terms of system inputs, processing and outputs to develop operational efficiency.

Page 7: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Main Features of a system Theory Managing Systems

– System - a set of interrelated and interdependent parts arranged in a manner that produces a unified whole• provides a more general and broader

picture of what managers do than the other perspectives provide

–Closed system - not influenced by and do not interact with their environment

1-1-77

Page 8: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Main Features of a system Theory Managing Systems

–Open system - dramatically interact with their environment• organizations - take in inputs from their

environments–transform or process inputs into

outputs–outputs are distributed into the

environment 1-1-88

Page 9: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Open systemsOpen systems are those systems that interact with the environment, using inputs from the outside and passing products and services back into the external environment. In general, the modern view of organizations is that they should, as far as possible, be open systems capable of monitoring and adapting those aspects of their environment that can provide access to opportunities and eliminate threats.

It is important to remember, the contingency perspective, whereby there is never one best way for organizations to behave in all situations.

Open system organizations adopt what Paul Strebel terms either an anticipator or an initiator role with regards to environmental change.

Page 10: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Paul Strebel (1990) described what he termed ‘discontinuities’ – sharp shifts of behaviour and organizations forced on companies by the environment in which they operate. The key factor is that the organization must manage any potential discontinuity by either avoidance tactics, reactive responses or proactive responses.

The anticipator role is approach in which the organization begins to convert the status quo into change agents as soon as environmental change is detected. The initiator role involves outpacing the opposition and then creating environmental change by triggering smaller incremental environmental changes.

Page 11: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Closed systemsClosed systems operate in organizations that place emphasis on internal efficiency.

Whilst it is almost impossible to do without some contact with the external environment, closed systems organizations minimize that contact by concentrating on establishing tightly-defined systems within. Moving towards an almost scientific management approach.

Closed systems organizations tend to use avoidance of adaptive responses to changes in the external environment.

Page 12: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Environment

Organization

Organizational Systems Organizational systems can be seen from two perspectives, open systems and closed systems.

Environment

Organization

Open system Closed system

Page 13: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

System

The Organization As An Open System

TransformationEmployee’s work activitiesManagement activitiesTechnology and operations methods

OutputsInputsRaw materials

Human resourcesCapital

TechnologyInformation

Products and servicesFinancial results

InformationHuman results

Environment

Environment

Feedback

1-1-1313

Page 14: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Inputs Transformation Process Output

Feedback

Page 15: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

InputsInputs are the resources required to enable the transformation process the desired outputs. Inputs should be considered from three perspectives:

•Physical resources:People,Space and time,Materials

•Technological resources:Equipment and machinery, Information

•Cognitive resources:Knowledge, Skills and abilities.

Page 16: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Transformation Process

A transformation process is the mechanism that brings about the conversion of the inputs into the outputs. In manufacturing terms this is clearly the production of the product; in service and or management terms, the transformation process involves the use of managerial and technical skills and abilities to produce the desired outcome.

Page 17: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Outputs

Outputs are the end products (or services). They are the reason for the existence of the entire process. For any system to continue to work effectively, there needs to be an integrated mechanism for feeding back to the input stage and transformation process, the degree of success, accuracy and conformance to standards of the ultimate output.

Page 18: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Implications of the Systems Approach

• Coordination of the organization’s parts is essential for proper functioning of the entire organization.

• Decisions and actions taken in one area of the organization will have an effect in other areas of the organization.

• Organizations are not self-contained and, therefore, must adapt to changes in their external environment.

Page 19: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

3) The Contingency Approach

• Contingency Approach Defined

– Also sometimes called the situational approach.

– There is no one universally applicable set of management principles (rules) by which to manage organizations.

– Organizations are individually different, face different situations (contingency variables), and require different ways of managing.

Page 20: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Contingency Theory Developed in the 1960s, the contingency theory moves

away from the idea that there is one best way to manage organizations. Contingency theory asserts that the best way to manage in any given situation is dependant on the characteristics of that situation.

Different situations require different practices which may or may not contain a few or many of the elements of the management school of thought we have already considered.

The contingency approach is based on managers assessing the situation and deciding which approach is most likely to achieve the desired goals.

