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collections of people that work together and coordinate their actions to achieve a wide variety of goals or desired future outcomes |
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the planning, organizing leading and controlling of human and other resources to achieve organizational goals efficiently and effectively |
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organizational performance(Ch 1) |
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a measure of how efficently and effectively a manager uses resources to satisfy customers and achieve organizational goals. |
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a measure of how well of how productively resources are used to achieve a goal |
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a measure of appropriateness of the goals an organization is pursuing and the degree to which the organization achieves those goals |
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essential managerial tasks (Ch 1) |
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planning, organizing, leading, controlling |
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identifying and selecting appropriate goals |
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a cluster of decisions about what goals to pursue, what actions to take and how to use resources to achieve goals |
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structuring working relationships in a way that allows organizational members to work together to achieve organizational goals |
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organizational structure (Ch 1) |
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a formal system of task and reporting relationships that coordinates and motivates organizational members so they work together to achieve organizational goals |
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articulating a clear vision and energizing and enabling organizational members so they understand the part they play in achieving organizational goals. |
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evaluating how well an organization is achieving its foals and taking action to maintain or improve performance |
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Mintzberg's Typology (Ch 1) |
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the identification of 10 roles that capture the nature of managerial work |
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Includes entrepreneur, disturbance handler, resource allocator, negotiator |
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Interpersonal Type (Ch 1) |
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Includes figurehead, leader, liaison |
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Informational Type (Ch 1) |
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Includes monitor, disseminator, spokesperson |
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a group of people who work together and possess similar skills or use the same knowledge, tools, or techniques to perform their jobs |
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first-line manager (Ch 1) |
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a manager who is responsible for the daily supervision of nonmanagerial employees |
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a manager who supervises first-line managers and is responsible for finding the best way to use resources to achieve organizational goals |
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a manager who establishes organizational goals, decides how departments should interact, and monitors the performance of middle managers |
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top management team (Ch 1) |
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a group composed of the CEO, COO, President, and the heads of the most important departments |
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the ability to analyze and diagnose a situation and to distinguish between cause and effect |
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the ability to understand, alter, lead and control the behavior of other individuals and groups |
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the job-specific knowledge and techniques required to perform an organizational role |
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the specific set of departmental skills, knowledge and experience that allows or organization to outperform another |
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downsizing and organization by eliminating the jobs of large numbers of top, middle and first-line managers and nonmanagerial employees (sooo...everyone?) |
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contracting with another company, usually abroad, to have it perform an activity the organization previously performed itself |
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the expansion on employees' knowledge, tasks and decision-making responsibilities |
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a group of employees who assume responsibility for organizing, controlling, supervising their own activities and monitoring the quality of the goods and services they provide |
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global organizations (Ch 1) |
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organizations that operate and compete in more than one country |
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competitive advantage (Ch 1) |
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the ability of one organization to outperform others because it produced desired goods or services more efficiently and effectively |
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the process of creating new or improved goods and services or developing better ways to produce or provide them |
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turnaround management (Ch 1) |
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the creation of a new vision for a struggling company based on a new approach to planning and organizing to make better use of a company's resources and allow it to survive and prosper |
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the process by which a division of labor occurs as different workers specialize in different tasks over time |
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scientific management (2) |
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the systematic study of relationships between people and tasks for the purpose of redesigning the work process to increase efficiency |
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administrative management(2) |
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the study of how to create an organizational structure and control system that leads to high efficiency and effectiveness |
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a formal system of organization and administration designed to ensure effectiveness and efficiency |
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the power to hold people accountable for their actions and to make decisions concerning the use of organizational resources |
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unwritten, informal codes of conduct |
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standard operating procedures (SOPs)(2) |
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specific set of written instructions about how to perform a certain aspect of a task |
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CEO of Comambault Mining, developer of the 14 principles of management |
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developed principles of bureaucracy |
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a reporting relationship in which an employee receives orders from, and reports to, only one superior. (Fayol) |
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the chain of command extending from the top to the bottom of an organization (Fayol) |
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the concentration of authority at the top of the managerial hierarchy (Fayol) |
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the singleness of purpose that makes possible the creation of one plan or action to guide managers and workers as they use organizational resources (Fayol) |
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the justice, impartiality, and fairness to which all organizational members are entitled (Fayol) |
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the methodical arrangement of positions to provide the organization with the greatest benefit and to provide employees with career opportunities (Fayol) |
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the ability to act on one's own without direction from a superior (Fayol) |
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obedience, energy, application, and other outward marks of respect for a superior's authority (Fayol) |
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remuneration of personnel (2) |
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reward systems including bonuses and profit-sharing plans (Fayol) |
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stability of tenure of personnel (2) |
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long-term employment (Fayol) |
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subordination of individual interests to the common interest(2) |
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the interests of the organization must take precedence over the interest of any individual or group for the organization to survive (Fayol) |
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shared feelings of comradeship, enthusiasm or devotion to a common cause (Fayol) |
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mother of mamangement, developed behavioral management |
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developer of scientific management |
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the finding that a manager's behavior or leadership approach can affect workers' level of performance |
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human relations movement(2) |
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a management approach that advocates the idea that supervisors should receive behavioral training to manage in ways that elicit cooperation and productivity |
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the system of behavioral rules and norms that emerge in a group |
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organizational behavior(2) |
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the study of the factors that have an impact on how individuals and groups respond to and act in organizations |
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a set of negative assumptions about workers that leads to micromanaging |
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a set of positive assumptions about workers that leads to creation of goals, self-direction and imaginative workers |
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management science theory(2) |
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an approach to management that uses rigorous quantitative techniques to help managers make maximum use of organizational resources (MIS, TQM, Ops Man, QM) |
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organizational environment(2) |
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set of forces and conditions that operate beyond an organization's boundaries but affect a manager's ability to acquire and utilize resources |
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a system that takes in resources from its external environment and converts them into goods and services that are then sent back to that environment for purchase by customers. |
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a system that is self contained and thus not affected by changes occurring in its external environment |
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the tendency of a closed system to lose its ability to control and thus fall apart |
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performance gains that result when individuals and departments coordinate their actions |
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the idea that the organizational structures and control systems managers choose depend on characteristics of the external environment in which it operates |
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mechanistic structure (2) |
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an organizational structure in which authority is centralized, tasks and rules are clearly specified, and employees are closely supervised |
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Definition
an organizational structure where authority is decentralized to middle and first line managers, and tasks and roles are left ambiguous to encourage employees to cooperate and respond quickly to the unexpected |
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