MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES T Brevis and M Vrba (editors) CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Editors 5#SFWJTr.7SCB Contemporary management principles First edition 2014 Print fourth edition 2014 © Juta and Company Ltd, 2014 1st Floor, Sunclare Building 21 Dreyer Street Claremont 7708 South Africa ISBN: 978 1 48510 229 8 (Parent) ISBN: 978 1 48510 427 8 (WebPDF) All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. Subject to any applicable licensing terms and conditions in the case of electronically supplied publications, a person may engage in fair dealing with a copy of this publication for his or her personal or private use, or his or her research or private study. See Section 12(1)(a) of the Copyright Act 98 of 1978. Project manager: Deidré Mvula Editor: Karoline Hanks Proofreader: Mariana Swart Typesetter: Hendali Steynberg Cover designer: Adam Rumball Indexer: Jennifer de Wet The author and the publisher believe on the strength of due diligence exercised that this work does not contain any material that is the subject of copyright held by another person. In the alternative, they believe that any protected pre-existing material that may be comprised in it has been used with appropriate authority or has been used in circumstances that make such use permissible under the law. Contents Preface ....................................................................................................................................................... About the authors ................................................................................................................................ viii ix PART I: INTRODUCTION Chapter 1 The evolution of management theory .......................................................................... 1.1 Why managers need to study the history of management theory ................................. 1.2 The classical approach to management ............................................................................ 1.3 The behavioural approach ................................................................................................ 1.4 Quantitative management theory ..................................................................................... 1.5 The quality movement ....................................................................................................... 1.6 Systems approach .............................................................................................................. 1.7 Contingency theory ........................................................................................................... 1.8 The information revolution ............................................................................................... 1 3 4 10 14 15 17 20 21 Chapter 2 The management process ................................................................................................ 2.1 Managers and management ............................................................................................... 2.2 Management and the management process ..................................................................... 2.3 Levels and areas of management ...................................................................................... 2.4 The role distribution of managers ..................................................................................... 2.5 Managerial skills .................................................................................................................. 2.6 Learning to manage successfully ........................................................................................ 28 29 30 36 39 40 43 Chapter 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges ......... 3.1 The changing face of contemporary organisations .......................................................... 3.2 Variables influencing contemporary organisations to change .......................................... 3.3 The classic model of the formal organisation ................................................................... 3.4 The new organisation model ............................................................................................. 46 48 49 55 56 PART II: MANAGEMENT IN A CHANGING ENVIRONMENT Chapter 4 Composition of the management environment .......................................................... 4.1 The importance of the management environment and its impact on managerial decision-making .................................................................................................................. 4.2 Management theories and the management environment .............................................. 4.3 The structure and dynamics of the management environment ...................................... 4.4 Analysis of the management environment ....................................................................... 69 71 72 74 83 iii Chapter 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress ................................................. 5.1 Forces of organisational change ........................................................................................ 5.2 The dimensions of change ................................................................................................. 5.3 Resistance to change .......................................................................................................... 5.4 Overcoming resistance to change ..................................................................................... 5.5 Approaches to change ....................................................................................................... 5.6 Areas of organisational change .......................................................................................... 5.7 Managing work stress .................................................................................................... 90 92 96 97 98 101 103 104 Chapter 6 Corporate culture .............................................................................................................. 6.1 The concept of culture ...................................................................................................... 6.2 Organisational culture ........................................................................................................ 6.3 The levels of culture .......................................................................................................... 6.4 The different cultures evident in a business organisation ................................................. 6.5 The elements of culture .................................................................................................... 6.6 Types of culture ................................................................................................................. 6.7 Changing organisational culture ......................................................................................... 116 118 118 120 122 124 126 128 Chapter 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation .................................................... 7.1 Power .................................................................................................................................. 7.2 Interests .............................................................................................................................. 7.3 Influence tactics and taking political action ........................................................................ 7.4 Conflict management ......................................................................................................... 7.5 Negotiation ........................................................................................................................ 134 137 144 145 148 152 Chapter 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance ......... 8.1 The components of ethical business ................................................................................. 8.2 Business ethics ................................................................................................................... 8.3 Corporate social responsibility ......................................................................................... 8.4 Corporate governance ...................................................................................................... 8.5 The King Report on Governance for South Africa .......................................................... 159 162 163 168 173 175 Chapter 9 Workforce diversity .................................................................................................. 9.1 Dimensions of diversity ..................................................................................................... 9.2 Misconceptions of diversity ............................................................................................... 9.3 What is diversity? ............................................................................................................... 9.4 What is workforce diversity? ............................................................................................. 9.5 Reasons for the increased focus on managing workforce diversity ................................. 9.6 The need for diversity management in South Africa ....................................................... 9.7 Managing diversity .............................................................................................................. 9.8 Diversity training ................................................................................................................ 185 187 189 192 194 196 197 199 204 iv CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Contents PART III: PLANNING Chapter 10 Principles of planning ............................................................................. 10.1 The nature and importance of planning ............................................................................ 10.2 The benefits and costs associated with planning .............................................................. 10.3 Types of plan ...................................................................................................................... 10.4 Barriers to effective planning ............................................................................................. 10.5 Overcoming barriers to effective planning ........................................................................ 211 213 218 220 226 227 Chapter 11 Strategic management .......................................................................... 11.1 Strategy and strategic management .................................................................................. 11.2 The strategic management process .................................................................................. 233 235 237 Chapter 12 Decision-making .................................................................................... 12.1 Decision-making and the management process ............................................................... 12.2 The relationship between problems, problem-solving and decision-making .................. 12.3 Types of managerial decisions ........................................................................................... 12.4 Decision-making conditions ............................................................................................... 12.5 Decision-making models .................................................................................................... 12.6 Group decision-making ...................................................................................................... 12.7 Techniques for improving group decision-making ............................................................ 12.8 Tools for decision-making under various decision-making conditions ............................ 259 261 262 262 263 266 269 270 274 Chapter 13 Information management ..................................................................... 13.1 Information management and the decision-making process ............................................ 13.2 Managing information for sustaining competitive advantage ............................................ 13.3 The basic functioning of an information system ............................................................... 13.4 Characteristics and costs of useful information ................................................................ 13.5 Organising information systems ......................................................................................... 13.6 Classification of information systems ................................................................................ 13.7 Developing an information system .................................................................................... 282 284 286 287 289 290 291 298 Chapter 14 Project management ............................................................................. 14.1 The philosophy and meaning of project management ..................................................... 14.2 Perspectives of project management ................................................................................ 14.3 Key role players in project management ........................................................................... 14.4 The project management process ..................................................................................... 305 306 309 312 314 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES v PART IV: ORGANISING Chapter 15 Principles of organising ......................................................................... 15.1 Organising, organisation and organisational structure ..................................................... 15.2 The importance of organising ........................................................................................... 15.3 Designing an organisational structure ............................................................................... 15.4 Principles of organising ...................................................................................................... 15.5 Authority ............................................................................................................................ 15.6 The departmentalisation approach to organisation structure ......................................... 15.7 Designing jobs that motivate ............................................................................................. 15.8 Delegation .......................................................................................................................... 339 342 343 344 345 349 354 361 363 Chapter 16 Value chain and e-business .................................................................... 16.1 The internal value chain ..................................................................................................... 16.2 Optimising the value chain ................................................................................................ 16.3 Industry-specific value chains ............................................................................................ 16.4 The value system ............................................................................................................... 16.5 E-business ........................................................................................................................... 373 374 377 378 379 381 PART V: LEADING Chapter 17 Individual behaviour in organisations ................................................... 17.1 Individual personalities ....................................................................................................... 17.2 The Big Five personality dimensions ................................................................................. 17.3 Concepts about personality and work ............................................................................. 17.4 Perceptions ......................................................................................................................... 17.5 Emotional intelligence ........................................................................................................ 17.6 Values .................................................................................................................................. 17.7 Attitudes ............................................................................................................................. 17.8 Mars model of individual behaviour and results ............................................................... 17.9 Individual output ................................................................................................................ 393 396 398 399 401 403 405 407 408 411 Chapter 18 Work groups and teams ....................................................................... 18.1 Groups and teams .............................................................................................................. 18.2 Reasons why people join groups ...................................................................................... 18.3 Types of organisational group ........................................................................................... 18.4 Stages in group and team development ............................................................................ 18.5 Variables that influence group and team behaviour ......................................................... 18.6 Organisational teams ......................................................................................................... 18.7 Reasons why organisations use teams .............................................................................. 420 421 422 422 424 426 434 437 vi CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CONTENTS 18.8 Types of team .................................................................................................................... 18.9 Developing individuals into team members ..................................................................... 438 439 Chapter 19 Principles of leading ............................................................................... 19.1 Towards a definition of leadership .................................................................................... 19.2 Leadership and management ............................................................................................ 19.3 The components of leadership ......................................................................................... 19.4 Leadership approaches ...................................................................................................... 19.5 Contemporary approaches to leadership ......................................................................... 445 446 448 449 450 457 Chapter 20 Workforce motivation ........................................................................... 20.1 The nature of motivation .................................................................................................. 20.2 The motivation process ..................................................................................................... 20.3 The motivation theories .................................................................................................... 20.4 Money as a motivator ........................................................................................................ 20.5 Designing jobs that motivate ............................................................................................. 468 469 469 471 485 486 PART VI: CONTROLLING Chapter 21 Principles of control ............................................................................... 21.1 A definition of control ....................................................................................................... 21.2 The importance of control ............................................................................................... 21.3 The control process ........................................................................................................... 21.4 The levels of control .......................................................................................................... 21.5 Functional area control systems ........................................................................................ 21.6 Characteristics of an effective control system ................................................................. 493 496 497 497 499 507 513 Index ............................................................................................................................................. 