Management Concepts &
Organizational Behavior
Unit No : 01
Presented by: Prof. Pawan Sharma
Road Map
MBO
Planning
Social Responsibilities Of
Business
Introduction
Meaning Of Management
According to James A.F. Stoner “Management is the process of
planning, organizing, leading and controlling the efforts of organization
members and of using all other organizational resources to achieve stated
organizational goals”
Management is understood in different ways by different people.
Economists regard it as a factor of production. Sociologists see it as a
class or group of persons while practitioners of management treat it as a
process.
What is management?
Management as a Science:
Science can be defined as a systematic and organised body of knowledge based on logically
observed findings, facts and events. Science comprises of exact principles which can be verified
and it can establish cause and effect relations.
1. Systematic body of knowledge:
2. Scientific principles are derived on the basis of logical and scientific observations:
3. Principles are based on repeated experiments
4. Universal Validity
5. Replication is possible
Management as an Art:
Art can be defined as systematic body of knowledge which requires skill, creativity and practice
to get perfection. The main features of art are:
1. Systematic body of knowledge/Existence of theoretical knowledge:
2. Personalised application:
3. Based on Practice and creativity:
Management as a Profession:
1. Well defined Body of knowledge:
2. Restricted Entry:
3. Presence of professional associations:
4. Existence of ethical codes:
5. Service Motive:
Functions of Management- POSDCORB
POSDCORB is a word composed of the initials of the functions of the executives. POSDCORB is
developed by Luther Gulick. POSDCORB lists the functions of the executives according
to Luther Gulick who was a well known member of the classical school. POSDCORB includes
seven functions. According to POSDCORB model the seven functions of executives are as
follows:
LEVELS OF MANAGEMENT:
Managerial Skills
Management job is different from other jobs. It requires elements of stewardship
and commitment to the purpose. It involves the obligation to make prudent use of
human and material resources. It requires sound judgment to handle complex
situations.
Technical Skills
Technical skills refer to the ability to use the tools, equipment, procedures, techniques and
knowledge of a specialized field.
Human Skills
Human skills are primarily concerned with “persons” in contrast to “things”. When a manager is
highly skilled in employee relations, he is aware of their attitudes, assumptions, and beliefs and
recognizes their limitations as well as their usefulness.
Conceptual skills
It is also called design and problem-solving skills Conceptual skills extend to visualizing the
relation of the organization to industry, to the community and to the political, economic and
social forces of the nation as a whole and even to forces which operate beyond the national
boundaries
Social responsibility-Meaning and Scope
According to Keith Davis’ social responsibilities of business refers to “the
businessman’s decisions and actions taken to reasons at least partially beyond the
firms direct economic or technical interest”.
To quote Andrews, “ By social responsibility, we mean intelligent and objective
concern for the welfare of society that restrains individual and corporate behavior
from ultimately destructive activities, no matter how immediately profitable, and
leads in the direction of positive contribution to human betterment variously as the
latter may be defined”
Responsibilities to Various Groups:
Towards the Customers
Towards Employees
Towards Shareholders
Towards Creditors/Suppliers
Towards Government
Towards Society at Large
Planning
According to Allen, “A plan is a trap laid to capture the future.”
Principles of Planning
Systematic planning is essential for the success and survival of any
organization. Organizations fail not because they don’t plan, but because
they don’t plan in an effective way.
Take Time to Plan
Planning can be top down and bottom up
Involve and communicate with all those concerned
Plans must be flexible and dynamic
Evaluate and revise
STEPS IN PLANNING
a. Setting of goals
b. Outlining Planning premises
c. Decide the planning period
d. Develop alternatives and select the course of action
e. Derivative plans
f. Review periodically
MANAGEMENT BY OBJECTIVES
According to George Odiorne, “MBO is a process whereby the superior
and subordinate managers of an organisation jointly identify the common
goals, define each individual’s major areas of responsibility in terms othe
results expected of him, and use these resources as guides for operating
the unit and assessing the contribution of each of its members”.
The process of MBO includes the following steps:
Establishment of goals for the whole organization,
Preparation by subordinates, of specific goals within the framework provided by the
superior
Joint discussion of an agreement upon the goals by the superior and subordinate,
Joint review of progress at regular intervals in the light of the predetermined goals, and
Corrective measures, if necessary, as revealed by the review.
Policies
Policies provide the basic frame work within which managers operate. Policies
exist at all levels in the organization.
Some may be major company policies affecting the whole organization while
others may be minor in nature affecting the departments or sections within the
departments. Thus, policies are, intended to provide guidance to managers in
decision-making.
