+ All Categories
Home > Documents > 1.INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT 2.DESIGNING … TO... · 7.Herzberg’s Two Factor Theory Of...

1.INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT 2.DESIGNING … TO... · 7.Herzberg’s Two Factor Theory Of...

Date post: 06-Mar-2018
Category:
Upload: lythuy
View: 217 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
124
1.INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT 2.DESIGNING ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE 3.OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT 4.MATERIAL MANAGEMENT AND MARKETING 5.HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT 6.PROJECT MANAGEMENT 7.STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT 8.CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRACTICES MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Transcript

1.INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT

2.DESIGNING ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE

3.OPERATIONS MANAGEMENT

4.MATERIAL MANAGEMENT AND MARKETING

5.HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGEMENT

6.PROJECT MANAGEMENT

7.STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT

8.CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRACTICES

MANAGEMENT SCIENCE

1.INTRODUCTION TO MANAGEMENT

Entrepreneurship And Organization

1.Nature And Importance Of Management

2.Function Of Management

3.Taylor’s Scientific Management Theory

4.Fayol’s Principles Of Management

5.Maslow’s Theory Of Human Needs

6.Douglas Mcgregor’s Theory X And Theory Y

7.Herzberg’s Two Factor Theory Of Motivation

8.System Approach To Management

9.Leadership Styles

10.Social Responsibilities Of Management

1.NATURE AND

IMPORTANCE OF

MANAGEMENT

FUNCTION

OF

MANAGEMENT

3.Taylor’s Scientific

Management Theory

Frederick W. Taylor (1856- 1915)

• founder of scientific Management

• one of the first people to study the behavior and

performance of people at work

• was a manufacturing manager

• became a consultant and taught other managers how

to apply his scientific management techniques

• believed that by increasing specialization and the

division of labor, the production process will be more

efficient.

The systematic study of relationships between people and tasks for the purpose of redesigning the work process to

increase efficiency.

1. Study the way workers perform their tasks, gather all the informal job knowledge that workers posses, and experiment with ways of improving how tasks are performed.

2. Codify the new methods of performing tasks into

written rules and standard operating procedures.

3. Carefully select workers who possess skills and abilities that match the needs of the task, and train them to perform the task according to the established rules and procedures.

4. Establish a fair or acceptable level of performance for a task, and then develop a pay system that provides a reward for performance above the acceptable level.

Rather than sharing performance gains with workers through bonuses, only increased the amount of work that each worker was expected to do.

Unhappy workers: more work but same pay; increase in performance meant fewer jobs and greater layoffs; dissatisfied with monotonous and repetitive jobs.

Managers did not care about the workers’ well beings

Workers withheld job knowledge to protect their jobs and pay.

Workers develop informal work rules that discourage high performance .

Increased mechanization of the work process.

Example: Henry Ford introduced moving conveyor belts in factory. Machine imposed pace to push employees to perform at higher levels.

The combination of 2 management practices: 1) achieving the right mix of worker task specialization and 2) linking people and tasks by the speed of the production line =savings in cost and increase in output.

Introduction to ethical issues in work places.

4.Fayol’s

Principles

Of Management

5.Maslow’s

Theory Of

Human Needs

6.Douglas Mcgregor’s

Theory X And Theory Y

7.Herzberg’sTwo

Factor Theory Of

Motivation

8.System Approach

To Management

9.Leadership Styles

10.

Social Responsibilities

Of Management


Recommended