Manager Development
By: Top • Research Paper • 1,351 Words • December 15, 2009 • 1,136 Views
Essay title: Manager Development
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT 3C
(MANAGER DEVELOPMENT/BUM 321)
ASSIGNMENT 1
Question 1
a)
The roles of management are the four basic management functions (planning, organising, leading and controlling) and six additional management functions (decision making, communication, coordination, delegation and disciplining). The basic management functions are the most important steps in the management process and are performed consecutively during each activity during the simultaneous performance of different elements of the management function. The six additional management functions are usually performed in some or other combination with the four basic management functions.
Planning
The first phase of planning involves a conscious deliberation and visualisation of what the business and its departments should achieve within a particular time in order to be successful despite the uncertainty of the future.
It comprises environmental scanning of the future circumstances and the formulation of goals (long term) and objectives (short term) in every area where performance or results are expected.
The second phase of planning concerns the drifting of a realistic, feasible plan which spells out the activities that have to be executed and the resources that will be required to reach the stated objectives and goals.
Besides environmental scanning and objective setting, planning also includes policy formulation and interpretation and the establishment of programmes, schedules, procedures and methods, budgets, standards, rules and regulations.
Organising
Organising deals with the grouping and allocation of activities to main functional divisions and subdivisions, as well as with the creation of posts within these division and determining their duties, authority and responsibilities. During this process an organisation structure is established which provides the structural framework of the business’s activities, its main and subdivision, formal lines of authority, channels of responsibility and communication, as well as the different management levels.
Staffing is mostly assigned to the human resource department; it mainly entails the recruitment, selection, placement, induction, training, promotion, transfer, demotion, termination of service and remuneration of personnel.
Leading
Leading is the process of influencing people in such a way that they will enthusiastically contribute towards the work activities in order to achieve the business’ goals as efficiently as possible.
Leading encompasses effective leadership, motivation and communication. It is a difficult and demanding task because people have to be activated each individual has his or her own attitudes, personality, perceptions and frame of reference. Each person is unique because needs, ambitions, expectations, attitudes, knowledge, skills, potential and backgrounds differ.
In order to be a good leader, each manager should be thoroughly aware of these differences. The challenge for the manager is to create conditions that will allow the individual to best reach his own goals and then to guide this attempt to simultaneously achieve the goals of the business.
Controlling
Controlling is the process by which the execution of plans and instructions can be recorded and controlled through a management information system. Feedback of the actual performance can be compared with the standards and objectives set during the planning.
In this way deviations can be determined and corrective steps taken to ensure that the business or department will, as far as possible, reach its stated standards and objectives. Task control is to ensure that the carefully structured plans are not upset because of various problems, such as insufficient or unusable inventory and conflict with workers. This feedback or knowledge of results is used in the new planning cycle and in this way mistakes can be eliminated or reduced.
The behaviours of a successful manager in a dynamic work environment are:
To understand and predict environmental changes
Managers feel more comfortable when we can understand why organisational events occur and accurately anticipate future events. It helps them at some extent predict what people will do under various conditions.
Influence