517 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES vii Preface Contemporary management principles comprises 21 chapters covering a wide range of traditional and contemporary management principles and concepts and many examples illustrating how successful managers of 21st century business organisations apply theory to practice in their organisations. The underlying themes of the book are the changes and challenges facing modern organisations and the functions that managers perform to manage their organisations in an environment characterised by major, on-going change. Relevant opening case studies illustrate the practical application of the theoretical concepts discussed in the book and specific learning objectives provide a map of the essential management concepts that business management students need to understand and apply in the organisations where they work. The first chapter in Part I sets the stage for the remaining chapters, tracing the development of management theory from the Industrial Revolution to the Information Revolution, which paved the way for globalisation and the emergence of a global economy. In the second chapter, we introduce the reader to the management process and the concept of the organisation as an open system, in continuous interaction with its environment. The last chapter in Part I describes the emergence of new forms of organisation, which are developing in response to a rapidly changing business environment and are characterised as being flatter, more flexible, networked, global and more diverse than the traditional bureaucratic form of organisation. The business environment is the topic of discussion in Part II, which comprises six chapters, each focusing on a different aspect of managing organisations in a changing environment. The reader is first introduced to the components of business management and then to the different variables in the internal (micro-) environment of organisations, such as corporate culture, the role of power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation, managing business ethics, corporate social responsibility, corporate governance and sustainability and the managing of workforce diversity. Parts III, IV, V and VI focus on the traditional management functions of planning, organising, leading and control, with the emphasis on how managers apply these functions in contemporary organisations in order to achieve organisational goals. In addition to the traditional topics of planning, strategic planning, decision making and information management, a chapter on project management enhances the discussion on the various aspects of goal setting and planning. A chapter on value chain and e-business adds further value to the book as it promotes an understanding of the many aspects of contemporary business organisations. The authors December 2013 viii About the authors Prof Tersia Brevis is an associate professor in Business Management and the Chair of the Department of Business Management in the College of Economic and Management Sciences at the University of South Africa. Mari Vrba is a senior lecturer in Business Management in the Department of Business Management at the University of South Africa. Louis Botha is the founder and managing director of Davis & Dean South Africa, a rapid skills development company registered with the Project Management Institute. Prof Hellicy C. Ngambi is a professor in Business Leadership and the Vice-chancellor at Malungushi University in Zambia. Dr Minka Woermann is a lecturer in Business Ethics and Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy and the Head of the Unit for Business Ethics and Public Integrity in the Centre for Applied Ethics at Stellenbosch University. ix x PART I Introduction Chapter 1 The evolution of management theory Mari Vrba PART I: Introduction OPENING CASE The capitalist philosophers Through the ages, relatively few individuals rose above their contemporaries to shape the course of history in the context of the specific social, scientific and political settings of their time. Albert Einstein, Franklin Roosevelt – and closer to home, Nelson Mandela – are just a few individuals who achieved such status. Frederick Winslow Taylor is another example of an achiever whose name appears in history books. Taylor is widely considered to be the father of scientific management and although others made substantial contributions to this approach to management, it is Taylor’s name that is closely linked to the metaphor of a factory as a ‘machine’ and the mission to find the ‘one best way’ to manage. ‘Taylorism’ captivated the attention of management theorists in the United States of America, where Taylor’s influence was (and still is) substantial, but also in countries ranging from Germany and the Soviet Union to India and China1. Taylor was an engineer and a colourful personality who, by the time of his death in 1915 had gained the reputation of being an ‘enemy of the working man’2. A committee of the United States House of Representatives summoned him to defend his system of management in 1911. Conversely, in the context of the historical setting at the time, when the average educational level in the USA workforce was three years, Taylor’s ideas instigated a revolution that enabled workers to earn middle-class wages and achieve middle-class status. His ideas resulted in greater productivity, greater purchasing power, and the highest standard of living ever seen in the world3. Supporters of Taylor and his ideas say that he is the most popular target of modern management theorists to criticise. One critic described him as the ‘epitome of anachronistic management studies and dehumanising time-motion studies’4. This is an unfortunate presentation of Taylor’s work because the fundamental aim of his philosophy was to replace rule-of-thumb opinions with scientific study in a search for the best way to manage complex organisations. Ironically, this is precisely the goal 2 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES that contemporary managers strive to achieve. The human problems resulting from Taylor’s scientific method have been obvious ever since its inception. Taylor himself recognised the limitations of the scientific knowledge at his disposal and he understood that he was dealing with a human problem as well as with materials and machines. He readily admitted that ‘… the motives which influence men warrant serious studying’5. Viewed in their historical context and judged with reference to the intellectual framework and assumptions of the period in which he lived, Taylor’s ideas still have relevance for contemporary managers6. One example is fast-food chains that serve hamburgers and other standardised products. The food chains organise work in the smallest detail; they analyse the total process of production, determine the most efficient procedures, and allocate specialised duties to people trained to perform them in a very precise way7. It is true that scientific management discounted the value of human creativity. What sets current thinking apart from earlier management trends is the recognition that people are the source of the competitive advantage and the heart of the survival instinct that drives the most successful organisations in the twenty-first century. Outside units, including remote divisions, suppliers, and even customers, influence the decisions of top management, and teams or work groups are an integral part of organisational activity8. Globalisation, the increasing complexity of markets and production systems, and the exchange of ideas across cultures have all helped the converging of the humanistic and scientific tracks of management9. This trend is meaningful as it also recognises that, for capitalism to succeed globally, it must be bearable for society – markets are sustainable because social and political institutions underpin them. The success of capitalism will continue to rest on the example set by business organisations, and increasingly by that of global organisations. A new band of twenty-first century managers are shaping and developing these organisations’ views and leadership10. CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of the history of management theory, from the Industrial Revolution to the point where the world has entered another revolution, the Information Revolution, which developed in the context of a global economy. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Explain why managers need to study the history of management theory. 2. Discuss the important contributions made by Frederick W Taylor, Max Weber and Henri Fayol to management theory. 3. Distinguish between human relations, human needs, motivation, and the integration phases of the behavioural approach to management. 4. Explain why the quantitative approach to management emerged and how it led to the focus on quality. 5. Discuss the contributions of W Edwards Deming, Joseph M Juran and Philip B Crosby to the quality approach to management. . Discuss the systems approach to management and explain how systems thinking inƃuenced the Ƃeld of cybernetics and Peter 5engeos ideas on the learning organisation. . Discuss the contributions of Tom Burns, )eorge M 5talker, Paul .awrence, Jay .orsch, Joan Woodward, and Alfred Chandler to the contingency approach to management. 8. Describe the three revolutions that took place since the late eighteenth century and explain how the Information Revolution changed the business environment of organisations. 1.1 WHY MANAGERS NEED TO STUDY THE HISTORY OF MANAGEMENT THEORY When studying the evolution of management theory, one recurring theme is that management theorists have developed numerous responses to the same basic management question: What is the best way to manage an organisation? The reason why this question elicited so many different responses is that one should see the proposed ‘best’ ways to manage organisations in the context of the social, political, economic, technological, international and ecological forces that affect organisations (and society) at any specific time. As these forces change, so do the theories on management, adjusting to changing circumstances in the environment. This chapter reviews the major approaches to management since the beginning of the twentieth century. A study of these approaches is the basis for understanding the practice of management today. Management theorists distinguish between six various approaches to management that had evolved since the 1890s, namely the classical, behavioural, quantitative, systems, contingency and quality approaches to management. Many of these major approaches still influence management thinking today, but towards the end of the previous century, new approaches emerged because of the major changes occurring in the environment since then. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Explain why managers need to study the history of management theory. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 3 PART I: Introduction 8IZEPXFTUVEZIJTUPSZ ‘Today is not like yesterday, nor will tomorrow be like today, yet today is a synergism of all our yesterdays, and tomorrow will be the same. There are many LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Discuss the important contributions made by Frederick W Taylor, Max Weber and Henri Fayol to management theory. lessons in history for management scholars, and the most important one is the study of the past as prologue’11. 1.2 THE CLASSICAL APPROACH TO MANAGEMENT The Industrial Revolution had a considerable impact on the development of management theory. The Industrial Revolution created extraordinary growth, resulting in the development of unique problems in Europe and the United States. In response to these problems, three management theories emerged, collectively known as the classical approach to management. The premise of the classical approach to management is that organisations are rational systems that should operate in the most efficient manner possible. The three management theories are scientific management, bureaucratic management and administrative (or process) management and they focus on different aspects of the organisation: 1. Scientific management – production efficiency 2. Bureaucratic management – the structure of organisations 3. Administrative management – the process and principles of management. 1.2.1 Scientific management UEKGPVKƂEOCPCIGOGPV scientific management focused on production efficiency A few individuals had a strong influence in the TDJFOUJųDNBOBHFNFOU area: Frederick Taylor, Frank and Lillian Gilbreth, Henry Gantt, Harrington Emerson and Morris L Cooke. Frederick W Taylor (1856–1915) Theorists often credit Taylor as the originator of the scientific management era, where in fact his crucial role in the development of scientific management was that he was the personification of an idea: ‘Scientific management was not an invention; it was a synthesis, a stage in evolving management theory. Taylor became the focal point for an idea. Scientific management was more than methods and time study; it was a much deeper philosophy of managing human and physical resources in a technologically advanced world where people had gained greater control over their environment than ever before. The Industrial Revolution had provided the impetus; Taylor provided the synthesis.’12 Taylor advocated five simple principles13: 1. Managers should carry the responsibility for the planning, design and organisation of work and workers should implement the work. This principle of separating the planning and design of work from its execution is the most criticised and far-reaching element of Taylor’s approach to management. 2. Use scientific methods to establish the most efficient way of doing work and design jobs by specifying the exact way the worker should do it. 4 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory 3. Select the best person to do the work. 4. Provide training to the worker to do the work. 5. Monitor the performance of the worker to make sure that it is in accordance with the prescribed procedures and that the worker achieves the specified results. Organisations first applied Taylor’s principles on the factory floor, but it spread to offices where the implementation of organisation methods and work-study projects were used to design work into specialised jobs and frequent performance evaluation. Although opponents of his ideas often accused Taylor of dehumanising and misusing workers because of his focus on designing jobs to strict performance standards, it remains the foundation of modern industrial engineering. At the heart of Taylor’s philosophy was his belief that organisations and their employees benefit from better designed jobs, more systematic work methods, higher productivity and efficient management processes. Underpinning his ideas of linking performance to reward, Taylor introduced the concept of piece-rate work whereby the organisation pays a worker for each piece of work the worker completes. The underlying principle of this idea is that workers who work harder earn more money and therefore are motivated to be more productive. Taylor’s contributions include the development of job analysis; time and motion studies; standardisation of processes; efficiency techniques and productivity measurements to track labour costs. He also advocated the provision of rest periods for workers and introduced the idea of training for both managers and employees. Henry L Gantt (1861–1919) Gantt, a consulting industrial engineer, focused his research on control systems for production scheduling and developed the still relevant Gantt chart for scheduling multiple overlapping tasks over a specific period. Gantt emphasised the importance of people and their motivation at work and developed motivational schemes that emphasised the greater effectiveness of rewards for good work (rather than penalties for poor work). He developed a pay incentive system with a guaranteed minimum wage and bonus system for people on fixed wages. Gantt was one of the first to recognise the role of the quality of leadership and management skills in effective industrial organisations. Frank Bunker Gilbreth (1868–1924) Frank Gilbreth was a pioneer in the field of motion study. His research focused on eliminating waste, reducing fatigue, and increasing worker productivity by finding ‘the one best way to work’. He identified 17 work elements and called them therbligs (his surname spelled backwards). His rules for motion economy and efficiency provide guidelines on planning jobs for maximum achievement by using minimum effort, through the effective interaction between job, worker and working environment14. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 5 PART I: Introduction Lillian Evelyn Moller Gilbreth (1878–1972) While her husband Frank was doing motion studies, Lillian Gilbreth, an industrial psychologist, studied individual workers and their performance under stressful conditions. She advocated standard working days, scheduled breaks and normal lunch periods. She brought about the cooperation between scientific management and applied psychology – a crucial step in the evolution of management thinking and practice15. Morris L Cooke (1872–1960) Morris L Cooke introduced the concept of efficiency to educational and municipal organisations and added fresh ideas to scientific management to develop cooperation between labour and management. He advocated more participation by workers and he appealed to leaders to assist organised labour16. While Taylor and people such as Gantt, the Gilbreths, and Cooke concentrated their work on improving the efficiency of individual workers, another pioneer of management theory during the scientific management era, Max Weber, focused his attention on organisational design. 1.2.2 Bureaucratic management DWTGCWETCVKEOQFGN a rational method of structuring complex organisations EJCTKUOCVKEQTICPKUCVKQP organisations with charismatic leaders who have exceptional powers or qualities 6 Max Weber (1864–1920) was born in Germany. He qualified in law and then became an academic. He remained an academic for the rest of his life, having an interest in the historical development of civilisations through studies of the sociology of religion and the sociology of economic life. Weber developed the CVSFBVDSBUJD NPEFM which is a rational method of structuring complex organisations. His aim was to define an ideal system where positions were well defined, the division of labour was clear, objectives were explicit, and a clear chain of authority existed. Weber’s major contribution to the study of organisations and their management was his theory of authority structures, which led him to characterise organisations in terms of the authority relations within them. This stemmed from his interest in the question of why individuals in organisations obey commands. Weber made a distinction between power (the ability to force people to obey) and authority (where those who receive orders obey them voluntarily). Under a system of authority, subordinates perceive the issuing of orders by superiors as legitimate. Weber distinguished between organisational types according to the way in which they ‘legitimise’ authority. He identified three pure types of legitimate (ie socially acceptable) authority, which he labelled charismatic, traditional and rational-legal17. Charismatic organisations The first pure type of organisation, according to Weber, is the DIBSJTNBUJDPSHBOJTBUJPO. These are organisations with charismatic leaders who have exceptional powers or qualities. Weber used the CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory Greek term ‘charisma’ to mean any quality of individual personality whereby the leader is set apart from ordinary people by possessing exceptional power or qualities. In this type of organisation, the authority in the organisation stems from the characteristics of one person, which is the basis of command. According to Weber, organisations managed by a charismatic leader have a built-in instability because the question of succession always arises when the leader leaves the organisation. It is unlikely that another charismatic leader will be present, and so the organisation loses its charismatic form and has to revert to one of the remaining types18. Despite Weber’s sketchy outline of charismatic leadership, his ideas so fascinated researchers, scientists and sociologists that they still explore the sources of a leader’s charisma. Research on the topic culminated over four decades to reveal what we know today about charismatic and transformational leaders (see Chapter 19). Traditional organisations Weber’s USBEJUJPOBM PSHBOJTBUJPO is one where subordinates obey people who occupy a formal position of authority. In such organisations, the basis of authority is a belief in the legitimacy of the status of the people who exercise authority and implies that because a person occupies a formal position of authority, subordinates should obey him or her. In Weber’s view, this type of authority is not efficient because it is based on custom and not on competence. Rational-legal organisations The concept of rational analysis led to Weber’s third type of authority system, the SBUJPOBMMFHBM one, with its bureaucratic organisational form. As a basis for his theory, Weber compared the bureaucracy with the traditional organisation. He concluded that bureaucracies are more powerful and more responsive to authority because of four elements, namely differentiation, integration, constraints and incentives19: 1. Differentiation. An intensive division of labour, a hierarchy of authority, and a clear separation of official duties from personal interests and obligations. 2. Integration. Bureaucracies have written rules and regulations, codified procedures for selection and advancement of officials, and a specialised administrative staff charged with maintaining these rules and procedures. 3. Constraints. Strict subordination requires all actions to be justified in terms of the larger purposes of the organisation, the norm of impersonality requires detachment and objectivity and advancement is contingent on both seniority and performance. 4. Incentives. The prospect of a lifetime career, salaries paid in cash rather than in kind, and social esteem attached to the status of the official. VTCFKVKQPCNQTICPKUCVKQP an organisation where subordinates obey people who occupy a formal position of authority TCVKQPCNNGICN rational-legal organisations have a bureaucratic form The major characteristics of a bureaucracy are summarised in Table 1.1 on the next page. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 7 PART I: Introduction Table 1.1: The major characteristics of a bureaucracy Organisational activity Related management activity Formulating goals, decision-making and using power r r r r r top-down goal-setting centralised power preHerence Hor larger units leaders control, monitor and set oDLectiXes D[ using Hormal autJorit[ strict JierarcJ[ %ontrolling tJe ƃow oH resources into and out oH tJe organisation and estaDlisJing Doundaries r r r r r r tJe organisation as a unit oH anal[sis Doundaries are clearl[ speciƂed reliaDle and replicaDle Xertical rule-Dased assets linked to organisational units &iHHerentiating Hunctions and roles, estaDlisJing duties and rigJts including goXernance r r r r r specialised roles clear role deƂnitions tJe remoXal oH uncertaint[ relatiXe permanence eHƂcienc[-orientated Source: Adapted from: Child, J. & McGrath, R.G. 2001. Organizations unfettered: organization form in an information-intensive economy. Academy of Management Journal, 44(6):1135–1148. Weber’s bureaucratic management theory made a substantial contribution to the classical management approach. The bureaucracy remains a popular form of organisation for organisations functioning in a stable environment. However, in an environment characterised by change and instability, the very strengths of the bureaucracy expose its weaknesses. Max Weber himself, when describing the strengths of the bureaucracy, unintentionally described precisely why it is not an optimal form of organisation for organisations functioning in unstable environments – characteristics such as hierarchical control and authority relations, relatively fixed boundaries, and top-down authority render the bureaucracy unsuitable for such environments20. The bureaucracy, in the words of Max Weber: ‘The fully-developed bureaucratic mechanism compares with other organisations exactly as does the machine with non-mechanical modes of production. Precision, speed, no ambiguity, knowledge of the files, continuity, discretion, unity, strict subordination, reduction of friction and of material and personal cost – these are raised to the optimum in the strictly bureaucratic administration’21. 