Page 21: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Activity 1

State some of the contingency variables

Page 22: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Hint: Activity 1:

1) Organization size

2) Technology level

3) Environmental uncertainty – physical factors

4) Individual differences

5) Firm age

6) Firm industry

7) Profit level

8) Location – country/region

Page 23: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Management theory – comparing Management theory – comparing Western & Japanese thinkingWestern & Japanese thinking

1960s – Western management lacked curiosity about competition from Japan, with British and European managers obsessed by American examples

1970 & 80s - many sought to emulate the characteristics of Japanese management

Japanese methods have produced:• high levels of teamwork• an atmosphere of innovative ideas• a willingness to continually improve (Kaizen)

Page 24: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

More Japanese Approach: Management in Action: More Japanese Approach: Management in Action: Japanese ManagementJapanese Management

Page 25: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko
Page 26: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

4) Current Trends and Issues

4.1) Globalization – Universal pressure4.2) Ethics – Moral management – child labour,

poor wages, 4.3) Knowledge Management – (management

of all skills’ set4.4) Learning Organizations (learning curves4.5) Quality Management ( robustness)

Page 27: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

2–27

Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)

4.1) Globalization– Management in international organizations– Political and cultural challenges of operating in a

global market

4.2) Ethics– Increased creation and use of codes of ethics by

businesses

Page 28: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

2–28

A Process for Addressing Ethical Dilemmas

Step 1: What is the ethical dilemma?

Step 2: Who are the affected stakeholders?

Step 3: What personal, organizational, and external factors are important to my decision?

Step 4: What are possible alternatives?

i.e implication of a decision

Step 5: Make a decision and act on it.

Page 29: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)

4.3) Knowledge Management– The cultivation of a learning culture where

organizational members systematically gather and share knowledge with others in order to achieve better performance.

4.4) Learning Organization– An organization that has developed the capacity

to continuously learn, adapt, and change.

Page 30: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Current Trends and Issues (cont’d)

4.5) Quality Management– A philosophy of management driven by continual

improvement in the quality of work processes and responding to customer needs and expectations

– Inspired by the total quality management (TQM)

– Quality is not directly related to cost

Page 31: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

2–31

What is Management Quality?

1) Intense focus on the customer

2) Concern for continual improvement

3) Monitoring idle time

4) Improvement in the quality of everything

5) Accurate measurement

6) Empowerment of employees

Page 32: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Advantages of different approaches / Advantages of different approaches / categorisationscategorisations

• Provides a setting in which to view the field of Provides a setting in which to view the field of managementmanagement

• Traces the major lines of argument developed by Traces the major lines of argument developed by different writersdifferent writers

• Provides a framework in which principles can be set and Provides a framework in which principles can be set and comparisons of management practice madecomparisons of management practice made

• Helps in organisational analysis and identification of Helps in organisational analysis and identification of problem areasproblem areas

• Enables managers to select those ideas which best suit Enables managers to select those ideas which best suit the requirements of their jobthe requirements of their job

Page 33: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

CaveatsCaveats

• The various approaches represent a progression The various approaches represent a progression of ideas and a pattern of complementary studiesof ideas and a pattern of complementary studies

• Not all writers can be neatly categorisedNot all writers can be neatly categorised• Whilst there may be acceptance of the need for Whilst there may be acceptance of the need for

a framework there is no agreement on its shapea framework there is no agreement on its shape

Page 34: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Activity 2

1) Which approach (es) is and/or are being used in your firm?2) Which of them have influenced your thinking?3) In your own private study compare and contrast these approaches

Page 35: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Summary of Some approaches Summary of Some approaches

Page 36: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Activity 3:

1)Identify ten situational influences which will have a direct bearing on the way in which you manage a particular situation.2)How do these impact your behaviour and your approach to people?

Page 37: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Activity 4: Case Study

The ‘Dictator of Detroit’ – Henry Ford (1863 – 1947)

The name Henry Ford is renowned for two reasons, firstly his approach to management practice and secondly, for his notion that ‘people could have any colour they wanted as long as it was black’.

Henry Ford was born to a farming family near Detroit, Michigan. By the age 28 he had decided against a career in farming and opted to become a mechanic – some advocates specifically to ease the workload of farmers. Henry ford loved machines, and spent the next two years of his life designing and building modes of transport. In 1893 he created his ‘gasoline buggy’ a machine which made so much noise that it frightened the horses.

Page 38: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Seven years later he teamed up with eleven associates and created the Ford motor Company. In 1908 the model ‘T’ was launched and, only twelve years later, every other car in the world was a model ‘T’ Ford. Henry Ford bought out his partners and had become a millionaire.

Henry Ford’s obsession with machinery became most apparent when he declared that machinery was the new ‘messiah’.

His factories were built around machines with men having to adapt to the demands of Ford’s mechanical systems. Ford himself is quoted as saying:

Page 39: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

‘We measure on each job the exact amount of room that a man needs……. This brings our machines closer together than any other factory in the world.

To a stranger they may seem piled right on top of one another, but they are scientifically arranged, not only in sequence of operations, but to give every man and every machine every square inch that he requires and if possible, not a square inch and certainly not a square foot more than he requires.

Our factory buildings are not intended to be use as car parks.’

