Limitations
Limited view of employees as resources without social needs
Pursuit of “one best way” (universal principles) to manage
“Control-oriented” approach creates an inflexible, mechanistic organization
Limitations
Limited view of employees as resources without social needs
Pursuit of “one best way” (universal principles) to manage
“Control-oriented” approach creates an inflexible, mechanistic organization
Limitations
Limited view of employees as resources without social needs
Pursuit of “one best way” (universal principles) to manage
“Control-oriented” approach creates an inflexible, mechanistic organization
Limitations
Limited view of employees as resources without social needs
Pursuit of “one best way” (universal principles) to manage
“Control-oriented” approach creates an inflexible, mechanistic organization
Fayols Principles of Management, Max Webers Bureacratic Model
Organizational behavior A field of study that investigates the impact that individuals, groups, and structure have on behavior within organizations, for the purpose of applying such knowledge toward improving an organizations effectiveness.
OB can be defined as the understanding, prediction and management of human behaviour in organizations. Philosophies and Approaches to Management Practice The evolution of Management thought a. Early strategists b. Scientific Management schools c. Classical organization theory school d. The behavioral school e. The systems approach f. The contingency approach The Scientific Management Movement In the late 19 th century management decisions were often arbitratry and workers often worked at an intentially slow pace. No systemantic management Scientific management was introduced in an attempt to create a mental revolution in the workplace. In the earlier part of the 20 th century a school of thought known as scientific management emerged.
Management which conducts a business or affairs by standards established by facts or truths gained through systematic observation, experiment or reasoning. Focussed on increasing labour efficiency and productivity primarily by managing the work of employees in the organizations technical core. Characterized by close forms of supervision and control oriented management practices. Systematic study of work methods in order to improve efficiency.
Scientific Management Pioneers 1) Charles Babbage (1792-1871) Advocated division of labour and job specialization Breaking up work into relatively narrow, standardized and repetitive jobs Promoted time studies to establish performance standards and rewards for exceeding standards.
2) Frederick Taylor (1856-1915) Believed in the science of work- the underlying laws, or principles, that govern various work activities. Believed in the economically motivated mutuality of interest of employees and managers. 4 principles Replace rule of thumb work methods with methods based on a scientific study of the tasks. Scientifically select, train and develop each employee rather than passively leaving them to train themselves. Provide Detailed instruction and supervision of each worker in the perfoemance of that workerss discrete task Divide work nearly equally between managers and workers, so that the managers apply scientific management principles to planning the work and the workers actually perform the tasks. Frederick Taylors scientif management prescriptions
Develop the science of work (one best way). Scientifc method to work in order to determine the best method for accomplishing each task. Emphasize an absolute adherence to work standards. Management should take complete responsibility for planning the work and that workers primarily responsibility should be implementing managements plans. Scientifically select, place, and train workers
Apply a financial incentive system.
Monetary awards are a source of motivation. Utilize specialized functional supervision.
3)The Gilbreths Frank Gilbreth (18681924) and Lillian Gilbreth (18781972) pioneers of time and motion study. to describe the motions (therbligs) used in the performance of a job With the use of motion picture cameras, the Giberths found the most efficient and economical motions for each task thus reducing and upgrading production.
4)Henry Gantt (18611919) Developed the Gantt chart to summarize work activities and identify those tasks that should be performed simultaneously or sequentially. Advocated a minimum-wage-based incentive system and bonuses for work above and beyond the expected standard by employees. Proposed a bonus system for supervisors to encourage them to manage subordinates effectively. Drawbacks of Scientific Management 1) While scientific management principles improved productivity and has a substantial impact on industry, they also increased the monotony of work. The core job dimensions of skill variety, task identity, task significance, autonomy and feedback all were missing from the picture of scientific management. Criticism Workers Viewpoint 1. Unemployment- Workers feel that management reduces employment opportunities from them through replacement of men by machines and by increasing human productivity less workers are needed to do work leading to chucking out from their jobs. 2. Exploitation- Workers feel theu Administrative Management and the Bureaucratic Organization Organizations were viewed as giant machines created to achieve goals. A basic set of universal laws, or principles should govern organization design and allow managers to run those machines effectively.
Henri Fayol (18411925) - Real father of modern management theory Believed that all managers perform five managerial functions: Planning Organizing Commanding Coordinating Controlling
Fayols Fourteen Principles 1. Division of labor 2. Authority 3. Discipline 4. Unity of command 5. Unity of direction 6. Subordination of individual interest for common good 7. Remuneration 8. Centralization 9. Scalar chain 10. Order 11. Equity 12. Stability of tenure 13. Initiative 14. Esprit de corps The Bureaucratic Organization Max Weber (18641920) Envisioned an organization managed on an impersonal and rational basis. Goals of the bureaucratic model: Speed Precision/accuracy Order Unambiguity/ no vagueness Continuity Predictability Structure of the Bureaucratic Model Division of labor (functional specialization) Well-defined hierarchy of authority (centralization of authority) Systems of rules for employees and work procedures Impersonal organizational relationships Selection and promotion solely on competence Career employment and well-defined promotion path to top of organization Organizational transactions extensively documented Contributions and Limitations Contributions Prescriptions for how to manage organizations Search for one best way to manage to lead to greater organizational efficiency Spurred additional research into management and organizational systems Limitations Limited view of employees as resources without social needs Pursuit of one best way (universal principles) to manage Control-oriented approach creates an inflexible, mechanistic organization