TYPES OF POLICES
1. Originated Policies
2. Appealed Policies
3. Implied Polices
4. Externally Imposed Policies
Principles of Policy Making
Policies help to ensure that all units of an organization operate under the same
ground rules.
1. Define the Business
2. Assess Future Environment
3. Ensure availability of Resources
4. Communicate the Policies
Decision Making
Decision-making in simple may be defined as “the selection of a future
course of action from among various alternatives’. It presupposes the
existence of various alternatives. It is in a way a choice between
alternatives
Types of Decisions
Decisions taken by managers may be classified under various categories
depending upon the scope, importance and the impact that they create in
the organisation. The following are the different types of decisions:
1. Programmed and Non-programmed Decisions
2. Operational and Strategic Decisions
3. Organizational and Personal Decisions
4. Individual and Group Decisions
Steps in the Decision-making Process:
Define the
Problem
Follow-up Analyze
and Feed the
back
problem
Select and
Develop
Implement
Alternatives
the Decision
Evaluate
Alternatives
Management Concepts &
Organizational Behavior
Unit No : 02
Presented by: Prof. Pawan Sharma
Road Map
Formal and
Informal
Impact of Organization
Technology
on Organizational
Decentralization design
Delegation of Authority
Organization
Structure
The organization chart of any company, therefore, enables one to
understand easily three classical principles of organizing, viz.,
Chain command,
Unity of command, and
Span of control.
Chain of
Command
The type of arrangement of various positions
in an orderly way is termed scalar chain or
chain of command.
The chain of command exists wherever an
individual is made subordinate to another.
Since ancient times, it has been recognized that
the only way to structure unified systems
involving large number of people is through a
chain of command
Unity of Direction
The entire organization
should be moving towards
a common objective in a
common direction.
Span of Management
The span of control of the average manager in
an organization determines the width of the
organization as seen when viewing the
organizational chart.
Fewer reports to the average manager will
result in a taller organizational chart, with more
management positions relative to the number
of individual contributors
Problems with levels
i. Costs: Levels are costly. Too many levels involve lot of expenditure. Additional facilities in
terms of secretarial staff have to be provided besides the pay differentials in the compensation
package. In many organizations substantial expenditure has been saved by increasing the span.
ii. Communication: Successive layers of management act as communication filters distorting
the transmission of information. Experience shows that the greater the number of management
levels a message must pass through, the longer it will take to reach its destination. More often,
the information also looses clarity. Thus, communication or organizational objectives, plans and
policies become difficult. Omissions and misinterpretations usually occur as information passes
through too many levels in the scalar chain.
iii. Managerial control: The distance between the top and bottom levels of an organization also
affects control. For example, even the best of the plans which are definite and complete at the top
level lose clarity as the plans are sub-divided and elaborated at lower levels
Factors Influencing Span of Managem
Manager’s personality Non-supervisory activities
Manager’s capability Similarity of activities supervised
Subordinates capabilities Complexity of work
Fatigue tolerance Availability of sophisticated
facilities
Activity level
Location
Departmentation
Departmentation is the process of dividing the organization’s overall task into manageable
submits. The subunits are often referred to as departments, divisions, or sections. By whatever
name the units are called, the process of creation of such sub-units to facilitate the performance of
activities is known as departmentation.
Functional Departmentation
Product/ Market
Departmentation
The Matrix Structure
Delegation Of Authority And
Decentralization
• Authority is the right to command. It is the discretion power vested
• with a manager to use the organizational resources. Managers acquire
• authority by virtue of the rank or title associated with their position.
Responsibility, on the other hand is the obligation to perform
• the tasks and accounts for their satisfactory completion. It is implied that
• an individual is expected to fulfill certain job requirements when he or
• she accepts a position in the organization.
Process of
Delegation
Entrustment of Duties or assignment of
Responsibilities
Granting of Authority
Creation of Accountability
Barriers to Effective Delegation
Lack of Confidence in Subordinates
The “I can do it better myself fallacy”
Lack of ability to direct
Aversion to Risk
Inadequate Information and Resources
Overcoming the
Barriers
Effective Communication:
Parity of Authority and Responsibility:
Incentives for additional responsibility:
Management Concepts &
Organizational Behavior
Unit No : 03
Presented by: Prof. Pawan Sharma
Objectives
Emerging Trends In Corporate Structure
Mechanistic vs Adoptive Structures
Impact of Technology on Organizational design
Formal and Informal Organization.