1.2.3 Administrative (or process) management The third classical theory is administrative management developed the functions of managers within by Henri Fayol. This is the first attempt to define the functions of managers within a framework of clear guidelines or principles. The a framework of clear guidelines significant contribution of administrative management is to define the or principles general duties or functions of managers within a framework of clear guidelines or principles. Henri Fayol (1841–1925), a French engineer, was one of the most influential management thinkers of the early twentieth century. Fayol’s administrative management 8 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory work complements that of Taylor as it contains the first significant attempt to develop principles for top-level management, and to analyse the different activities that comprise the managerial role22. Fayol used the term ‘administration’, which is often translated into English as ‘management’. He viewed administration (or management) as one of six functional areas of management, the others being technical operations, commercial operations, financial operations, security and accounting. Fayol considered administration to be the most crucial element for the success of the organisation. Fayol was among the first to see administration as a process rather than just a set of rules or structures. He identified five activities (or management functions, in today’s management language, as we explain in Chapter 2), comprising the administrative (or managerial) role: r QMBOOJOHGPSFDBTUJOH r PSHBOJTJOH r DPPSEJOBUJOH r DPNNBOEJOH r DPOUSPMMJOH Fayol considered these activities as the work of the administrator (or manager, as we use the term today) rather than specific actions in themselves. He focused on the organising activity and divided it into 16 duties, most of which could be classified in today’s language as the human resources responsibilities of line management. He proposed that 14 principles of administration govern the five activities of management and the 16 duties of the organising activity. Fayol’s 14 principles of administration are23: 1. Division of work. By dividing the work into smaller elements and assigning specific elements to specific workers, they can perform the work more productively. 2. Authority and responsibility. Authority is necessary to carry out managerial responsibilities. Managers have the authority to give orders to subordinates to do the work. 3. Discipline. Members of the organisation should respect the rules of the organisation to ensure its smooth operation. 4. Unity of command. Each employee should report to one manager only. 5. Unity of direction. Only one manager should coordinate and direct similar activities in the organisation. 6. Subordination of individual interests to general interests. The goals of the organisation should take precedence over the interests of individual employees. 7 . Fair remuneration of personnel. Financial compensation for work done should be fair to both the employees and the organisation. 8. Centralisation of power and authority. Power and authority should be concentrated at the upper levels of the organisation, with managers maintaining final responsibility. However, managers should give their subordinates enough authority to enable them to do their work. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 9 PART I: Introduction 9. Scalar chain. A single, uninterrupted chain of authority should extend from the top level to the lowest position in the organisation. 10. Order. Material should be in the right place at the right time, and the organisation should assign workers to do the work best suited to them. 11. Equity. Managers should display friendliness and fairness towards their employees. 12. Stability of tenure of personnel. A high turnover of personnel leads to the loss of organisational knowledge and a loss in the return on investment of human capital. 13. Initiative. Subordinates should have freedom to take initiative in carrying out their work. 14. Esprit de corps (union is strength). Team spirit and harmony should be promoted among workers to create a sense of organisational unity. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 1.3 THE BEHAVIOURAL APPROACH Distinguish between the human relations, human needs, motivation, and the integration phases of the behavioural approach to management. The CFIBWJPVSBM BQQSPBDI developed because of the research by behavioural scientists, including sociologists, psychologists and anthropologists. They attempted to find ways to change individual and group behaviour to improve organisational efficiency. The behavioural approach developed during the 1920s when research inspired the beginning of the human relations movement and during a second phase in the post-World War II period, when theorists focused on human needs and motivation. A number of prominent thinkers contributed to the behavioural approach, notably Hugo Münsterberg, Mary Parker Follett, Chester Barnard, Elton Mayo, Kurt Lewin, Abraham Maslow and Douglas McGregor. We shall discuss their contributions briefly. beJaviQWral aRRrQaEJ focused on changing individual and group behaviour to improve organisational efficiency 1.3.1 Human relations movement The human relations movement focuses on individuals who work in organisational groups. The research of contributors to the movement, some of whose contributions are still relevant in contemporary organisations, established that by improving workers’ satisfaction with their jobs, organisations could increase productivity. They encouraged managers to be supportive of workers, improve the social environment at work and to help individual employees to improve their self-esteem. Hugo Münsterberg, (1863–1916) Theorists often cite Hugo Münsterberg, a German psychologist and philosopher, as the founder of applied psychology. In 1913, he published Psychology and Industrial Efficiency, a textbook in which he offered new ideas in industrial psychology and showed the linkage between scientific management and human effort in working environments24. 10 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory Kurt Lewin (1890–1947) Kurt Lewin originated the concept of group dynamics, a construct for analysing group behaviour. In addition to generating group dynamics, Lewin initiated and contributed to the study of subordinate participation in decision-making and the use of the group to achieve changes in behaviour25. Chester Barnard (1886–1961) Chester Barnard was a manager. He studied economics at Harvard, but failed to obtain his degree when he did not complete one minor course – but he received seven honorary doctorates for his lifelong contributions to the body of knowledge on the nature and purpose of organisations. Barnard started his career by working for the American Telephone and Telegraph system and in 1927, he became president of New Jersey Bell. At the height of his career, in 1938, he published a book that had a huge impact, The functions of the executive, in which he described the importance of employee training, group processes and management practices that could improve cooperation between employees and supervisors. Barnard made three significant contributions to management theory: r 'JSTU IF WJFXFE PSHBOJTBUJPOT BT TPDJBM TZTUFNT UIBU OFFE UIF support of employees to be effective. r 4FDPOE IFQSPQPTFEUIFUIFPSZPGUIFBDDFQUBODFPG BVUIPSJUZ r 5IJSE BOE NPTU JNQPSUBOU IF SFDPHOJTFE UIF JNQPSUBODF PG UIF interaction between the organisation and its external environment. We examine each of these contributions briefly: 1. The organisation as a social system. According to Barnard, organisations are social systems that need the support of employees to be effective and in this regard, managers should perform three functions: r FTUBCMJTIBOENBJOUBJOBOFŲFDUJWFDPNNVOJDBUJPOTZTUFNJO the organisation r IJSFBOESFUBJOFŲFDUJWFQFSTPOOFM r FOTVSFUIBUQFSTPOOFMBSFNPUJWBUFEUPBDIJFWFPSHBOJTBUJPOBM goals. Closely related to the functions of a manager, Barnard believed that subordinates choose if they want to accept or reject a manager’s authority. 2. The theory of the acceptance of authority. Managers have as much authority as employees allow them to have, and each person has a range within which he or she would willingly accept orders without purposefully questioning authority. Employees will choose to follow orders if they: r VOEFSTUBOEXIBUJTSFRVJSFEPG UIFN r IBWFUIFQFSDFQUJPOUIBUUIFPSEFSTBMJHOXJUIPSHBOJTBUJPOBM goals r TFFQPTJUJWFCFOFųUTUPUIFNJODBSSZJOHPVUUIFPSEFST CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 11 PART I: Introduction Barnard maintained that organisations should provide sufficient incentives to satisfy these criteria. 3. The importance of the organisation and its environment. Barnard was one of the first to look at an organisation as a system because of the interrelatedness of the various parts of an organisation. Barnard introduced the following ‘new’ ideas26: r 5IFTVDDFTTPG BOPSHBOJTBUJPOEFQFOETPONBJOUBJOJOHHPPE relationships with the people and institutions it interacts with outside the organisation on a regular basis. r 0SHBOJTBUJPOTBSFEFQFOEFOUPOJOWFTUPST TVQQMJFST DVTUPNFST and other external stakeholders. Managers should therefore scan the environment to align the organisation and its resources with opportunities and threats that occur because of changes in the environment. r 'PSBOPSHBOJTBUJPOUPTVSWJWF JUNVTUCFCPUIFŵDJFOUBOE effective27. Barnard’s ideas on the interaction between the organisation and its environment created much interest and debate. In many ways, Barnard was ahead of his time and many of his ideas are still relevant in contemporary strategic management theory especially regarding the unstable and dynamic nature of the business environment. Mary Parker Follett (1868–1933) Mary Parker Follett was another pioneer of the human relations movement. She graduated in economics, government, law and philosophy and brought to management theory her knowledge and experience from these fields. Follett wrote about the basic questions that lie behind all human relations: authority, power, conflict, leadership and control. Her work formed the basis of many contributions to the theory of industrial psychology and sociology. She promoted the idea of integration in all her work. She was an early advocate of the systems approach to organisations and maintained that organisations should emphasise interdependence among their parts, activities and functions28. Follett based her philosophy on two concepts. Her ‘universal goal’ implies that group ethics rather than individualism should form the basis of organisation and her ‘law of the situation’ states that it is impossible for a manager to achieve success unless there is unity and cooperation among all elements, material and people, in a given situation’29. Follett’s two laws clearly separated her from the classical theorists’ view that there is only ‘one best way’ to manage. Her ideas have much in common with more recent management theories, such as contingency theory and systems theory, although management theorists seldom mentioned her after her death in 1933. It was only since the late 1980s that prominent management theorists such as Peter Drucker30 began to credit her for her farsighted ideas. It is because Mary Parker Follett’s philosophy of organisation opens up the possibility of such identification that it is the most important contribution to the business literature of our time31. 12 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory George Elton Mayo (1880–1949) George Elton Mayo pioneered experimental research on human behaviour in work settings. Mayo and a Harvard research team conducted a series of experiments at the Western Electric Company’s Hawthorne plant in Illinois. The experiments began in 1924 and spanned several years. The first experiment focused on changing the physical lighting in the company’s Relay Assembly Test Room. Mayo hypothesised that he could find one best method of illumination that would result in optimal productivity. What his team found, however, was that every change in illumination resulted in higher productivity. They conducted another experiment with the plant’s bank wiring room employees where they implemented several types of piece-rate incentive pay systems, hypothesising that they would discover one best pay system for motivating employees. Instead, they found that workers were equally motivated under a variety of pay systems. Mayo realised that the Hawthorne employees did not react to illumination or incentive pay, but to attention and recognition. Subsequent experiments by Mayo confirmed that employees felt good about themselves and the value of their jobs because of the interventions of the researchers. Mayo concluded that improved human relations, social contacts and behavioural rewards (such as recognition), were important for motivating employees. 1.3.2 Human needs and motivation The second era of behavioural research emphasised motivation. This research focused on employees’ personal needs and how these needs influence performance. Contributions to motivation theory by several important scholars immediately after World War II inspired greater efforts to understand individual behaviour in work environments. This focus led to a field of study called organisational behaviour. We mention only two theorists here, namely Douglas McGregor and Abraham Maslow, but many others contributed to the study of organisational behaviour. Douglas McGregor (1906–1964) Douglas McGregor brought a fresh perspective to management by challenging leaders to think of employees as responsible, capable, creative individuals. McGregor formulated his theories by considering two different views of people: a negative view, which he termed Theory X, and a positive view, which he termed Theory Y. McGregor studied the behaviour of managers towards their subordinates and concluded that managers base their behaviour on a specific set of assumptions and beliefs about human nature. The basis of 5IFPSZ9 is a set of assumptions that take a command and control view of management, underpinned by five beliefs that many managers hold about their employees. These assumptions are that people are lazy by nature; lack ambition, dislike responsibility and prefer that managers lead them; they are inherently self-centred and indifferent to organisational needs; and by nature resistant to change, gullible and not very bright. TJeQr[ : based on a set of assumptions that take a command and control view of management, underpinned by a negative view of human nature CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 13 PART I: Introduction Theory Y a mixture of assumptions and underlying beliefs based on a positive view of human nature, taking a leadership and empowering view of management McGregor argued that managers need a different view when managing employees. He proposed Theory Y, a mixture of assumptions and underlying beliefs based on a positive view of human nature, taking a leadership and empowering view of management. These beliefs are the following: r 1FPQMF BSF OPU QBTTJWF CZ OBUVSF BOE SFTJTUBOU UP PSHBOJTBUJPOBM needs, but their experiences in organisations cause them to become that way. r 1FPQMF BSF NPUJWBUFE IBWF UIF QPUFOUJBM GPS EFWFMPQNFOU BOE the readiness to achieve organisational goals, but management is responsible for ensuring that people recognise and develop these characteristics. r 5IF FTTFOUJBM UBTL PG NBOBHFNFOU JT UP BSSBOHF PSHBOJTBUJPOBM conditions so that people can achieve their own goals best by directing their own efforts to achieve organisational objectives32. McGregor’s major contribution is his conviction that managers could be better if they changed their assumptions about people. He argued that the way a manager treats employees is largely a self-fulfilling prophecy; if the manager assumes that people are lazy and treats them as if they were, they would be lazy. However, if the manager assumes that people want challenging work and provided opportunities for them to do such work, employees would in fact respond positively and seek more responsibility. Theory Y is consistent with the emphasis in contemporary organisations on employee participation, involvement, empowerment and self-management33. Abraham Maslow (1908–1970) A contemporary of McGregor, Abraham Maslow, also a psychologist, based his theory of human behaviour on the idea that individuals work to satisfy unfulfilled needs. Maslow developed one of the most widely recognised theories of motivation, the hierarchy of needs theory. He proposed that every person has a hierarchy of five needs: psychological needs, security needs, social needs, esteem needs and self-actualisation needs and that only unsatisfied needs can motivate people. We discuss Maslow’s theory in Chapter 20. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 Explain why the quantitative approach to management emerged and how it led to the focus on quality. 14 1.4 QUANTITATIVE MANAGEMENT THEORY During the late 1950s and early 1960s, the typical business school curriculum in the United States fell short in terms of mathematics content. An influential report on higher education emphasised this shortcoming34 and business schools responded by adding quantitative methods in the curricula. This resulted in new management specialties. 1SPEVDUJPO NBOBHFNFOU UFYUCPPLT FNFSHFE IFBWJMZ JOŴVFODFE CZ operations research techniques. Techniques such as statistics, linear programming, waiting line or queuing theory, game theory, decision trees, the transportation method, Monte Carlo methods, and simulation devices became the new vocabulary. The United States Navy, the Lockheed Missile System Division, and the consultants Booz, Allen CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory and Hamilton devised the Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT). This is an operations research technique that uses statistical probability theory for planning and controlling larger projects. This technique used statistical probability theory to furnish three time estimates (pessimistic, most probable, and optimistic) for planning and controlling large projects35. 2'4T 1.5 THE QUALITY MOVEMENT LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 The challenge for improved productivity, mainly in response to the Japanese ‘productivity miracle’, interrupted the American preoccupation with the application of quantitative methods to the solution of managerial problems. Joseph M Juran and W Edwards Deming were two of the major contributors to the quality movement in the USA. 8 &EXBSET %FNJOH (1900–1993) is often associated with total quality management (TQM), but he never used the term because he had a low regard for both the term and the application of a quality management practice that differed substantially from his own36. Juran and Deming’s working lives were similar in many ways. Both started their careers by working at Western Electric’s Hawthorn plant in Chicago, where the work of statistician Walter Shewhart influenced them both. While working at Western Electric as head of industrial engineering, Juran conceptualised the Pareto principle. After the war, the Union of Japanese Scientists and Engineers invited both Juran and Deming to Japan. Juran delivered lectures in Japan about managing for quality, while Deming taught Japanese engineers and top management statistical methods and how to view production as a system that included suppliers and consumers. The Japanese greatly appreciated their teachings and the Emperor of Japan presented both men with medals as high awards for their assistance37. The productivity achievements of the Japanese paved the way for the advent of Japanese management with its distinctive philosophy and style. As the Japanese management approach evolved, it combined elements of work simplification, lifetime employee participation, statistical quality control and value analysis. The most distinctive characteristic of Japanese management was the formation of small problem-solving groups of workers, supervisors and specialists to improve the quality of task performance. These groups epitomised group decision-making by consensus, mentoring and training on a continuous basis, open communication and group loyalty. The success of the Japanese management style inspired management researchers to determine what Western organisations could learn from the Japanese. an operations research technique that uses statistical probability theory for planning and controlling large projects Discuss the contributions of W Edwards Deming, Joseph M Juran and Philip B Crosby to the quality approach to management. 1.5.1 The Deming approach to quality management Deming kept his contacts with the Japanese from 1950 until his death in 1993. Initially he focused his clients’ attention on statistics, but then, upon requests from the Japanese, he gave them advice on how to improve actual results. As his contacts with the Japanese continued during the 1950s, Deming formalised his ideas about good management CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 15 PART I: Introduction practices. From 1946 to 1980, he primarily worked as a consultant in statistical studies. From 1980, after gaining fame as the world’s leading expert on quality, until his death 13 years later, he focused his attention on transforming the ways of Western management. Deming advocated continual improvement through lifelong learning. He provided a new and comprehensive theory for managing organisations. His description of production as a system of interrelationships between consumer research, design, suppliers, materials, production, assembly, inspection, distribution, and consumers added significantly to the body of knowledge of management theory38. Deming developed a new approach to management – his ‘system of profound knowledge’ – based on the following: appreciation for a system, knowledge about variation, theory of knowledge, and psychology. ‘Deming was the unlikeliest of management gurus to rise to prominence in the United States. A physicist and statistician by training, he had the single-focused personality of an Einstein. Both the humanistic and scientific strands of his quality philosophy can be traced to the same root idea, a profoundly simple statistical observation about how processes work: all processes are subject to some level of variation that is likely to diminish quality. Variation is the enemy of quality; yet it is inevitable and ubiquitous as gravity’39. 1.5.2 Total quality management By the 1950s, the realisation dawned on the top managers of huge American corporations that they could not achieve improvements in quality by using a variety of tools and techniques in a disorganised way. It was necessary to apply the knowledge, techniques and tools of quality throughout their organisations, to all functions and at all levels, and to do so in a coordinated way – total quality management (TQM). total quality management Two people who deserve recognition as major contributors to the TQM (TQM) movement are Joseph M Juran and Philip B Crosby40. to apply in a coordinated way Joseph M Juran was the most important contributor to the TQM the knowledge, techniques and movement. He made three notable contributions to the field: the Juran tools of quality throughout an trilogy, the tripol concept, and organisation-wide quality management. organisation, to all functions and r +VSBOTUSJMPHZVOEFSTDPSFTUIFJOUFSSFMBUJPOTIJQPG UISFFQSPDFTTFT at all levels to manage quality: quality planning, control and improvement. r +VSBOT USJQPM DPODFQU DPNQSJTFT UIF UISFF SPMFT UIBU QFPQMF IBWF in an organisation, as customer, processor, or supplier. According to Juran, the idea of the tripol is to consider systems rather than individual functions. r 5IFTFJOUFSSFMBUJPOTIJQTQSPWJEFBOVOEFSTUBOEJOHPG UIFTZTUFNBOE could result in substantial increases in quality. Another major theme of Juran is company-wide quality management – organisations need an all-inclusive, systematic approach to set and meet quality goals throughout the company41. Philip B Crosby was another popular figure in the TQM movement and the creator of the zero defect concept – the only performance standard is zero defects. 