Page 40: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Job designs were based on simplification and fragmentation. Sadly many of the workers on the assembly line of Ford’s Detroit plant could not tolerate that type of mundane and repetitive work. Even the move to use financial rewards (the $5 a day scheme) only reduced annual labour turnover from 423% in 1913, to 215% in 1919. Ford gain a reputation fro providing a mind-dulling, physically exhausting means of employment.

Discipline at work was harsh, and Ford integrated the concept of a moral code applicable outside the work environment. His belief that a man who lived ‘alright’ would work ‘alright’ founded the framework, and any employee caught gambling, drinking alcohol, smoking or engaging in sex outside of marriage was automatically excluded from the wealth-sharing scheme ($5 a day). His moral crusade extended to:

‘Making men as well as automobiles.’

Page 41: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

To operationalise new ideas, Ford created a sociological department, which systematically assessed the workforce against the specifications.

The results of the assessment were that by 1915, 90% of employees were deemed fit to qualify for the $5 a day. All staff were aware, however, that this would be withdrawn if any of the regulation was transgressed.

The ways in which Ford viewed organizational management are perhaps best emphasized by a quote from his autobiography. Ford proposed that man is best viewed as a machine, yet a business should not be viewed as a machine.

Page 42: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

It is a collection of people who are brought together to do work and not to write letters to one another. It is not necessary for any one department to know what any other department is doing.

If a man is doing his work he will not have time to take up any other work. It is the business of those who plan the entire work to see that all of the departments are working properly toward the same end. It is not necessary to have meetings to establish good feelings between individuals or departments.

It is not necessary for people to love each other in order to work together. Too much fellowship may indeed be a very bad thing, for it may lead to one man trying to cover up the faults of another. This is bad for both men.

Page 43: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Factories had no formal organizations, no specific duties attached to role or status, no succession or assumed authority, no red tape and no (or as little as possible) interpersonal contact. All work was pre-planned and all activities prescribed – nothing happened without the knowledge and permission of Henry Ford.

As company profitability increased, Henry Ford’s obsessional and over-zealous approach also increased. His glory in self-aggrandisement, however, had a darker side and his sensitivity to criticism made him increasingly suspicious. To remedy this situation he appointed Charles Sorensen as factory superintendent and Ernest Liebold as his private secretary. Both men with markedly authoritarian personalities.

Page 44: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Charles Sorensen, or iron Charlie’ as he became known, was soon the most feared man in the organization. In 1921, (under orders from Henry Ford) he increased the speed of the assembly line by 100%, whilst at the same time reducing the workforce by 30%. The wages of those remaining were cut by 25%.

Ford’s managers were not immune. Between 1919 and 1922 the majority of the organization’s leading lawyers, engineers, designers and managers were either fired or forced to resign usually for questioning decisions made by Ford ‘s top three.

The maliciousness of these events is legendary. It was once reported that during a purge on office staff, one group of clerks returned after lunch to their office to find that all their desks had been hacked to pieces with an axe. A poster on the wall told them that they were no longer required.

Page 45: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

The sociological department was later replaced by a rigid service department, which eventually became the world’s largest private quasi-military organization. The ford private police force was established and in 1928, harry Bennett was made Chief.

By 1932 he was head of the service department where he was given a free hand to make sure the organization runs efficiently. Following true Ford tradition he hired criminals, disgraced policemen and even known gangsters. Nobody was allowed to smile or talk of the factory floor.

Page 46: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

The brutality of the servicemen was legendary, with night-time raids on the homes of employees being commonplace. These raids increased following new Ford edicts (1930 banning the consumption of alcohol at home, 1932 compelling all employees to grow potatoes). Employees, fearing for their own safety, often informed on one another. Nobody anywhere could be trusted.Henry Ford condoned the activities of Bennett and his army, doing nothing to stop their activities.

The Reverend Samuel Marquis, once the head of the disbanded sociological department is quoted as saying about Henry Ford: “he has in him the makings of a great man, the parts lying about in more or less disorder. If only Henry Ford were properly assembled! If only he would do in himself that which he has done in his factory.(adapted from Critical Cases In Organizational Behaviour by J. Martin Corbett)

Page 47: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

Requirement

1)Can Henry Ford be described as being a leader or a manger? Why?

2) How do leader affect the culture of organizations?

3)How did Ford build the organization to comply with his own desires for the future?

4) What contingencies or situational factors need to be taken into consideration when charting the progression of the Ford Motor Co?

5)What action would any new leader have to take in an attempt to try and reverse the established culture and behaviours in the Ford Motor Co?

Page 48: Week 3, Unit 3, Lecture 3 Evolution of Management Thinking – Part 2 By:  Dr . Obi Berko

End of LectureMany thanks