Learning
Personality
Motivation
Stress Management
Communication
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Emerging Trends in Corporate Structure, Strategy and
Culture
Less Number of Management Levels
Adhocracy and Porous Departments
Sharing Rather than Dividing of Resources
Strategy and Organization Design
Informal Organization and Culture
40
Mechanistic Vs. Organic Structures
• A mechanistic Design follows Weber’s bureaucratic model very closely in
that it is characterized by specialized activities, specific rules and procedures,
an emphasis on formal communication and a well-defined chain of command.
Because mechanistic designs tend to be inflexible and resistant to change,
this type of design is more successful in a stable environment. The U.S. Army
offers a good example of a mechanistic design.
• In an organic design, task activities are loosely defined. There are very few
rules and procedures, and great emphasis is laid on self-control, participative
problem solving and horizontal communication. Organic designs are more
successful in dynamic, rapidly changing environments that require
adaptability to change.
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Impact of Technology on Organization Design
• Joan Woodward
Unit and Small-batch Technology
Large-Batch and Mass-Production Technology
Continuous-Process Technology
James Thompson
Long-Linked Technology
Mediating Technology
Intensive Technology
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Formal And Informal Organization
Formal organization is “a system of consciously coordinted activities
or forces of two or more persons”. A formal organization is
deliberately designed to achieve specific objectives.
Informal organization refers to the relationship between people in
the organization based on personal attitudes, emotions, prejudices,
likes, dislikes, etc. These relations are not developed according to
procedures and regulations laid down in the formal organization
structure.
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Difference between formal and Informal Organization
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Continued …
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Learning
• Learning is any relatively permanent change in behaviour that occurs as
a result of experience. There are two important elements in learning:
A. Change must be relatively permanent.
B. The second element is that the change of behaviour should take place as
a result of some kind of experience relatively permanent
46
Learning Theories
• Classical Conditioning
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Operant conditioning
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Principle of Reinforcement
• Positive reinforcement is provided by offering rewards for desired
behaviours. Such rewards should be powerful and durable so as to
increase the probability of occurrence of desirable behaviour. Money, as
you understand, is the most powerful reinforcement for positive behavior
since money can be used for a number of other purposes.
• Negative ReinforcementIn negative reinforcement, an unpleasant event
that precedes the employee behaviour is removed when the desired
behaviour occurs. This procedure increases the likelihood of the desired
behaviour to follow.
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Personality
• According to Hogan, personality refers to the relatively stable
pattern of behaviours and consistent internal states that explain
a person’s behavioural tendencies.
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Determinants of Personality
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Theories of Personality
• Trait Theory Trait theory presents an approach to understand
personality. Many traits are common to most people. However,
there are many other traits that are unique to a person. It may be
remembered that traits are reactions and not what a person
possesses.
A person does not possess emotion but he acts emotionally in
some circumstances. One the basis of the traits, people may be
described as emotional, aggressive, loyal, creative, flexible,
humorous, sentimental, and impulsive and so on.
52
Psychoanalytical Theory
53
Social Learning Theory
• The social learning theory differs from the psychoanalytical
theory in two ways.
First, it is believed that personality development is more a
result of social variables than biological drives.
Secondly, motives can be traced to known and conscious needs
and wants rather than unconscious and latent desires
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Motivation
• Dubin has defined motivation as “the complex of forces
starting and keeping a person at work in an organisation.
Motivation is something that moves the person to action,
and continues him in the course of action already initiated”
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Theories of Motivation
Maslow’s Need Hierarchy Theory
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HERZBERG’S Two Factor theory of MOTIVATION
• A research was conducted by Herzberg and his associates based on the
interview of 200 engineers and accountants who worked for eleven
different firms in Pittsburgh area. These men were asked to recall
specific incidents in their experience which made them feel particularly
bad about jobs. And it was found that hygiene factors provide no
motivation to the employees, but the absence of these factors serves as
dissatisfies
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David Mc Clelland’s Three Need Model
59
Reinforcement Theory
An event is said to be reinforcing if the event following some behaviour makes the
behaviour more likely to occur again in the future. It involves the use of four strategies
to systematically reinforce and are discussed as under:
Positive Reinforcement
Negative Reinforcement
Extinction
Punishment:
60
Values
• According to Rokeach “values represent basic conviction that a specific mode
of conduct or end state of existence is personally or socially preferable to an
opposite or converse mode of conduct or end state of existence”.
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Types of Values
Values can be categorized on the basis of the level at which they operate.
These may be:
• -- Personal values which are formed from past experience and
• interaction with others;
• -- Cultural values which are the dominant beliefs held
• collectively society;
• -- Organizational values which are at the heart of organizational
• culture in terms of shared assumptions, values and beliefs; and
• -- Professional values which are held by the members of an
• occupational group.