16 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory 1.5.3 In search of excellence During the height of the Japanese successes, Peters and Waterman published In search of excellence42, a book welcomed by many Western managers because it showed American corporations in a more positive light. Peters and Waterman both worked at McKinsey as researchers. The basis of the research and the theorising in their book rested on the .D,JOTFZ4NPEFM. The model comprises seven elements: r r r r Mc-inseyos 5s ME-insey 5 model comprises the seven Ss: structure, strategy, systems, style, skills, staff and shared values structure strateg[ s[stems st[le management r skills corporate strengtJs r staHH r sJared Xalues (igure 1.1: The Mc-insey 5 model Peters and Waterman analysed the best performing McKinsey clients in terms of the 7-S performance measures with the view to selecting the best amongst them. The result was lessons from 42 of the best-run companies in the United States. The research of Peters and Waterman justified the strengths of American corporations in relation to Japanese corporations and provided an effective counterbalance to the obsession with Japanese productivity achievements in the West. 1.6 SYSTEMS APPROACH LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 A theoretical biologist -VEXJH WPO #FSUBMBOŲZ observed that certain similar characteristics appeared in all disciplines: r TUVEZPG UIFXIPMFPSHBOJTNmUIFXPSEAPSHBOJTNIBTUIFTBNF Greek and Latin roots as the word organisation because both deal with function, structure and relationship of parts to a whole r BUFOEFODZPOUIFQBSUPG BOPSHBOJTNUPTUSJWFGPSBTUFBEZTUBUFPS equilibrium r UIFPQFOOFTTPGBMMTZTUFNT NFBOJOHUIBUBOPSHBOJTNJTBŲFDUFECZ its environment and also affects its environment. Discuss the systems approach to management and explain how systems thinking inƃuenced the Ƃeld of cybernetics and Peter 5engeos ideas on the learning organisation. The TZTUFNT BQQSPBDI asserts that the whole is greater than the sum of its individual parts. How do the systems approach and Ludwig von Bertalanffy’s observations of organisms contribute to our understanding of management thinking? Organisations, similar to other organisms, comprise many parts, including for example, individuals, groups and teams, systems, processes and structure. All these parts are interdependent to achieve organisational goals. Another feature of a system is that the whole is greater than the sum of its individual parts. Thus, by combining the efforts of all the individuals, sections and departments in an organisation, managers can achieve more than those individuals and the sections, groups, teams and departments to which they belong can achieve on their own. Every department or section of an organisation fits into the rest of the organisation and together, as a whole, they achieve the goals of the organisation. systems aRRroaEh 43 asserts that the whole is greater than the sum of its individual parts CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 17 PART I: Introduction Organisations are open systems because the environment outside an organisation has an influence on the organisation and the organisation influences the outside environment. The environment influences the organisation because it does not function in isolation. The organisation procures its resources such as raw materials, human resources, capital and information from suppliers outside the organisation. Inside the organisation, through various systems and processes and the human resources, managers transform resources into outputs such as products and services and sell them to customers outside the organisation. Thus, the organisation is open to influences coming from the external environment. In order to understand this approach to management it is crucial to understand the interaction between the organisation and its environment. The environment can range from stable to turbulent and gradual or rapid economic, social, political, and technological changes influence it (see Chapter 4). 1.6.1 Systems and information A relatively new interdisciplinary science based on general systems theory, which influences management theory, is cybernetics. The research into cybernetics focuses on information, communication and control. Cybernetics: learning and learning to learn44 Complexity is inherent in dynamic systems (such as organisations) because their processes are often non-linear and hard to view and control. However, the only way to address complexity is to acknowledge its existence in the first place. Cybernetics is about the knowledge of applying regulation, controlling and communicating in a system. In an organisational context, such an approach can help managers understand complex situations and attempt to deal with them. Developments in cybernetics and cybernetic technology have contributed much to the body of knowledge of how systems learn. A core insight that emerged through research into cybernetics is that the ability of a system to engage in self-regulatory behaviour depends on processes of information involving negative feedback. An analogy to negative feedback can be a skipper and a boat. If the skipper steers the boat off course by taking the rudder too far in one direction, he can get back on course by moving it in the opposite direction. Research based on the idea of negative feedback led to a theory of communication and learning underpinned by four key principles. Systems should be able to: r TFOTF NPOJUPSBOETDBOTJHOJųDBOUBTQFDUTPGUIFJSFOWJSPONFOU r SFMBUF UIJT JOGPSNBUJPO UP UIF PQFSBUJOH OPSNT UIBU HVJEF TZTUFN behaviour r EFUFDUTJHOJųDBOUEFWJBUJPOTGSPNUIFTFOPSNT r JOJUJBUFDPSSFDUJWFBDUJPOXIFOUIFZEFUFDUEJTDSFQBODJFT If these conditions are satisfied, it creates a continuous process of information exchange between the system and its environment and the 18 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory system can monitor changes and initiate responses, thus operating in an intelligent, self-regulating manner. The downside is that, because the system can maintain only the courses of action allowed by the guiding operating norms or standards, it limits the learning abilities. When the guiding standards are not appropriate for dealing with the changes the system come across, its intelligence breaks down because the process of negative feedback attempts to maintain an inappropriate pattern of behaviour. The term used for this type of learning is ‘single-loop learning’ because it is an ability to detect and correct error only in relation to a given set of standards. ‘Double-loop’ learning (the process of learning to learn), depends on being able to take a ‘double look’ at the situation by questioning the relevance of operating standards. The ideas associated with cybernetics, single-loop learning and double-loop learning have important implications for organisations and provide a framework for the development of the concept of learning organisations. Learning organisations Writers of management theory often use the term ‘organisational learning’ interchangeably with the term ‘learning organisation’. The difference is that ‘organisational learning’ describes certain types of activity in an organisation while the ‘learning organisation’ refers to a particular type of organisation. However, there is a simple relationship between the two – a learning organisation is one that is good at organisational learning45. Many organisations have become good at single-loop learning by developing the ability to scan the environment, set objectives, and monitor the general performance of the system in relation to the objectives. Organisations often institutionalise this basic skill in the form of information systems designed to keep the organisation on course by, for example, using budgets. Double-loop learning is often more difficult to implement – not many organisations have systems that review and challenge basic models and operating standards. Bureaucratic organisations in particular actually obstruct the learning process46. 1FUFS4FOHF popularised the concept of learning organisations in his book The fifth discipline. He challenged linear, cause-and-effect thinking about organisational behaviour and identified five new ‘competent technologies’47: r TZTUFNTUIJOLJOHmMPPLJOHGPSDZDMJDBMQSPDFTTFT r QFSTPOBMNBTUFSZmDPNNJUNFOUUPMJGFMPOHMFBSOJOH r NFOUBMNPEFMTmDIBMMFOHJOHEFFQMZJOHSBJOFEBTTVNQUJPOT r TIBSFEWJTJPOmDSFBUJOHBOBJNXJUIXIJDIFNQMPZFFTDBOJEFOUJGZ r UFBNMFBSOJOHmUIFGVOEBNFOUBMMFBSOJOHVOJUTJONPEFSO organisations. The competent technologies join to form innovative learning organisations. Each provides a vital dimension for building organisations that can learn and continually enhance their capacity to realise their goals. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 19 PART I: Introduction Senge maintained that learning organisations must develop capacities that allow them to do the following48: r 4DBO BOE BOUJDJQBUF DIBOHF JO UIF XJEFS FOWJSPONFOU UP EFUFDU significant variations. r %FWFMPQ UIF BCJMJUZ UP RVFTUJPO DIBMMFOHF BOE DIBOHF PQFSBUJOH standards and assumptions. r "MMPXBOBQQSPQSJBUFTUSBUFHJDEJSFDUJPOBOEQBUUFSOPG PSHBOJTBUJPO to emerge. r &WPMWF EFTJHOT UIBU BMMPX UIFN UP CFDPNF TLJMMFE JO UIF BSU PG double-loop learning. The ideas on system thinking paved the way for management practitioners to break free from bureaucratic thinking and encouraged them to consider the possibilities of organising their organisations according to the requirements of the environment. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7 1.7 CONTINGENCY THEORY Discuss the contributions of Tom Burns, )eorge M 5talker, Paul .awrence and Jay .orsch, Joan Woodward and Alfred Chandler to the contingency approach to management. As one of the major strands of thinking about organisations, contingency theory proposes that there is no one best way of organising; instead, the best organisation structure depends on a number of contingency factors. Rather than accepting an approach that all organisations should be the same or that all organisations should be different, contingency theorists argue that it is possible to analyse the variation in organisations in a systematic way by considering the contingencies, or situational factors, for every organisation. The major contingency factors include environmental complexity, technology, organisational strategy and organisation size49. 5PN#VSOT and (FPSHF.4UBMLFS conducted one of the most influential studies to establish the credentials of the DPOUJOHFODZ BQQSPBDI to organisation in the 1950s. The contingency approach analyses the variation in organisations in a systematic way by considering the contingencies, or situational factors for every organisation. Their work is famous for establishing the distinction between mechanistic and organic approaches to organisation and management. Focusing on organisations in a variety of industries (eg manufactured fibres, engineering and electronics), Burns and Stalker illustrated that when conditions in the environment are relatively stable with predictable technological and market conditions, the mechanistic organisation structure is suitable. However, when the environment becomes highly unpredictable, with rapid technological advances and boundless market opportunities, open and flexible styles of organisation and management are required50. In their study of American organisations in the container, food and plastics industries, 1BVM -BXSFODF and +BZ -PSTDI concluded that environmental conditions surrounding the organisation had a significant effect on their choice of structure. In her study of manufacturing firms in England, +PBO8PPEXBSE (1965) was the first to look into the effect of technology on the design of organisations. She classified organisations by the complexity of the EontingenEy aRRroaEh this approach analyses the variation in organisations in a systematic way by considering the contingencies, or situational factors, for every organisation 20 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory technology they use in producing goods and found that technology influences the choice of structure in organisations. She categorised organisations as less complex to more advanced, in terms of their production operations as small batch, large batch and long-run continuous-process production. Woodward found that the more successful organisations in each category had the same structures51. A group of researchers from the 6OJWFSTJUZ PG "TUPO in England found that the size of the organisation best explained many of the characteristics of its structure. They found that the larger the organisation, the more important the standardisation as a coordinating mechanism became52. "MGSFE$IBOEMFS53 conducted a study of the influence of strategy on structure and maintained that ‘structure follows strategy’. He argued that different strategies create different administration needs; therefore, organisational structure will eventually change to accommodate these needs. While contingency theory still has its followers, there is a shift in emphasis in the literature towards an integration of approaches and the many environmental and structural variables that interact to create superior performance, rather than one or two primary contingencies. However, contingency theory still offers insight into the relationship between certain contingency variables and organisation structure.54 1.8 THE INFORMATION REVOLUTION LEARNING OBJECTIVE 8 Historians55 argue that there have been at least two Industrial Revolutions. The first started at the end of the eighteenth century when new technology resulted in developments such as the steam engine, the spinning jenny and machines replacing traditional hand tools. The second Industrial Revolution, about 100 years later, produced electricity, the internal combustion engine, science-based chemicals, efficient steel casting and the beginning of communication technologies with the invention of the telephone. The first two revolutions had certain features in common, which offer valuable insights into the nature of technological revolutions56: r #PUI SFWPMVUJPOT TJHOBMMFE B QFSJPE PG TQFFEZ BOE VOQSFDFEFOUFE technological change. r 5IF MPDBUJPO PG XFBMUI BOE QPXFS CSPVHIU CZ UIF UFDIOPMPHJDBM changes moved power to those countries able to master the new technologies. r #PUI SFWPMVUJPOT DPOųSNFE UIBU UFDIOPMPHJDBM JOOPWBUJPO JT OPU an isolated instance and that technological breakthroughs come in clusters, interacting with each other in a process of increasing returns. r 5IF USBOTGPSNBUJPO PG TPDJFUJFT IBQQFOT GBTUFS JG UIFSF JT B DMPTF relationship between the sites of innovation, production and the use of new technology, and results in more innovation. Describe the three revolutions that took place since the late eighteenth century and explain how the Information Revolution changed the business environment of organisations. Both revolutions brought a whole array of new technologies that formed and transformed an industrial system in successive stages57. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 21 PART I: Introduction r 5IFHFOFSBUJPOBOEEJTUSJCVUJPOPG FOFSHZXBTBUUIFDPSFPG CPUI revolutions, for example, the invention of the steam engine in the first revolution and the invention of electricity in the second revolution. r 5FDIOPMPHJDBM CSFBLUISPVHIT JO FMFDUSPOJDT EVSJOH 8PSME 8BS ** preceded the third revolution. The invention of the first programmable computer, the transistor and the discovery of the source of microelectronics followed. r %JŲFSFOUGPSNTPG VTJOHUIFSBEJPFNFSHFETVDIBTCSPBEDBTUJOH direct satellite broadcasting, microwaves and digital cellular telephony. r $PBYJBM DBCMF BOE ųCSF PQUJDT PŲFSFE B EJWFSTJUZ BOE WFSTBUJMJUZ of transmission technologies, which were adapted to a whole range of uses, and enabled extensive communication between mobile users. Each leap and bound in a specific technological field amplified the effects of related information technologies. The third revolution, the Information Revolution, emerged in the 1970s when a ‘great technological divide’ took place and resulted in rapid technological advances, including the following58: r 5IF 6OJUFE 4UBUFT %FGFODF %FQBSUNFOUT "EWBODFE 3FTFBSDI Projects Agency set up a new, electronic communication network that would develop into the internet. r 5IFųSTUJOEVTUSJBMFMFDUSPOJDTXJUDI &BSMZT r 5IFųSTUJOEVTUSJBMMZQSPEVDFEPQUJDųCSFBQQFBSFE r 5IFJOWFOUJPOPG UIFNJDSPQSPDFTTPS NJET r 5IFEFWFMPQNFOUPG EJHJUBMTXJUDIJOH r 5IFBQQFBSBODFPG UIF9FSPY"MUP r 5IFJOWFOUJPOPG UIFNJDSPDPNQVUFS r "QQMFJOUSPEVDFT"QQMF** JUTųSTUTVDDFTTGVMDPNNFSDJBMQSPEVDU r .JDSPTPGU QSPEVDFT PQFSBUJOH TZTUFNT GPS NJDSPDPNQVUFST UIF matrix of many software technologies developed during the 1990s. The Information Revolution changed the world and the way in which organisations function and resulted in the emergence of a global economy. Organisations have changed fundamentally since the first revolution, the pace of change accelerated rapidly since the Information Revolution and there is no slowing down. The Information Revolution and the emergence of globalisation are two factors that, in tandem, forced business organisations to change fundamentally in order to be able to function in a fast-changing, dynamic environment. 22 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Chapter 1 Evolution of management theory Information technology and globalisation are the two major factors responsible for the emergence of new organisation forms, the topic of discussion in Chapter 3. CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Explain why managers need to study the history of management theory. • The proposed ‘best’ ways to manage organisations through history took place in the context of the social, political, economic, technological, international and ecological forces that affect organisations at any specific time. As these forces change, so do the theories on management, adjusting to changing circumstances in the environment. Managers need to be aware of the influence of environmental factors on the development of management theory. • There are many lessons in history for management scholars. The most important one is the study of the past as an introduction (prologue) to the study of contemporary organisations. 2. Discuss the important contributions made by Frederick W Taylor, Max Weber and Henri Fayol to the management theory. • Frederick W Taylor was the father of scientific management with the emphasis on efficiency. • Max Weber focused on how to structure organisations and developed the bureaucracy. • Henri Fayol pioneered administrative management with the focus on the process and principles of management. 3. Distinguish between the human relations, human needs and motivation and the integration phases of the behavioural approach to management. • The human relations movement focuses on individuals working in group environments. • The human needs and motivation phase of the behavioural approach to management focuses on personal needs and their influence on performance. • The integration phase is about searching for concepts that integrate various theories. 4. Explain why the quantitative approach to management emerged and how it led to the focus on quality. During the mid-1960s, business schools in the United States began to teach more statistics and mathematics to their students in response to the increasing complexity of managerial problems. This resulted in the qualitative approach to management. However, the challenge for improved productivity, mainly in response to the Japanese superior productivity, interrupted the American preoccupation with the application of quantitative methods to the solution of managerial problems and led to the focus on quality. 5. Discuss the contributions of W Edwards Deming, Joseph M Juran and Philip B Crosby to the quality approach to management. • Edwards W Deming’s basic philosophy was continual improvement through lifelong learning. He provided a new and comprehensive theory for managing organisations. His description of production as a system of interrelationships between consumer research, design, suppliers, materials, production, assembly, inspection, distribution, and consumers added significantly to the body of knowledge of management theory. His ‘system of profound knowledge’ – based on appreciation for a system, knowledge about variation, theory of knowledge, and psychology was an important contribution to the quality movement. Contemporary Management Principles EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:40 PM via UNISA AN: 707010 ; Vrba, M. J., Brevis, Tersia.; Contemporary Management Principles Contemporary.indb 23 Account: s7393698 23 2013/11/20 4:23 PM Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part I: Introduction • Joseph M Juran was the most important contributor to the TQM movement. He made three notable contributions to the field: the Juran trilogy, the tripol concept, and organisation-wide quality management. • Philip B Crosby was a popular figure in the TQM movement and the creator of the zero defect concept – the only performance standard is zero defects. 6. Discuss the systems approach to management and explain how systems thinking influenced the field of cybernetics and Peter Senge’s ideas on the learning organisation. • Systems researchers observed that organisations, similar to other ‘organisms’, comprise many ‘parts’ including for example, individuals, groups and teams, systems, processes and structure. All these ‘parts’ are dependent on each other (interdependent) in order to achieve the goals of the organisation. Another characteristic of a system is that the whole is greater than the sum of its individual parts. By combining the efforts of all parts of the organisation, managers can achieve more than what those individuals and the sections, groups, teams and departments to which they belong can achieve on their own. • Organisations are also open systems because the environment outside an organisation has an influence on the organisation and the organisation influences the outside environment. • Cybernetics entails knowledge on how to apply regulation, control and communication in a system. In an organisational context, such an approach can help managers understand complex situations and to deal with them more effectively. • Developments in cybernetics and cybernetic technology have contributed much to the body of knowledge of how systems learn. A core insight that emerged through research into cybernetics is that the ability of a system to engage in self-regulatory behaviour depends on processes of information involving negative feedback. • Peter Senge popularised the concept of learning organisations. He challenged linear, causeand-effect thinking about organisational behaviour and identified five new ‘competent technologies’ which, in his opinion, were gradually converging to form innovative learning organisations. Each provided a vital dimension of building organisations that can truly ‘learn’ and that could continually enhance their capacity to realise their aspirations. 7. Discuss the contributions of Tom Burns, George M Stalker, Paul Lawrence, Jay Lorsch, Joan Woodward and Alfred Chandler to the contingency approach to management. • Tom Burns and George M Stalker conducted one of the most influential studies to establish the credentials of the contingency approach to organisation. Their work is famous for establishing the distinction between mechanistic and organic approaches to organisation and management. • Paul Lawrence and Jay Lorsch found that environmental conditions surrounding the organisation had a significant effect on the choice of structure. • Joan Woodward was the first researcher to study the effect of technology on the design of organisations. She classified organisations by the complexity of the technology used in producing goods and found that technology influenced the structure of organisations. • Alfred Chandler conducted a study of the influence of strategy on structure and asserted that strategy determines structure. He argued that different strategies create different administration needs; therefore, organisational structure will eventually change to accommodate these needs. 24 Contemporary Management Principles EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:40 PM via UNISA AN: 707010 ; Vrba, M. J., Brevis, Tersia.; Contemporary Management Principles Contemporary.indb 24 Account: s7393698 2013/11/20 4:23 PM Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Chapter 1 Evolution of management theory 8. Describe the three revolutions that took place since the late eighteenth century and explain how the Information Revolution changed the business environment of organisations. • The first started at the end of the eighteenth century and was characterised by new technologies such as the steam engine and the spinning jenny and the replacement of hand tools by machines. • The second Industrial Revolution, about 100 years later, entailed the development of electricity, the internal combustion engine, science-based chemicals, efficient steel casting and the beginning of communication technologies, with the diffusion of the telegraph and the invention of the telephone. • The Information Revolution, as a revolution, started in the 1970s. During this time, a great ‘technological divide’ took place. • The Information Revolution changed the world and the way in which organisations function and resulted in the emergence of a global economy. Organisations have changed fundamentally since the first revolution, the pace of change accelerated rapidly since the start of the Information Revolution and there is no slowing down. KEY TERMS administrative approach bureaucratic approach behavioural approach charismatic organisations classical approaches contingency theory double-loop learning cybernetics globalisation human relations movement human needs and motivation Information Revolution internationalisation learning organisations quantitative management theory quality movement rational-legal organisations scientific management approach single-loop learning systems approach systems and information the learning organisation total quality management traditional organisations Contemporary Management Principles EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:40 PM via UNISA AN: 707010 ; Vrba, M. J., Brevis, Tersia.; Contemporary Management Principles Contemporary.indb 25 Account: s7393698 25 2013/11/20 4:23 PM PART I: Introduction REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Why are the three theories comprising the classical approach to management still relevant today? 2. Which shortcomings of the classical approach led to the emergence of the behavioural approach to management? 3. What were the contributions of Chester Barnard and Mary Parker Follett to the human relations movement? 4. How did Douglas McGregor challenge managers to think differently about their employees as was previously done? 5. W Edwards Deming is the pioneer of TQM (total quality management). Is this statement correct? Substantiate your answer. 6. What is the difference between a learning organisation and organisational learning? 7. What are the differences between single-loop learning and double-loop learning? 8. Contingency theory proposed that there is no ‘best way’ of organising. Discuss how the contributions of Burns & Stalker, Lawrence & Lorsch, Woodward and Chandler substantiated this premise. END NOTES 1 Gabor, A. 2000. The Capitalist Philosophers. New York: Three Rivers Press, p xi. 2 Morgan, G. 1997. Images of organization. London: Sage, p 22. 3 Gabor, 2000, op. cit., p xi. 4 Bedeian, A.G. 1998. Exploring the past. In Journal of Management History, 4(1), pp 4–16, quote on p 6. 5 Taylor, F.W. 1911. The principles of scientific management. New York: Harper Collins, p 119. 6 Bedeian, 1998, op. cit., p 6. 7 Morgan, 1997, op. cit., p 24. 8 Ibid., p 327. 9 Ibid., p 329. 10 Ibid., p 330. 11 Wren, D.A. 1994. The evolution of management thought. 4th edition. New York: John Wiley & Sons, p 442. 12 Ibid., p 230. 13 Morgan, 1997, op. cit., p 23. 14 Warner, M. (ed). 2002. International encyclopaedia of business & management. Vol 3, 2nd edition. Thompson Learning, p 2297. 15 Ibid., p 2303. 16 Wren, 1994, op. cit., p 153. 17 Pugh, D.S., Hickson, D.J. & Hinings, C.R. 1996. Great writers on organizations. Cornwall: Ashgate. 18 Conger, J.A .1989. The charismatic leader: behind the mystique of exceptional leadership. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. 19 Cooper, G.L. & Argyris, C. (eds).1998. The concise Blackwell encyclopaedia of management. London: Blackwell. 20 Ibid., p 1137. 21 Weber, M. 1946. The theory of social and economic organisation, translated by T. Parson, New York: Free Press. In The concise Blackwell encyclopaedia of management. Edited by Cooper, G.L. & Argyris, C. London: Blackwell. 22 Campbell, A. 2002. Fayol, Henri (1841–1925). In M Warner (ed) International encyclopaedia of business & management, 3(2), London: Routledge: Thompson Learning, pp 38–59. 23 Fayol, H. 1984. General and industrial management (translated by I. Gray). New York: David S Lake. In International encyclopaedia of business & management. Edited by Warner, M. Vol. 3. 2nd edition. Thompson Learning, p 59. 24 Robbins, S.P. 2003. Organizational behavior. 10th edition. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, p 599. 25 Moreno, J.L. 1924. Who shall survive: a new approach to human interrelations. In The evolution of management thought. 4th edition. New York: John Wiley & Sons. 26 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 1 Evolution of management theory :UHQRSFLWS 5REELQVRSFLWS ,ELG :UHQRSFLWS 3XJKHWDORSFLW 8UZLFN/,QThe capitalist philosophers.*DERU$1HZ<RUN7KUHH5LYHUV3UHVVS 0F*UHJRU'The human side of enterprise. 1HZ<RUN0F*UDZ+LOO 6FKHUPHUKRUQ-5Core concepts of management. 'DQYHUV0$-RKQ:LOH\ 6RQVS :UHQRSFLW 3DOPHU31'H.OHUN$ 9UED0-+LVWRULFDQGFRQWHPSRUDU\PDQDJHPHQWSHUVSHFWLYHVRQDWKHRUHWLFDOQH[XV" Management Dynamics ŋ 3HWHUVRQ3%7RWDOTXDOLW\PDQDJHPHQWDQGWKH'HPLQJDSSURDFKWRTXDOLW\PDQDJHPHQWJournal of Management History ŋ /DQGHVEHUJ3,QWKHEHJLQQLQJWKHUHZHUH'HPLQJDQG-XUDQJournal for Quality and Participation /DQGHVEHUJRSFLWS *DERURSFLWS 3HWHUVRQRSFLWSSŋ ,ELG 3HWHUV7- :DWHUPDQ5+-UIn search of excellence: lessons from America’s best-run companies. 1HZ<RUN+DUSHU 5RZ3XEOLVKHUV 0RUJDQRSFLWS 7KHVHFWLRQRQŁ&\EHUQHWLFVOHDUQLQJDQGOHDUQLQJWROHDUQłLVEDVHGRQDGLVFXVVLRQLQ*0RUJDQSSŋ 7VDQJ(:.2UJDQL]DWLRQDOOHDUQLQJDQGWKHOHDUQLQJRUJDQL]DWLRQDGLFKRWRP\EHWZHHQGHVFULSWLYHDQGSUHVFULSWLYH UHVHDUFKHuman Relations ŋ 0RUJDQRSFLWS 6HQJH30The fifth discipline: the art and practice of the learning organization. 1HZ<RUN'RXEOHGD\S 0RUJDQRSFLWS L 3XJK'6+LFNVRQ'-+LQLQJV&50F'RQDOG.07XUQHU& /XSWRQ7ŋ$FRQFHSWXDOVFKHPHIRU RUJDQL]DWLRQDODQDO\VLVAdministrative Science QuarterlySSŋ LL &KLOG- 0DQVğHOG57HFKQRORJ\VL]HDQG RUJDQL]DWLRQVWUXFWXUHSociologyŋ 0RUJDQRSFLWS %LUNHQVKDZ-1REHO5 5LGGHUVWDOH-.QRZOHGJHDVDFRQWLQJHQF\YDULDEOHOrganization Science 0D\ŋ -XQHŋ 3XJKHWDOŋRSFLWSSŋ &KDQGOHU$Strategy and structure: chapters in the history of the industrial enterprise&DPEULGJH0,73UHVV %LUNHQVKDZRSFLWSSŋ &DVWHOOV0The rise of the network society2[IRUG%ODFNZHOOS ,ELGSSŋ ,ELG ,ELG CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 27 Chapter 2 The management process Tersia Brevis OPENING CASE MTN South Africa: Best large-sized employer in South Africa: 2010/2011 Since 1991, the Corporate Research Foundation (CRF) Institute has developed and run a BEST Employers methodology in South Africa, with the aim to identify and rate employers that are among the best in the country and create the best working conditions for their employees. In order to be certified as one of the country’s BEST Employers, organisations must exceed the objective rating standards in an in-depth benchmarked assessment of their policies in terms of the following areas: organisational strategy; the human resources function; communication; diversity management; corporate social responsibility; knowledge management; talent management and engagement; employee development; performance management; and rewards and recognition. The CRF publishes best employer rankings in the following categories: Best 10 Overall Employers; Best 10 Large-sized Employers; Best 10 Mediumsized Employers; Best 10 Small-sized Employers; Best Employers in Industry; and Best Empowered Employers. In the Best 10 Large-sized Employers, MTN South Africa was ranked first. MTN is a telecoms service provider, headquartered in South Africa and operates across 24 countries, predominantly in the developing world. MTN offers voice, data and internet solutions to clients. It employs 4 583 permanent staff with an annual turnover of R34 billion in 2009. Although MTN is still a relatively young company – it opened its doors in 1994 – it has 110 million subscribers across Africa and the Middle East, of which 17 million reside in South Africa. The company’s flair for innovation is seen to be its biggest advantage. MTN’s simplified solutions allow people from all areas, no matter how remote, to have access to communication. MTN is a company that gives its employees every opportunity to realise their full potential. Like many companies in South Africa, MTN is affected by the skills shortage, particularly within the Information Communications Technology (ICT) industry. There is a scarcity of engineers to configure modern society. MTN was one of the main sponsors of the 2010 FIFA World Cup and this opportunity has opened a number of doors for its employees. 2010 gave them the opportunity to enhance their broadband capabilities and improve the network. For example, they had to ensure that people would be able to watch the games from their handsets if desired. Their World Cup sponsorship provided the impetus to develop new technology and infrastructure that will be maintained after the event. For example, the company has built 3G stations across the country which will need continued maintenance and upkeep. Executive managers, general managers and senior managers are provided with mentors and coaches. These mentors come from outside the company and are seasoned executives who have CHAPTER 2 The management process retired from other businesses and are willing to lend MTN their skills and expertise. They assist managers in various areas such as their approach to market, business-related problems and issues associated with behaviour in the organisation. This provides a valuable input from individuals who have practical, independent experience. MTN makes various career opportunities available to potential employees. The backbone of the organisation comprises high-level engineers. From there, frontline positions include solutions consultants who take the specifications for product design to the engineers, as well as IT, sales and customer service. MTN also has a retail division, which is growing at a rapid rate. In 2009, the number of retail shops increased from 18 to 235. MTN’s main objective for the near future is to position the South African business strategically in the broadband space. Essentially, the voice telecoms market has been saturated. Consumers are no longer using their mobile phones exclusively for voice communication but also for news, banking, internet and the like. Therefore, the company will be targeting this market and making opportunities available for people to work within these specialist fields. LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to provide a comprehensive contemporary view of general management principles and their application in modern organisations. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Understand the importance of managers and management in modern society. . &eƂne management and eZplain the management process. 3. Identify and explain the different levels and areas of management in an organisation. 4. Explain the role distribution of managers. 5. Expound on the various skills needed by managers. 6. Explain how one can learn to manage successfully. 2.1 MANAGERS AND MANAGEMENT LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Managers experience more pressure today than any other time in history. Changes in the world that are impacting on managers include the growing globalisation of economies, technological innovations, trends towards democratisation and increasing social imbalances. The nature of management is to cope with these diverse and far-reaching challenges. Managers have to keep pace with ever-advancing technology and find ways to incorporate the internet and e-business into their strategies and business models. They must strive to remain competitive in the face of increasingly tough global competition, uncertain environments, cutbacks in personnel and resources and massive economic, political and social shifts. The diversity of the workforce creates other dynamics: How can managers maintain a strong corporate culture while supporting diversity, balancing work and family concerns, and coping with the conflicting demands of all employees for a fair chance at power and responsibility? Understand the importance of managers and management in modern society. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 29 PART I: Introduction The field of management is undergoing a revolution that demands managers have to do more with less, to see change rather than stability as the nature of things, and to create a vision and cultural values that allow people to create a truly collaborative and enabling workplace. Successful organisations don’t just happen; they are managed to be that way. To be successful under such circumstances, every organisation needs skilled managers. In our opening case, we saw that MTN proved itself as the best South African employer in the large-sized employers’ category. MTN is a relatively young company. It opened its doors in 1994 and boasts 110 million subscribers across Africa and the Middle East, 17 million of which reside in South Africa. During this short period of time, management at MTN succeeded in fostering a highly enabling environment and culture for their employees. It is a modern company, conceived in a modern age. MTN’s management also succeeded in integrating the company in both developed and developing countries. To navigate the turbulence of today’s world, managers need to shift their mindsets. Making a difference as a manager today and tomorrow requires integrating tried-and-tested management skills with new approaches that emphasise the individual, enhance flexibility, and involve employees’ hearts and minds as well as their bodies. In our opening case, we saw MTN using mentors from outside the company to coach their executive managers, general managers and senior managers. These mentors are willing to share their skills and expertise with MTN’s management in various areas. A company is only as good as its management. Managers have the most direct influence on the performance of the company’s employees and have the primary responsibility for inculcating the values, beliefs, norms and values of top management for the long-term sustainability of the organisation. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 &eƂne management and explain the management process. 30 2.2 MANAGEMENT AND THE MANAGEMENT PROCESS MTN’s management proved their ability to steer the company successfully through many changes and challenges, especially the global economic turbulence of the past few years. Taking into consideration how broad the concept of management is, as it was exercised by MTN, it is important to define the term ‘management’. For the purposes of this book, management is defined as the process of working with and through others to achieve organisational objectives as efficiently and effectively as possible within a changing environment. This definition of management essentially has six components which require closer examination: 1. management is a process 2. working with and through others 3. achieve organisational goals and objectives 4. balance effectiveness and efficiency 5. make the most of limited and scarce resources 6. coping with a changing environment. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 2 The management process 2.2.1 Management is a process A process is a structured, interrelated set of activities designed to produce a specific output. The management function in an organisation can also be viewed as a process, as illustrated in Figure 2.1. PLANNING CONTROL ORGANISING LEADING Figure 2.1: The management process Managers need certain inputs (or resources) to deliver certain outputs (or performance). Managers need people (human resources); capital (financial resources), physical resources, raw materials, components, information and entrepreneurial skills to produce products and/or services, create jobs, make a profit, achieve organisational goals and contribute to the wealth of society. The transformation of inputs to outputs requires management to perform certain activities or functions. All managers, regardless of the type of organisation, the level at which they are involved, their designated role(s) or specific skills, engage in some manner in four fundamental, interrelated activities, also called the management functions, in order to achieve some or other goal(s): r QMBOOJOH r PSHBOJTJOH r MFBEJOH r DPOUSPMMJOH The management functions Planning (setting an organisation’s goals and finding the best way to achieve them) is one of the management functions that determines the organisation’s mission and goals. It involves identifying ways of reaching the goals and finding the resources needed for the task within a complex environment. Hence the activities of the organisation cannot be performed in a random fashion, but should follow a specific, logical, scientific method or plan. Plans are mostly made by top management and they vary from one to five or even ten years. These are called ‘strategic plans’. Tactical plans are made by functional managers (such as financial, human resources, research and development, marketing and management functions managers engage in four fundamental functions of management, namely planning, organising, leading and controlling planning setting an organisation’s goals and finding the best way to achieve them CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 31 PART I: Introduction operations managers) to support the organisation’s long-term plans. Operational plans are made by lower management (often called ‘firstline’ or ‘supervisory’ management) to plan for short periods ahead. 0SHBOJTJOH is the second step in the management process. Once organising the goals and plans have been determined, management has to allocate developing an organisational the organisation’s resources to relevant departments or individuals. structure that indicates how Tasks, roles and responsibilities have to be defined and policies and people and other resources procedures established to achieve the goals. Thus organising involves should be deployed to achieve developing a framework or organisational structure to indicate how organisational goals people and other resources should be deployed to achieve the goals. The success of an organisation lies in directing the different resources towards the achievement of a common set of goals. The better the resources are coordinated and organised, the more successful the organisation will be. Because organisations have different goals and resources, it stands to reason that each one should have an organisational structure that will accommodate its particular needs. Management must match the organisation’s structure to its strategies. This process is called ‘organisational design’. -FBEJOH refers to directing the human resources of the organisation leaFing and motivating them in such a way that their actions are aligned with directing human resources and previously formulated goals and plans. Managers are responsible for motivating them in such a way getting things done through other people – they collaborate with their that their actions are aligned with previously formulated goals superiors, peers and subordinates, with both individuals and groups, to attain the goals of the organisation. Leading the organisation means and plans making use of influence and power to motivate employees to achieve organisational goals. Leading means communicating goals through the organisation and motivating departments, sections and individuals to perform as well as they possibly can. controlling $POUSPMMJOH means that managers should constantly make sure that the organisation is on the right course to attain its goals. Control monitoring the organisation’s also enables management to identify and rectify any deviations from the progress towards the attainment plans, and to take into account factors which might oblige them to revise of its goals their goals and plans. It is important to realise that the functions of management do not occur in a tidy, step-by-step order. At any given time, a manager is likely to be engaged in several management functions simultaneously. resources inputs that are utilised by managers to achieve organisational goals Inputs or resources 3FTPVSDFT are the inputs that are utilised by managers to achieve organisational goals. The following basic resources can be found in all organisations: r QFPQMF IVNBOSFTPVSDFT r NPOFZ DBQJUBMPSųOBODJBMSFTPVSDFT r SBXNBUFSJBMT QIZTJDBMSFTPVSDFT r LOPXMFEHF JOGPSNBUJPOSFTPVSDFT r UFDIOPMPHZ r JOGPSNBUJPO r DPNQPOFOUT These are the resources utilised by management to achieve the goals 32 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 2 The management process of the organisation as efficiently and effectively as possible. Resources are usually scarce and management’s biggest challenge is to utilise its resources as productively as possible. Managers have the task of bringing resources together, deciding which resources are necessary for a specific situation or specific circumstances, and in what quantities, to achieve the organisation’s goals. The success with which an organisation achieves its goals and satisfies the ever-increasing needs of society depends on the competence of its managers in utilising its scarce resources. If managers utilise resources well, the organisation will be successful. If a country’s organisations are all competitive and successful, the country as a whole will prosper because successful organisations satisfy needs not only by producing products and services, but also by providing jobs and contributing to the wealth of society. Like many companies in South Africa, MTN is affected by the skills shortage, particularly within the ICT industry. There is a scarcity of engineers to configure modern technology. MTN’s managers utilise its scarce skilled human resources by making use of a proactive model to identify high performers within the company, known as ‘Leadership Talent Management’. According to this model, management sits down with the individual and look at his or her developmental talent path. The path is confirmed collaboratively and once all parties are in agreement, MTN will make the necessary investment, financially or otherwise, to make sure that the individual’s development is actioned. The company also practices job rotation. Via the Leadership Talent Management programme, employees are moved across positions, within the various countries in order to gain the necessary exposure for further progression2. Outputs or performance Inputs or resources are transformed in the organisation to realise certain outputs, of which goal achievement, products, services, profit, job creation, efficiency and effectiveness are the most important outputs. This is called the organisation’s performance. 