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Attitudes
• An attitude is generally defined as the way a person responds to his or her
environment, either positively or negatively. Essentially, there are three
important attitudes concerned with job which are:
Job satisfaction,
Job involvement, and
Organizational commitment.
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Stress Management
Beehr and Newman define
job stress as “a
conditionarising from the
interaction of people and
their jobs and characterized
by changes within people
that cause them to deviate
from their normal
functioning”.
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Managing Work-Related Stress
REMOVE THE STRESSOR
WITHDRAW FROM THE STRESSOR
CHANGE STRESS PERCEPTION
CONTROL STRESS CONSEQUENCES
RECEIVE SOCIAL SUPPORT
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Communication
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Barriers of communication
• Ineffective Expression
• Inaccurate Translation
• Inattention
• Loss in Transmission
• Vague and Unclarified Assumptions
• Inadequate Adjustment Period
• Distrust
• Fear
• Noise, Distance and Time
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Management Concepts &
Organizational Behavior
Unit No : 4 & 5
Presented by: Prof. Pawan Sharma
Objectives
Group Dynamics
Leadership
Organizational Power & Politics
Organizational Structure, Climate And Culture
Organizational Change
Organizational Development (OD)
Managing Diversity
Japanese Management Practices
Creativity And Innovation
Benchmarking
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Group Dynamics
To quote David Smith “a group is a set of two or
more individuals who are jointly characterized
by a network of communication, a shared sense
of collective identity and one or more shared
dispositions with associated strength”.
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Types of Groups
i. Formal Groups
ii. Informal Groups
iii. Command and Task Groups
iv. Interest and Friendship Groups
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Theories of Group Formation
Propinquity Theory
Individuals affiliate with one another because of spatial or geographical
proximity. In an organization, employees who work in the same area of the
plant or office would more probably form into groups than those who are
not physically located together.
Homans’ Theory
According to George C. Homans, “The more activities persons share, the
more numerous will be their interactions and the stronger will be their
shared activities and sentiments: and the more sentiments persons have for
one another, the more will be their shared activities and interactions.
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Cont..
Balance Theory
The theory as proposed by Theodore Newcomb states that “persons are attracted
to one another on the basis of similar attitudes towards commonly relevant
objects and goals. Once a relationship is formed, it strives to maintain a
symmetrical balance between the attraction and the common attitudes. If an
imbalance occurs, attempts are made to restore the balance. If the balance cannot
be restored, the relationship dissolves.”
Exchange Theory
This theory is based on reward-cost outcomes of interactions. To be attracted
towards a group, a person thinks in terms of what he will get in exchange of
interaction with the group members. Thus, there is an exchange relationship in
terms of rewards and costs of associating with the group.
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Leadership
Louis A. Allen, “A leader is one who guides and directs
other people. He gives the efforts of his followers a
direction and purpose by influencing their behavior”.
Managers at all levels must perform leadership function
in order to lead the subordinates towards organizational
goals.
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Styles of Leadership
i. Autocratic leadership
ii. Participative leadership
iii. Free rein leadership; and
iv. Paternalistic leadership.
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Likert’s Management Systems and Leadership
• System 1 – Exploitative authoritative
• System 2 – Benevolent authoritative
• System 3 – Consultative
• System 4 – Participative (Democratic)
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Managerial Grid
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Organizational Power & Politics
The earliest definition of power is one given by Max Weber,
the famous Sociologist. He defines power as “the probability
that one actor within a social relationship will be in a position
to carry out his own will despite resistance”. Another definition
of power refers it to the ability to get things done despite the
will and resistance of others or the ability to win political fights
and outmaneuver the opposition
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Sources of Organizational Power
• There are four sources of power, namely,
position power (legitimate power),
referent power (personal powers),
expert power and
opportunity power.
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Bases of Organizational Power
• Coercive Power
• Reward Power
• Persuasive Power
• Knowledge Power
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Organizational Structure
Organizational structure provides the framework for managers
and others for performing the various functions expected of
them and for facilitating the work flow in the organisation. A
sound structure facilitates performance. The formal
Organizational structure has two ‘dimensions’.
They are: horizontal dimension and vertical dimension.