2.2.2 Working with and through others Managers get things done by working with and through other people. MTN’s management, for example, needs various people with various skills to achieve the company’s goals and objectives, such as high-level engineers, solutions consultants, IT specialists, and sales and customer service specialists. Management is, above all else, a social process. Many collective purposes bring individuals together – building houses and cars, publishing books, offering tertiary education, providing personal financial services and so on. The activities that are needed to build a house or a car, publish a book, offer tertiary educational programmes and to provide advice on personal finances, cannot happen on their own. In all cases, managers are needed for getting things done by working with and through other people and other organisations. performance the outputs realised by transforming or utilising resources CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 33 PART I: Introduction The ability to work with and through others is therefore an important skill that managers should have in order to be successful. Problems with interpersonal relationships and failure to build and lead a team are often the reasons why managers fail. However, the ability to work with and through others is not the only important skill that managers should have in order to be successful. Learning Objective 5 will focus on other important managerial skills. 2.2.3 Achieving organisational goals and objectives An objective can be described as a target to be strived for. A university student, for example, can set an objective for himself or herself to graduate with a specific degree by a given date. All actions taken or activities performed by the student will be with the view of achieving this target. As with individuals, organisations formulate organisational objectives. Organisations will also be more successful when their activities are guided by challenging, yet realistic and achievable objectives. Nokia’s target, for example, is to increase their net sales of $41.0 billion in 2009 by 10 per cent by the end of 2015. This goal will require Nokia’s managers to work with and through their 123 553 employees (as at the end of 2009) as they strive to increase their market share among diverse customers around the world3. Organisational goals and objectives serve later as measuring sticks for performance. Without goals and objectives, the management process would be aimless and wasteful. The formulation of organisational goals will be addressed in more detail in Chapter 10, Principles of planning. 2.2.4 Balancing effectiveness and efficiency It is important to distinguish between the concepts of effectiveness and efficiency. Effectiveness is achieved when the organisation formulates and pursues appropriate (or stated) goals. For example, Nokia needs to meet their sales objective. Effectiveness in essence means ‘doing the right things’. Given the reality of limited resources, effectiveness alone is not enough. An organisation also needs to be efficient. Efficiency enters the picture when the resources required to achieve an objective are weighed against what was actually accomplished. The organisation will be more efficient if the ratio between benefits (outputs or performance) and costs (inputs or resources) is more favourable. Efficiency essentially means ‘doing things right’. Efficiency is achieved by using the fewest inputs (such as the number of people employed or the amount of capital utilised during the financial year) to generate a maximum amount of output (such as number of products produced or the profit realised within a financial year). Managers are responsible for balancing effectiveness and efficiency. Too much emphasis on either effectiveness or efficiency leads to mismanagement. On the one hand, managers must be effective by getting the job done. On the other hand, managers need to be efficient by reducing costs and not wasting resources. Too much emphasis on effectiveness will mean that the job gets done, but limited resources 34 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 2 The management process are wasted. Too much emphasis on efficiency will mean that the job doesn’t get done because available resources are underutilised. Thus, the answer lies in a balanced emphasis on effectiveness and efficiency – the job gets done and limited resources are not wasted. 2.2.5 Making the most of limited and scarce resources We live in a world of scarcity and limited resources. Like many companies in South Africa, MTN is challenged by the skills shortage. In fact, all resources and inputs needed by an organisation are scarce and, in some countries more than in others, very expensive. Although experts and non-experts alike may quibble over exactly how long it will take to exhaust our non-renewable resources or come up with clever new technological alternatives, one fact remains: our planet is becoming increasingly crowded. For South Africa, Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) estimated the 2010 mid-year population as 49.99 million4. Table 2.1 illustrates the estimated annual population growth rates in South Africa for the period 2001 to 2010. TaDle 2.1: 5outh #fricaos estimated annual population growth rates 1s1 2001– 2002 2002– 2003 2003– 2004 2004– 2005 2005– 2006 2006– 2007 2007– 2008 2008– 2009 2009– 2010 Male 1.53 1.43 1.34 1.30 1.27 1.25 1.26 1.25 1.18 Female 1.29 1.18 1.08 1.03 1.00 0.99 1.00 1.01 0.94 Total 1.40 1.30 1.21 1.16 1.13 1.11 1.13 1.12 1.06 Source: www.statssa.gov.za/keyindicators/mye.asp. Accessed on 6 February 2011. Table 2.1 shows the South African annual population growth rate as a positive figure, yet there are fewer resources to sustain this growing population. South Africa is already experiencing increasing pressure to divide limited resources more equitably. In productive organisations, managers are the custodians of limited and scarce resources and it is their job to see that the basic factors of production are used efficiently and effectively. 2.2.6 Coping with a changing environment Successful managers are those who anticipate and adjust to changing circumstances rather than those who are passively swept along or caught unprepared. Management at MTN South Africa has proved an ability to anticipate and adjust to the opportunities of being one of the main sponsors of the 2010 FIFA World Cup. Chapter 4 (Composition of the management environment), provides detailed coverage of important changes and trends in management’s social, political, legal, economic, international and technological environments. For now we can conclude with Business Week’s amusing but challenging profile of tomorrow’s managers: ‘The next generation of corporate leaders will need the charm CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 35 PART I: Introduction of a debutante, the flexibility of a gymnast, and the quickness of a panther. A few foreign languages and a keen understanding of technology won’t hurt either’5. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 2.3 LEVELS AND AREAS OF MANAGEMENT Identify and explain the different levels and areas of management in an organisation. The management process and functions of management as explained earlier only provide us with a starting point for understanding what management entails. To add to the complexity of the process, management takes place at different levels and in different areas within organisations. While managers at each level and in each area must generally possess planning, organising, leading and controlling skills, certain job-specific activities and skills are more important at one level than at another. 2.3.1 Levels of management leXels of management differentiation of managers into three basic layers: top-level; middle-level and lower-level managers 36 Managers function at various levels in the organisational hierarchy. A small organisation may have only one layer of management, whereas a large organisation may have several layers. In general, relatively large organisations (especially governmental organisations) have threeMFWFMT PG NBOBHFNFOU: top-level managers, middle-level managers and lower-level managers. 5PQ NBOBHFNFOU represents the relatively small group of managers who control the organisation as a whole and with whom the final authority and responsibility for executing the management process rests. Top management is usually responsible for determining the organisation’s mission, goals and overall strategies. Top management is concerned mainly with long-term planning, designing the organisation’s broad organisational structure, leading the organisation (through the top executive) and controlling it. Top management also influences the corporate culture. The annual reports of organisations usually depict their top management structure. This level of management usually comprises the board of directors, partners, the managing director, chief executive officers and management committees. .JEEMFNBOBHFNFOU is responsible for specific departments of the organisation and is primarily concerned with implementing the policies, plans and strategies formulated by top management. It normally includes the functional heads, such as the marketing manager, the purchasing manager and the human resources manager. Middle management is concerned with the near future and is therefore responsible for mediumterm and short-term planning, organising functional areas, leading by means of the departmental heads, and controlling the management activities of the middle managers’ own departments. Middle managers also continually monitor environmental influences that may affect their own departments. The trend in recent years of corporate restructuring, delayering, downsizing and decentralisation of decision-making has been responsible for many of middle managers becoming redundant. Electronic technology has reduced the need for middle management in some organisations. It is in the area of information management, in particular, that computers have replaced the information-gathering tasks CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 2 The management process of middle managers. Middle managers are, however, still necessary to link the upper and lower levels of the organisation and to implement the strategies developed at the executive level. Lower-level management (also called first-line management) is responsible for even smaller segments of the organisation, namely the different subsections. The managerial functions of first-line managers are centred on the daily activities of their departments or sections, on short-term planning, and on implementing the plans of middle management. Their primary concern is to apply policies, procedures and rules in order to achieve a high level of productivity, to provide technical assistance, to motivate subordinates and to accomplish day-to-day goals. Typically, they spend a large portion of their time supervising the work of subordinates. Because of this, first-line management is a vital force in the organisation. These managers hold the power to increase or decrease the productivity and output of most organisations. They also maintain the crucial interface between management and the major body of employees in the organisation. This level of management usually comprises titles such as office manager, shift supervisor, advertising manager, debtors’ clerk or a section manager. Figure 2.2 summarises the various levels of management, the responsibilities of managers at each level of management and the titles that are normally associated with each. Top-level management Responsible for determining the vision, mission, goals and strategies of the organisation. Managerial titles such as board of directors, partners, managing directors, chief executive ofƂcer and management committees are used. Middle-level management Responsible for implementing policies, plans and strategies developed by top management. Managerial titles are usually functional head, such as marketing manager, Ƃnancial managers, and so on. Lower-level management Responsible for short-term planning, applying policies, procedures and rules, providing technical assistance and executing day-today activities. Managerial titles are usually ofƂce manager, shift supervisor, section manager and so on. Figure 2.2: The levels of management, management responsibilities and managerial titles CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 37 PART I: Introduction areas of management 2.3.2 Areas of management managers can be differentiated into finance, operations, human resources, procurement, research and development, public relations and marketing At each managerial level, different functional areas can also be distinguished. These functional areas may include finance, operations, human resources, procurement, research and development, public relations and marketing. r 5IFųOBODJBMGVODUJPOJTSFTQPOTJCMFGPSPCUBJOJOHUIFOFDFTTBSZ finances for an organisation at the lowest cost, investing these finances in assets that would earn greater returns than the cost of capital as well as managing the profitability, liquidity and solvency of the organisation. r 5IFPQFSBUJPOTGVODUJPOJODMVEFTUIBUHSPVQPGBDUJWJUJFT concerned with the actual provision of goods and services to the organisation’s clients. Operations management systematically designs, directs and controls the process that transforms inputs into products and services for internal and external customers. r 5IFIVNBOSFTPVSDFTGVODUJPOFOUBJMTUIFBQQPJOUNFOU development and maintenance of the human resources of the organisation. To enable the organisation to operate at optimum levels, the human resources manager must appoint the right people and provide them with the right training in order to make the best use of them. r 5IFQSPDVSFNFOUGVODUJPOJTDPODFSOFEXJUICVZJOHUIFNBUFSJBMT and resources needed to create products and services. The manager responsible for procurement needs to balance a number of constraints. He or she needs to ensure that the right product is available, at the right time, in the right quantity and of the right quality, at the best possible price. r 5IFSFTFBSDIBOEEFWFMPQNFOUGVODUJPOJTSFTQPOTJCMFGPS developing new products and services and improving old products and services. This function plays a crucial role in organisations that operate in fast-changing environments, such as information technology, communications, etc. r 5IFQVCMJDSFMBUJPOTGVODUJPOPGBOPSHBOJTBUJPOJTSFTQPOTJCMFGPS creating a favourable, objective image of the organisation and to establish good relations with those directly or indirectly concerned with the business and its products or services. r 5IFNBSLFUJOHGVODUJPOJTSFTQPOTJCMFGPSHFUUJOHUIFųOBMDVTUPNFS or client to buy the organisation’s products or services. The marketing function is concerned with new product development, promotion and distribution. While these are specialised areas of management which require more specific and specialist skills, managers in each area still plan, organise, lead and control. A financial manager, for example, is responsible for determining the financial goals of the organisation, thus performing the planning function of management. Sappi Limited, for example, set specific financial goals in terms of two key financial measures, namely return on capital employed (ROCE) and cost of capital. For the year 38 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 2 The management process 2010, Sappi’s financial goal was to achieve their ROCE target of greater than 12 per cent and to exceed their cost of capital. The financial goal is in accordance with the overall strategic goal of the company6. The financial manager needs to organise financial activities by allocating financial tasks to people so that financial goals can be achieved. The financial manager also needs to take the lead in financial activities, motivate and direct members of staff in the financial section to perform their duties in pursuit of the financial targets. Lastly, financial managers need to ensure that financial goals are accomplished. In the case of Sappi Ltd, the financial manager needs to determine whether their target to achieve a ROCE of greater than 12 per cent was achieved. 2.4 THE ROLE DISTRIBUTION OF MANAGERS Regardless of the managerial level or the management area in which a manager works, the manager is also required to perform certain managerial roles. Professor Henry Mintzberg followed five American Chief Executive Officers, shadowing each for a week and analysing their mail, their conversations and their actions. He concluded that managers play ten different but highly interrelated roles that can be grouped under three overlapping primary headings, namely information, decisionmaking and interpersonal roles7. In other words, managers talk to people, gather and give information and make decisions. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 Explain the role distribution of managers. managerial roles managers fulfil three major roles while performing their jobs: interpersonal, informational and decision-making roles 2.4.1 Interpersonal role More than anything else, management jobs are people-intensive. Evidence shows that managers spend most of their time in face-to-face communication with others8. In fulfilling the interpersonal role of management, managers perform three sub-roles. All managers have to perform duties that are ceremonial and symbolic in nature. For example, managers may have to appear at community functions, attend social events or host luncheons for important customers. In doing so, managers fulfil their role as figureheads. Second, all managers have a role as a leader. In this capacity, managers work with and through their employees to ensure that organisational goals are met. The third sub-role within the interpersonal role is that of liaison, which aims at maintaining good relations within and outside the organisation. Managers must be politically sensitive to important organisational issues so that they can develop relationships and networks both within and beyond their organisations. interpersonal role the role that includes the sub-roles of figurehead, leader and liaison 2.4.2 Information role A manager’s information role enables him or her to obtain information from colleagues, subordinates and departmental heads, as well as outside individuals and organisations. He or she can use this information for making decisions. The information role of the manager involves monitoring or gathering information on trends and passing on relevant data or information to their superiors and subordinates. The manager is therefore a vital link in the organisation’s communication process. The information role the role of monitor, disseminator and spokesperson CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 39 PART I: Introduction manager’s information role also entails acting as a spokesperson for the department or for the whole organisation. 2.4.3 Decision-making role decision-making role the role of entrepreneur, problem solver, resource allocator and negotiator The third set of managerial roles is grouped into what is known as the decision-making role. A manager is regarded as an entrepreneur. As an entrepreneur, the manager initiates projects that capitalise on opportunities that have been identified in the monitoring role. This may involve developing new products, services or processes. A second decisional role that managers play is that of problem-solver. Regardless of how well an organisation is managed, things do not always run smoothly. Managers must cope with conflict and resolve problems as they arise. This may involve dealing with an irate customer, negotiating with an uncooperative supplier or intervening in a dispute between employees. Managers must also make decisions about the resources available to the organisation. Resource allocation, or deciding to whom resources such as money, people and equipment are to be assigned, is often a critical management decision. In his or her role as negotiator, a manager often has to negotiate with individuals, other departments or organisations, and trade unions about goals, standards of performance and resources. Figure 2.3 summarises Mintzberg’s managerial roles and sub-roles. Managerial roles Interpersonal role Information role Decision-making role ƂIWTGJGCF NGCFGT NKCKUQP OQPKVQT FKUUGOKPCVQT URQMGURGTUQP GPVTGRTGPGWT RTQDNGOUQNXGT TGUQWTEGCNNQECVQT PGIQVKCVQT Figure 2.3: Mintzberg’s managerial roles and sub-roles The environment in which managers perform their main functions and their roles is complex. Its fast-changing and uncertain nature means that managers need to have a flexible managerial style with certain essential skills and competencies in order to survive. These skills and competencies are explored further in Learning Objective 5. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 2.5 MANAGERIAL SKILLS Expound on the various skills needed by managers. Each level, area and management role requires different knowledge, skills and competencies for the performance of the management task. Clark L Wilson did 30 years of research involving thousands of managers, and thereby provides a very clear picture of what it takes to be an effective manager. Wilson identified three skill categories – 40 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 2 The management process technical, teambuilding and drive – where each category branches into various specific managerial skills. 2.5.1 Technical skills Technical skills refer to the manager’s ability to apply his or her education, training and experience to effectively and efficiently organise a task, job or project. The first branch of technical skills is technical expertise, which refers to the skills that have been acquired by a manager through education and/or actual experience of the task at hand. A knowledge of accountancy or logistics are examples of a technical expertise that can be used to perform a task. The second branch of technical skills is the clarification of goals and objectives. A manager should have the ability to determine what actual activities need to be performed in order to meet established targets. These activities should then be organised and scheduled. The third branch of technical skills is problem solving, which refers to the manager’s ability to resolve issues confronted within his or her day-to-day work as well as the development of team collaboration. Lastly, technical skills also involve a manager’s ability to use imagination and creativity. This is the ability to originate ideas and to correct and develop ways to improve the overall productivity of the organisation. technical skills ability or apply education, training and experience to organise a task, job or project 2.5.2 Teambuilding Teambuilding refers to the ability or skill of a manager to listen carefully to others, to communicate effectively with others and to develop and coordinate an effective group or team. The first branch of teambuilding is listening for insights. The manager should keep aware of team activities by listening to team members. The second branch is directing and coaching. Directing refers to the manager’s ability to work through and with team members to achieve organisational goals and objectives. A directive manager lets team members know what is expected of them and gives specific guidance as to how the work should be done. Coaching focuses on the improved performance of a less experienced individual and imparts skills that this individual needs to accept new responsibilities. Coaching in a business sense is very similar to that in sport, where a tennis coach will direct the learning of his or her pupil. The third branch of teambuilding is solving problems as teams. An efficient manager should have the ability to help his or her team to contribute ideas and solutions to improve their performance in the organisation. Lastly, teambuilding branches into coordinating and cooperating. Coordination is an important principle in organising. Coordination means that all departments, sections and individuals within an organisation should work together to accomplish strategic, tactical and operational goals and objectives of the organisation. Coordination will be discussed in more detail in Chapter 15 (Principles of organising). Cooperation means the willingness to work with others, be it your team, other teams or units close to you. teambuilding ability to listen and communicate with others and to develop and coordinate a group or team CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 41 PART I: Introduction 2.5.3 Drive drive ability to set goals, maintain standards and evaluate performance The third category of skills needed by managers is drive. Having the skill to drive an organisation, team or unit successfully, means that a manager should have the ability to set goals, maintain standards and evaluate performance in order to achieve effective outcomes. In this sense, outcomes refer to costs, output, product quality and customer service. The first branch of the skill to drive is setting standards of performance. Managers should have the skill to keep that part of the organisation for which they are responsible and for moving and aiming towards new accomplishments. The second branch refers to control of details, which refers to the ability to oversee the performance of work in detail in order to meet overall goals and objectives. The third branch of the driving skill of a manager is energy. Successful managers demonstrate the willingness and ability to work with their team and they expect cooperation from others. The last branch of this category of managerial skills is exerting pressure. This refers to the manager’s ability to urge others to perform, without dominating. According to Wilson’s research, about one third of managers at all levels do not achieve an appropriate balance between technical, teambuilding and drive skills and are thus ineffective. The answer lies in finding a balance in all three categories of managerial skills, fit for the manager’s specific situation. Figure 2.4 summarises the three categories of managerial skills. Technical skills Teambuilding Drive r technical expertise r listening for insights r clariƂcation of goals and objectives r directing and coaching r set standards of performance r control of details r problem solving r solving problems as teams r imagination r coordinating r exerting pressure r creativity r cooperating r energy Figure 2.4: Managerial skills Source: Wilson, C.L. 2003. How and why effective managers balance their skills: technical, teambuilding and drive. Rockatech Multimedia Publishing: Columbia, p 13, 18–20 and Kreitner, R. 2009. Principles of management. 11th edition. Arizona: Cengage Learning, p 1415. 42 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 2 The management process 2.6 LEARNING TO MANAGE SUCCESSFULLY Managers acquire management skills through management training and development, as well as through practical experience. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 Explain how one can learn to manage successfully. 2.6.1 Management training and development In South Africa, management and entrepreneurship training and development is obtained in schools, business colleges, technical universities and academic universities. Some institutions and organisations provide in-house management training and development. It is important that the management training and development offered by these institutions is aligned with the NQF (National Qualifications Framework). This ensures that the training is accredited. Non-formal management training and development, often called ‘continuous learning’, refers to non-degree programmes offered by universities, organisations and in-house training facilities set up by business organisations themselves. Management training and development is of major importance to the South African economy. The economy must grow at a rate of well above three per cent per year to reverse spiralling economic stagnation and impoverishment. This will be possible only if there are enough skilled managers to drive the economy. It is widely recognised that a moderate real economic growth rate of 2.7 per cent per year will require an additional 100 000 managers each year for the foreseeable future. In order to provide for this need, significant levels of management training and development are required. In order to create equitable representivity and empowerment, these managers cannot be white males (as has traditionally been the case). 2.6.2 Practical experience A second source of managerial competence is practical experience. There is no doubt that a natural aptitude for management, self-motivation and ambition plays a decisive role in the development of managerial competence. Most managers have advanced to their present positions from other jobs. Through experience, and by facing and meeting a variety of managerial challenges, the individual develops insights that cannot be learnt from training alone. Efficient managers, however, develop their skills through a combination of training, development and experience. Management is a science, a profession and an art. The growing body of knowledge around management and organisational performance is acquired through scientific research and is disseminated through teaching, textbooks and articles. Management is also often viewed as an art because many of the skills cannot be learnt from a book or in a classroom. Management requires practice, and many of the required skills – especially interpersonal and conceptual skills – are learnt through experience. Becoming a successful manager, therefore, requires a blend of formal learning and practice of science and art. Practice alone used to suffice when learning how to manage, but this is no longer the case. The study of management enables managers to see and understand aspects of organisations that others cannot. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 43 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part I: Introduction CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Understand the importance of managers and management in modern society. • Managers need to cope with diverse and far-reaching challenges from inside as well as outside the organisation. • Managers have the most direct influence on the performance of its employees and have the primary responsibility for inculcating the values, beliefs, norms and values of the top management for the long-term sustainability of the organisation. 2. Define management and explain the management process. • Management can be defined as a process of working with and through others to achieve organisational goals and objectives as effectively and efficiently as possible within an everchanging environment. • Managers need certain resources or inputs to deliver outputs or performance. 3. Identify and explain the different levels and areas of management in an organisation. • Managers can be differentiated between three basic layers, namely top-, middle- and lowerlevel management. • At each of these levels, different functional areas can be distinguished, which include finance, operations, human resources, procurement, research and development, public relations and marketing. 4. Distinguish between the role distribution of managers. Professor Henry Mintzberg concluded that managers play ten roles that can be grouped into three primary headings: interpersonal, informational and decision-making roles. • The interpersonal role has three sub-roles, namely the role of figurehead, leader and liaison. • The informational role has three sub-roles, namely the role of monitor, disseminator and spokesperson. • The decision-making role has four sub-roles namely entrepreneur, problem solver, resource allocator and negotiator. 5. Expound on the various managerial skills and competences needed by managers. Clark L Wilson identified three skill categories, where each category has various branches: • The technical skills category branches into technical expertise, clarification of goals and objectives, problem solving and imagination and creativity. • The teambuilding category branches into listening for insights, directing and coaching, solving problems as teams, and coordinating and cooperating. • The drive category branches into standards of performance, control of detail, energy and exerting pressure. 6. Explain how one can learn to manage successfully. Managers can acquire management skills through management training and development, as well as practical experience. 44 Contemporary Management Principles EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:41 PM via UNISA AN: 707010 ; Vrba, M. J., Brevis, Tersia.; Contemporary Management Principles Contemporary.indb 44 Account: s7393698 2013/11/20 4:23 PM CHAPTER 2 The management process KEY TERMS controlling decision-making role drive education in management effectiveness efficiency finance goals human resources informational role inputs interpersonal role leading lower-level management management management environment management process managerial experience managers marketing middle management objectives operations organising outputs planning procurement public relations research and development teambuilding technical skills top management REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Why are managers and management so important in modern society? 2. Define the term ‘management’. 3. Explain the management process and illustrate your answer diagrammatically. 4. Identify the various levels of management that can be found in most medium- to large-sized organisations. 5. Explain the various areas of management that can typically be found in large-sized organisations. 6. Explain the various categories of roles that managers fulfill according to Professor Henry Mintzberg. 7. Identify and explain the various categories of managerial skills identified by Clark L Wilson. In your answer you also need to discuss the branches of each skill category. 8. Explain how a manager and potential managers can acquire managerial skills. END NOTES %HVW(PSOR\HUV6RXWK$IULFDSSŋ %HVW(PSOR\HUV6RXWK$IULFDS KWWSZZZQRNLDFRPDERXWQRNLDFRPSDQ\IDT ZZZVWDWVVDJRY]D$FFHVVHGRQ)HEUXDU\ 'LDQH%UDG\:DQWHG(FOHFWLFYLVLRQDU\ZLWKDVHQVHRIKXPRUBusiness Week$XJXVWS KWWSZZZVDSSLFRP6DSSL:HE,QYHVWRULQIR*OREDOEXVLQHVVVWUDWHJ\$FFHVVHGRQ-DQXDU\ 0LQW]EHUJ+The nature of managerial work1HZ<RUN+DUSHU 5RZ +DOHV&3:KDWGRPDQDJHUVGR"$FULWLFDOUHYLHZRIWKHHYLGHQFH Journal of management studies ŋ CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 45 Chapter 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges Mari Vrba OPENING CASE WL Gore & Associates, Inc.1 WL Gore & Associates, Inc. is a privately held company that was founded in 1958 with its headquarters in Newark, Delaware, USA. For more than 50 years, Gore has built a worldwide reputation for ethics and integrity in its dealings with customers, suppliers, and employees, and for taking a long-term view when assessing business situations. Gore employs approximately 9 000 associates. They are located in 30 countries worldwide, with manufacturing facilities in the United States, Germany, Scotland, Japan and China, and sales offices around the world. Gore’s fluoropolymer products provide innovative solutions for many industries, in nextgeneration electronics, for medical products, and with high-performance fabrics. While their best-known product is GORE-TEX® fabrics, their products are all distinguished in their markets. Their technologies and fluoropolymer expertise are unsurpassed. Gore also has a unique – and successful – management style. In 2013, for the fifteenth consecutive year, WL Gore & Associates, Inc. earned a position on Fortune magazine’s annual list of the U.S. ‘100 Best Companies to Work For’. Its European operations have also earned similar honours. An important factor in this recognition is Gore’s unique culture, which evolved from the company’s success with small teams during its early years. This approach to business emerged from founder Bill Gore’s experience with task force teams while he worked at the DuPont Company. DuPont formed such groups on an ad hoc basis to attack problem situations. They were usually multidisciplinary and typically operated for short periods outside of the company’s formal management hierarchy. Bill Gore first presented the concept of a ‘lattice’ organisation to the company in 1967. Unlike the traditional management structure that Bill Gore had experienced at DuPont, he proposed a flat, lattice-like organisational structure where everyone shares the same title of ‘associate’. There are neither chains of command nor predetermined channels of communication. Leaders replace the idea of ‘bosses’. Associates (not employees) work in general work areas. With the guidance of their sponsors (not bosses) and a growing understanding of opportunities and team objectives, associates commit to projects that match their skills. All of this takes place in an environment that combines freedom with cooperation and autonomy with synergy. Associates choose to follow leaders rather than have bosses assigned to them and peers review and rate associate contributions. A leader’s job at Gore is not to take individual decisions, but rather to act as the representative of the ten-or-so member team that is the basic management unit at Gore. Everyone can earn the credibility to define and drive projects. Sponsors CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges help associates plan their career choices in the organisation that will offer personal fulfilment whilst maximising their contribution to the organisation. Leaders may be appointed, but ‘followership’ defines them. More often, leaders emerge naturally by demonstrating special knowledge, skills, or experience that advances a business objective. It can be confusing for new people who are used to looking to their line managers for guidance, but because people choose their own leaders, they are committed to meet objectives. Leadership at Gore is truly participatory, for example, the team, not the leader, will decide to accept or reject a new product innovation. In this lattice organisation, associates communicate directly with each other and are accountable to fellow members of their teams. At Gore, hands-on product innovation and prototyping are encouraged. Teams typically organise around opportunities, new product concepts, or businesses. As teams evolve, leaders frequently emerge as they gain followership. This unusual organisational structure and culture is a significant contributor to associate satisfaction and retention. Bill Gore articulated four principles that define the culture at Gore. He calls them freedom, fairness, commitment and waterline. 1. Associates have the freedom to encourage, help, and allow other associates to grow in knowledge, skill and scope of responsibility. 2. Associates should demonstrate fairness to one another and everyone with whom they come into contact. 3. Associates choose their own commitments and they should keep them. 4. A waterline situation involves consultation with other associates before undertaking actions that could influence the reputation or profitability of the company and otherwise ‘sink the ship’. Gore ignores the conventional wisdom when it comes to production. Although the company manufactures a vast range of products ranging from medical devices to guitar strings, it limits the size of the employee base at a plant to approximately 250 workers – small for a company comprising 9 000 employees. The underlying philosophy is that the cost savings from large plants cancels out the loss of efficiency and productivity that is a consequence when employees do not know one another well. Committees at Gore determine performance, following a comprehensive review process. Every year, each team ranks every member relative to all of the others by asking them who has made the biggest impact on the organisation. They leave the question deliberately undefined, to allow people to interpret it as they wish. Special committees sort through the rankings and use it as the basis for decisions on compensation. The process works because associates perceive it as being fair. All associates are part owners of the company through a stock plan; therefore, Gore associates expect much more from one another in terms of innovation and creativity, high ethics and integrity, and making commitments and delivering on them. Gore is more informal than most workplaces. Relationships between associates are open and informal, and everyone is treated respectfully and fairly. This type of environment naturally promotes social interaction and many associates have made lifelong friends with those they met working at Gore. Because the organisation views its associates as their most valued asset, they try to provide tools and resources to allow flexibility in balancing work/life needs. This includes internal training, continuous learning, and external education, resource and referral programmes for childcare, adoption assistance, domestic-partner benefits, and flexible work hours. While all of these processes sound very complex, the feeling at Gore is that it contributes to a freer, more innovative and flexible workforce. Bill Gore once commented that the aim of the organisation is to make money and to have fun doing so, and the results seem to bear this out. Although Gore is private, it has been growing revenues consistently for the last decade. Voluntary turnover at the company is only five per cent. This is a strikingly low number for an industrial company with many manufacturing units. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 47 PART I: Introduction LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of the chapter is to examine the emergence of organisations that differ substantially from traditional organisations because of on-going and turbulent environmental change. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Cite reasons why organisations change. . +dentify nnewo variables in the business environment of contemporary organisations. 3. Defend the statement that bureaucracy fails to provide for the needs of modern organisations. 4. Expound on the features of the new, emerging organisation. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Cite reasons why organisations change. 48 3.1 THE CHANGING FACE OF CONTEMPORARY ORGANISATIONS We use the words ‘change’ and ‘challenge’ often in this book. In this chapter, we focus on the challenges that managers face to meet the radical changes occurring in the world, the business environment and the workplace. In Chapter 1, we explained why the Information Revolution changed the entire world and the world of work. The Information Revolution and the emergence of globalisation are two factors that, in tandem, forced organisations to change fundamentally. These factors enabled organisations to function in a fast-changing, dynamic environment. Some of these changes are so revolutionary that some authors in influential journals refer to ‘new organisation forms’ emerging. However, another faction of prominent authors has unresolved issues with the use of the concept ‘new organisation forms’. Palmer and Dunford2, for example, ask if ‘new’ relates to new in time (the first time we have seen it) or new in context (the first time we have seen it here). Ambiguity also exists regarding the word ‘form’ – the question is whether the concept is interchangeable with ‘structure’ or ‘design’. These ambiguities notwithstanding, there is a high degree of consistency in the nature of organisational practices attributed to the ‘new organisation form’: flat, flexible, networked, global and diverse. For the purposes of this chapter, we focus on these features. WL Gore & Associates Inc., the organisation discussed in the opening case study, meets the challenges presented by a fast-changing environment in an innovative manner. Admittedly, not all organisations change as dramatically as this organisation, but many exhibit one or more of the features of the ‘new’ organisation and differ fundamentally from the traditional model of formal bureaucratic organisations discussed in Chapter 1. The key features of emerging ‘new’ organisations are that they are flatter and leaner, flexible, networked internally and externally, diverse, and global in orientation and operations3. The discussion in this chapter sometimes overlaps with topics and issues we shall deal with in the rest of the book because the parallel themes of change and challenge are prevalent throughout the book. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges However, in this chapter, we introduce the ‘new’ organisation, we expand on the challenges contemporary managers face, and explain how these changes and challenges affect management theories. 