81
Organizational Climate
The term, ‘Organizational climate’ is defined as a relatively
enduring quality of the internal environment of an organisation
as perceived and experienced by its members, which can be
described in terms of specific dimensions or characteristics and
which influences the patterns of behaviour and work
performance of members
82
Factors Affecting Organizational Climate
• Organizational content
• Structure
• Process
• Physical Environment
• System Values and Norms
83
Organizational Culture
Organizational culture is the set of assumptions, beliefs,
values and norms that are shared by the members of an
organization. It may be consciously created by its key
members, or it may have simply evolved over time. It
represents a key element of the work environment in
which employees perform their jobs
84
Characteristics of organizational cultures
-- Stable
-- Implicit
-- Symbolic
-- Integrated
-- Accepted
-- A reflection of top management
85
Organizational Change
The term change in the organization context refers to any
alteration that occurs in the work environment. Planned changes
mean those changes which are effected in a planned manner
after assessing the need for change and working out the details
as to when and how they will be carried out. A planned change
is also called proactive change
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Sources of Resistance to Change
87
Change Process
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Organizational Development (OD)
Keith Davis defines OD “as an integrated strategy that uses
group process to focus on the whole culture of organization in
order to bring about planned change. It seeks to change beliefs,
attitudes, values, structures, and practices so that the
organization can better adapt to technology and live the fast
pace of change”.
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Process of OD
• Initial diagnosis
• Action planning and problem solving
• Team building
• Intergroup Development
• Evaluation and follow
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Benefits and Costs of OD
Benefits of OD: primary advantage of OD as a useful method of
organizational intervention is that it tries to deal with change in the
whole organization or major unit of it.
Limitations (or problems) of OD: It is time consuming and expensive.
Since benefits of OD require long pay-off periods, organizations may not
prefer waiting that long. There are problems of invasion of privacy and
psychological harm in some of the OD techniques
91
OD Programmes and Techniques
• Laboratory training methods:
(a) Role playing
(b) Gaming
(c) Encounter groups
• Transactional analysis: first introduced by Eric Berne, it
analyses the nature of people’s verbal interactions with each
other. The basic principle of TA is that each one of us operates
from three ego states and there are compatible and incompatible
messages we send to each other.
92
Cont
• The three Ego stages:
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MANAGING DIVERSITY
Diversity exists in a group or organisation when its members
differ from one another along one or more important
dimensions. It may be noted that diversity is not an absolute
phenomenon. It has to be viewed as a continuum. For instance,
if everyone in a group is exactly like everyone else, there is no
diversity. Similarly, if everyone in the group is completely
different from the other, it implies total diversity.
94
Reasons for Diversity
i. Changing Demographics
ii. To gain Competitive Advantage
iii. To meet the legal and regulatory requirements
iv. Globalization of Business
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Managing Diversity in Organisations
• Individual Strategies for Dealing with Diversity
• Understanding
• Empathy
• Tolerance
• Willing to Communicate
• Organizational Approaches to Managing Diversity
• Organizational Policies
• Organizational Practices
• Diversity Training
• Organizational Culture
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Japanese Management Practices
The Japan management system has three levels of attention: An overall
focus, general strategies and specific techniques.
Strategies Techniques
• i. Life time employment • i. Job rotation and slow
promotion
• ii. Organizational • ii. Complex appraisal system
philosophy • iii. Emphasis on work groups
• Open communication
• iii. Intensive • Consensus decision- making
socialisation • Concern for the employee
Creativity And Innovation
In Lawrence B. Mohr’s Woods, creativity implies “bringing
something new into being while innovation implies bringing
something new into use”. According to Rosabeth Kanter,
“Innovation is the generation, acceptance and implementation
of new ideas, processes, products or services”
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Climate for Organizational Creativity
• Accept change
• Encourage new ideas
• Tolerate failure
• Freedom to achieve
• Offer recognition
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Benchmarking
Benchmarking is defined as “measuring our performance against
that of best-in-class companies, determining how the best-in-
class
Achieve those performance levels and using the information as a
basis for our own company’s targets, strategies and
implementation.”
100
Approaches of Benchmarking
To compare one’s business practices with those of other
organizations, four common approaches to benchmarking are
adopted.
They are:
-- Internal benchmarking ,
-- Competitive benchmarking,
-- Non-competitive benchmarking, and
-- World-class benchmarking.
101
Types of Benchmarking
Three major types of benchmarking that have emerged in
business are:
i. Performance benchmarking or operational benchmarking,
ii. Process benchmarking or functional benchmarking, and
iii. Strategic benchmarking.
102
The Seven Step Benchmarking Model
Step 1: Identify what to benchmark
Step 2: Determine what to measure
Step 3: Identify how to benchmark
Step 4: Collect the data
Step 5: Analyze data and determine the gap
Step 6: Set goals and develop action plan and
Step 7: Monitor the process.
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THANK YOU
Presented by: Prof. Pawan Sharma