3.2 VARIABLES INFLUENCING CONTEMPORARY ORGANISATIONS TO CHANGE LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 +dentify nnewo variables in the business environment of contemporary organisations. In Chapter 1 we introduced you to the concept of systems thinking and why organisations, as open systems, are in continuous interaction with their environment. Organisations worldwide have to deal with a number of variables in their environment that emerged during the last decade or so, including: r HMPCBMJTBUJPOBOEUIFHMPCBMFDPOPNZ r UFDIOPMPHJDBMBEWBODFT r SBEJDBMUSBOTGPSNBUJPOPG UIFXPSMEPG XPSL r JODSFBTFEQPXFSBOEEFNBOETPG UIFDVTUPNFS r UIFHSPXJOHJNQPSUBODFPG JOUFMMFDUVBMDBQJUBMBOEMFBSOJOH r OFXSPMFTGPSBOEFYQFDUBUJPOTPGXPSLFST 3.2.1 Globalisation and the global economy Previously, international organisations operated in many countries, but they kept their operations in each country separate, with little interaction or interdependence between them. In contrast, being global means operating without the constraints or traditions of national boundaries, and seeking to compete in any high-potential marketplace on Earth4. At its most basic, globalisation refers to the worldwide integration of markets, and cultures, the removal of legal and political barriers to trade, the ‘death of distance’ as a factor limiting material and cultural exchanges’5. The global organisation is a consequence of several new and sophisticated forces influencing the world economy6. r *OUFSOBUJPOBMUSBOTQPSUBUJPOBOEDPNNVOJDBUJPOTIBWFCFDPNF cheaper. For example, China and Korea manufacture clothes that sell at competitive prices in other markets in the world. r 0SHBOJTBUJPOTDPQZBOEBQQMZOFXQSPEVDUPSQSPDFTTUFDIOPMPHJFT because they possess a highly educated workforce, technological and managerial capabilities, and advanced telecommunications and transportation infrastructures. On the one hand, this intensifies international competition but, on the other, it increases the available strategic options of individual organisations in such areas as purchasing components or finding markets for products or services. r .BSLFUTBSFCFDPNJOHNPSFIPNPHFOFPVTCFDBVTFDPOTVNFSTBSF acquiring a taste for foreign products. r $PTUTUSVDUVSFTEJŲFSGSPNDPVOUSZUPDPVOUSZ NBLJOHJUQPTTJCMF for organisations to take advantage of lower-cost locations for support activities or production. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 49 PART I: Introduction r $SPTTCPSEFSMFBSOJOHJODSFBTFTUIFQPTTJCJMJUZPGPSHBOJTBUJPOT expanding their capabilities, for example by building networks into leading markets. r 'JOBODJBMNBSLFUTBSFUSBEJOHIPVSTBEBZBSPVOEUIFXPSME r (MPCBMTUBOEBSETBOESFHVMBUJPOTGPSUSBEFBOEDPNNFSDF ųOBODF products, and services have emerged. Globalisation is the catalyst for the worldwide merging of economic and social forces, interests and commitments, values and tastes, and challenges and opportunities. Manuel Castells places global organisations in the context of a global economy. He defines the global economy as follows: ‘It is an economy with the capacity to work as a unit in real time on a planetary scale. ...[W]hile the capitalist mode of production is characterized by its relentless expansion, always trying to overcome limits of time and space, it is only in the late-twentieth century that the world economy was able to become truly global on the basis of the new infrastructure provided by information and communication technologies … it is informational because the productivity and competitiveness of units or agents in this economy (be it firms, regions or nations) fundamentally depend upon their capacity to generate, process, and apply efficiently knowledgebased information. It is global because the core activities of production and circulation, as well as their components (capital, labour, raw materials, management, information, technology, markets) are organised on a global scale, either directly or through a network of linkages between economic agents’7. Not so long ago, the international scope of South African companies was limited. Sanctions, political isolation and legislative constraints during the apartheid years made anything beyond normal trade relations almost impossible. After the release of Nelson Mandela in 1992, both business and diplomatic relations with the rest of the world began to expand slowly. However, the democratic elections of 1994 provided the impetus for South African corporations to move rapidly into the rest of Africa and beyond. 3.2.2 Advances in technology CFXCPEGUKPVGEJPQNQI[ the Information Revolution and other technological advances that have had a powerful influence on organisations As mentioned in Chapter 1, BEWBODFT JO UFDIOPMPHZ have dramatically changed the world of work and will continue to do so in the future. Modern managers need to appreciate and understand the power of technology and must be able to use it in the best interests of the organisations where they work. The Information Revolution was discussed in Chapter 1. The way in which technological advances force organisations to change will be discussed in Chapter 5. "GSJDBKPJOTUIFJOUFSOFU#BOEXBHPO8 South Africa has the best internet access in Africa. One in 65 people has direct access to the internet. 50 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Elsewhere in Africa, the average is nearer to one in 4 000 people. Zimbabwe ranks third in Africa with CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges one in 1 000 people boasting direct access, while approximately 700 000 of the estimated one million people in Africa with public access to the internet reside in South Africa. E-mail access, although often too expensive, too slow, and hampered by phone lines that are inadequate in both number and quality, is spreading rapidly in Africa. There are only a few countries without known connectivity. Internet access is limited, but it is also spreading rapidly. On the continent, South Africa is comparable to most European countries at the level of connectivity. In general, Southern Africa is the most advanced region, but countries all over the continent are in the process of being connected. Africa continues to lag far behind the developed world where, for example, an estimated one in six people in North America and Europe use the internet regularly. Internet and e-mail are essential in assisting African businesses to overcome the traditional constraints to economic development, such as distance from markets. High internet access charges are also a serious problem. Other problems include a severe shortage of skilled technology personnel, the high cost of computer and communication equipment, inadequate telecommunications infrastructure and unreasonable regulatory environments in many countries. One of the most serious problems in Africa is teledensity – the number of telephone lines per 100 people. There are more telephone lines in New York or Tokyo alone than in the whole of Africa. The state control and monopoly model adopted by African countries and the fact that governments have concentrated their telecommunication drives in urban areas while 89 per cent of Africa’s population lives in rural areas are responsible for this state of telecommunication. The only solution to the problem is for governments to embrace privatisation. This does not necessarily mean handing the telecommunication industries entirely over to multi-national companies. South Africa has proved that local investors are more than willing to invest in potentially lucrative markets either directly or through the stock exchange. 3.2.3 Radical transformation of the world of work9 The world of work has transformed – moving from the total quality management efforts (TQM) through the re-engineering processes of the 1990s to the radical transformation of the workplace itself in the 2000s. Organisations have moved from focusing on reducing defects and streamlining business processes to focusing on managing continuous and radical change. Today the emphasis is on creating organisations in which work is re-organised, redesigned, or re-engineered to improve performance. The biggest difference between the old work and the new is the pressure to do it all better, faster, and cheaper10. Organisations are focusing and organising around what they do best – they structure according to core competencies, instead of according to product or market. Autonomous work teams and strategic alliances are becoming more important. They outsource work that is not part of the core work or hire temporary and contract workers as needed. New ways of viewing the organisation are emerging as more organisations realise that the key resources of business are knowledge, information and ideas. Organisations are restructuring, creating integrated organisations, global networks, and leaner and more flexible structures. They are becoming more fluid, shifting in size, shape and arrangement. (We consider these characteristics in more detail when we discuss the unique features of contemporary organisations.) CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 51 PART I: Introduction 3.2.4 Increased power and demands of the customer New communication, transportation and information technologies allow customers to compare prices, quality, availability and so forth between local organisations and organisations abroad. When buying a book, buyers no longer have to buy from a local bookshop – or even a South African-based bookshop. Buyers can access the website of the South African organisation Kalahari.net or the website of Amazon.com to do so. Both organisations can deliver ordered books to one’s doorstep within as little as two days, or one can have the book of one’s choice available on an Amazon Kindle within minutes. Consumers’ awareness of possible products and services has increased because of global competition – a greater variety and higher quality of choice is available to them. Consumers are now able to choose the products and services they want according to the criteria they set in terms of the following: r DPTUmUIFNPTUFDPOPNJDBMDIPJDF r RVBMJUZmCFTURVBMJUZ NFFUJOHBOEFYDFFEJOHUIFDVTUPNFST expectations r UJNFmBWBJMBCMFBTTPPOBTQPTTJCMF r TFSWJDFmCFTUTFSWJDFQPTTJCMF r JOOPWBUJPOmTPNFUIJOHOFX OPUZFUFOWJTJPOFECZUIFDVTUPNFS r DVTUPNJTBUJPOmUBJMPSFEUPUIFTQFDJųDOFFETPGFBDIDVTUPNFS The needs of customers are determining how organisations set strategies and carry out operations. The prime focus of twenty-first century managers is to serve customers better through continuous innovation of products and services. 3.2.5 The growing importance of intellectual capital and learning KPVGNNGEVWCNECRKVCN the sum and synergy of the knowledge, relationships, experience, discoveries, processes, innovations, market presence, and influence of an organisation on the community 52 The critical factors of production previously were land, labour and raw materials. The challenge to managers was to use these production factors to create products that were more valuable than the sum of their parts. The key factors of production have changed dramatically in the recent past – JOUFMMFDUVBMDBQJUBM has become the critical resource for the organisation of today. Fewer people are doing physical work and more are doing knowledge-based work. This trend is likely to continue in the future – many employees will work in knowledge organisations, and the value of their knowledge, as both input and output, will determine their value to the organisation. Intellectual capital is the sum and synergy of the knowledge, relationships, experience, discoveries, processes, innovations, market presence, and influence of an organisation on the community12. The three major categories of intellectual capital are as follows: r 4USVDUVSBMDBQJUBMmUIFBDDVNVMBUFELOPXMFEHFBOEFYQFSUJTFPG the organisation, represented by its copyrights, trademarks and patents, systems, and proprietary databases r $VTUPNFSDBQJUBMmUIFWBMVFPG FTUBCMJTIFESFMBUJPOTIJQTXJUI suppliers and customers CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges r )VNBODBQJUBMmUIFDPNCJOFETLJMMTBOELOPXMFEHFPGUIF employees in the organisation. Many management theorists stress that contemporary organisations must develop, measure and manage their intellectual assets if they are to be successful – the term coined for this process is ‘knowledge management’. Knowledge management is an integrated, systematic approach to identifying, managing and sharing the information assets of an organisation. These include databases, documents, policies, and procedures, as well as previously unarticulated expertise and experience available to individual knowledge workers, who are responsible for using it wisely and for replenishing the stock13. This ongoing cycle encourages a learning organisation, stimulates collaboration and empowers people continually to enhance the way they perform at work. We discuss the learning organisation in detail in Chapter 1. Successful learning organisations exhibit a number of distinctive features: individual learning is continuous; employees share knowledge; the organisational culture supports learning; employees are encouraged to think critically and to take risks with new ideas; and all individuals are valued for their contributions to the organisation. Organisational learning is the process that enables an organisation to adapt to change and move forward by acquiring new knowledge, skills, or behaviours, and thereby to transform itself. Knowledge management and organisational learning will have an increasing impact on organisations in the future because they can enhance the potential of an organisation to increase productivity, quality and innovation. 3.2.6 New roles and expectations of workers As society moves from the Industrial Era to the Knowledge Era, job requirements are changing, as illustrated in Table 3.1. From this table it is clear that the profile of the workforce will rapidly change to fit the job requirements of the Knowledge Era. This is significant, as a disproportionate number of jobs are already originating from the knowledge and service industries, and this trend will continue. Many of these jobs require a much higher level of technical skill than the jobs they are replacing, especially in resource-based and manufacturing industries. For South African leaders this has special significance. 6CDNGThe changing job requirements of workers Industrial Era Knowledge Era TGRGVKVKXGUMKNNU MPQYNGFIGVQFGCNYKVJVJGWPGZRGEVGF FGRGPFKPIQPOGOQT[CPFHCEVU DGKPIURQPVCPGQWUCPFETGCVKXG TKUMCXQKFCPEG risk taking HQEWsing Qn RQNitiEs anF RrQEGFWrGs EQNNaDQrating YitJ RGQRNG Source: Adapted from Marquardt, M.J. & Berger, N.O. 2000. Global leaders for the twenty-first century. New York: University of New York Press, p 17. And Ancona, D., Kochan, T.A., Scully, M., Van Maanen, J. & Westney, D.E. 2005. Managing for the future: Organisational behaviour and processes. 2nd edition. Cincinnati: South-Western College Publishing, p M1–12. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 53 PART I: Introduction An interesting aspect of knowledge workers is that they actually own the means of production. In other words, if they leave the organisation, they take the knowledge with them. In this respect, managers face another challenge: to attract and retain knowledge workers and to provide a fulfilling structure in which they can apply their knowledge. Another new element in the environment is coping with ‘temporariness’, as indicated by the following14: r 5IFBDUVBMKPCTUIBUXPSLFSTQFSGPSNBSFJOBQFSNBOFOUTUBUF of flux, so workers need to update their knowledge and skills continually to stay on top of new job requirements. r 8PSLHSPVQTBSFBMTPJODSFBTJOHMZJOBTUBUFPGŴVY*OUIFQBTU workers were part of specific work groups, which were relatively permanent and offered a considerable amount of job security. Temporary work groups replaced permanent work groups. Teams include members from different departments and the members change all the time to meet changing work assignments. r 0SHBOJTBUJPOTUIFNTFMWFTBSFBMTPJOŴVYmUIFZDPOUJOVBMMZ reorganise their various divisions, downsize, unbundle, outsource and replace permanent employees with temporaries. Yet another change in the expectations of workers emanates from the different generations of people working in most contemporary organisations15: r 5IFATJMFOUHFOFSBUJPO CPSOCFUXFFOBOE XFSF children of the Depression. r #BCZCPPNFST CPSOCFUXFFOBOE XFSFSFTQPOTJCMF for major social changes worldwide while they were teenagers; they became ‘yuppies’ (in midlife) and are nearing retirement. r (FOFSBUJPO9 CPSOCFUXFFOBOEHSFXJOUPBEVMUIPPE with a sense of world-weariness and many of them earn more in real terms than their parents. r A5IF.JMMFOOJBMT BMTPLOPXOBT(FOFSBUJPO:BSFOPXJOUIFJS early careers in the midst of a slow global economic recovery and high unemployment. An article in Time focuses on Generation Y and their influence on the world of work. The following is an excerpt from the article. ‘The Industrial Revolution made individuals far more powerful – they could move to a city, start a business, read and form organizations. The Information Revolution has further empowered individuals by handing them the technology to compete against huge organizations: hackers vs. corporations, bloggers vs. newspapers, terrorists vs. nation states, YouTube directors vs. studios, and app-makers vs. entire industries. ….. [T]om Brokaw, champion of the Greatest Generation (Generation Y) loves millennials. He calls them the Wary Generation, and he thinks their cautiousness in life decisions is a smart response to their world. “Their great mantra has been: Challenge the convention. Find new and better ways of 54 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges doing things. And so that ethos transcends the wonky people who are inventing new apps and embraces the whole economy”, he says’16. The world that most managers and workers work in today is one of permanent temporariness. 3.3 THE CLASSIC MODEL OF THE FORMAL ORGANISATION To study the features of the new organisation in the proper perspective, it is necessary to take another brief look at the traditional model of the organisation. In Chapter 1 we discussed the work of Max Weber, the German sociologist who, at the turn of the last century, developed the model of ‘rational-legal bureaucracy’, based on his studies of Germany’s government bureaucracy17. Weber was one of the first researchers to identify systematically a set of characteristics shared by many ‘modern’ large-scale organisations in both the private and the public sectors. Based on his research, Weber developed a model, which, at the time, served to analyse the key elements of a complex social phenomenon – the bureaucracy18. The emphasis here is on the word ‘model’ – not all real-life organisations described as bureaucracies embody all the characteristics identified in Weber’s model. Weber’s model provided the conceptual base for many further studies of the ‘modern’ organisations of the twentieth century. Generations of organisational researchers expanded the model of bureaucracy, moving beyond his focus on the organisation’s internal factors to include the analysis of its relationships with the external environment. In addition to the characteristics of the bureaucracy which we discussed in Chapter 1, the organisation’s environment is analysed in terms of one country, even in multinational organisations. Multinational organisations are organised into country subsidiaries19, linked to the rest of the organisation through specified departments, such as an international division. The traditional model of organisation has many strong points, including its predictability and reliance, impartiality, expertise through specialisation and clear lines of control. The expected benefits of a bureaucracy are efficiency and consistency. The bureaucracy functions best when the organisation performs many routine tasks because lowerlevel employees take care of the bulk of the work by simply following rules and procedures. Furthermore, employment is a lifelong career commitment; both the employee and the organisation view themselves as being committed to each other over the working life of the employee20. Bureaucracies also have many weaknesses, such as rigid rules and red tape, the protection of authority, slow decision-making, incompatibility with changing technology and incompatibility with workers’ values. Despite its weaknesses, however, the bureaucracy is still widely used in many organisations, especially where: LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 Defend the statement that bureaucracy fails to provide for the needs of modern organisations. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 55 PART I: Introduction r MBSHFBNPVOUTPG TUBOEBSEJTFEJOGPSNBUJPOIBWFUPCFQSPDFTTFE and an efficient processing method is in operation r UIFPSHBOJTBUJPOJTGBNJMJBSXJUIUIFOFFETPGJUTDVTUPNFSTXIJDI are relatively stable r UIFUFDIOPMPHZJTSPVUJOF r UIFPSHBOJTBUJPOEFMJWFSTBTUBOEBSEJTFEQSPEVDUPSTFSWJDF21. Whilst the bureaucracy still works well for many organisations, the very strengths of the model became weaknesses for organisations operating in dynamic and turbulent environments because such organisations have to respond to increased competition in terms of customer service, continuous improvement in manufacturing, and greater diversity of products, services and customers. For these organisations, the strengths of predictability and stability of the bureaucracy turns into weaknesses22. Contemporary organisations23 operate in a world of changing markets, technologies, customers and products. Economists call it a secular shift – a big, broad increase in uncertainty and volatility. The transition is a result of globalisation, the digital revolution and the information-based economy it creates. By freeing companies from their physical assets, it has made them more flexible and more vulnerable to competitors. For example, Microsoft can get into and out of many businesses – internet search, online advertising, mapping and electronic payment – at virtually a moment’s notice, but so can any other organisation. The digital revolution also makes business more chaotic by shifting information and power toward customers. Moreover, it changes products in every industry, new or old. Modern cars are essentially computers on wheels. Credit cards have chips in them. Computer chips transformed industries and will transform more industries every day as the cost of computing power, telecommunications and data storage continues to plunge. Modern organisations created strategies and structures to buffer them against the forces of change. This strength, so desirable in a stable environment, is turning into a weakness in the current business environment. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 3.4 THE NEW ORGANISATION MODEL Expound on the features of the new, emerging organisation. The new organisation model has characteristics that differ substantially from those embodied in the bureaucracy. The features of the new organisation we examine in this chapter are not typical of all modern organisations but serve as a guide to analyse the trends of change in contemporary organisations24. Table 3.2 on the next page shows the differences between the features of traditional organisations and those of organisations emerging because of change in the environment. 56 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges 6CDNGDifferences between traditional and nnewo organisations Dimension Traditional New critical tasks RJ[sical OGntal knQYlGFgG rGlatiQnsJiRs JiGrarcJical lateral inHQrOatiQn ƃQY Xertical JQri\Qntal anF Xertical decision-making top-down wJere inHormation resides s[stems and processes inƃeZiDle ƃeZiDle leXels man[ tall strWctWre Hew ƃat strWctWre DoWndaries ƂZed permeaDle competitiXe tJrWst Xertical integration networked management st[le autocratic participatiXe culture compliance commitment and results mindset etJnocentric gloDal workHorce Jomogeneous diXerse strategic Hocus eHƂcienc[ innoXation Source: (i) Adapted from Marquardt, M.J. & Berger, N.O. 2000. Global leaders for the twenty-first century. New York: State University of New York Press, p 17. (ii) Ancona, D., Kochan, T.A., Scully, M., Van Maanen, J. & Westney, D.E. 2005. Managing for the future: Organisational behaviour and processes. 2nd edition. Cincinnati: South-Western College Publishing, p M1–12. In the following sections, we discuss the specific features of the new organisation and outline the unique managerial challenges inherent in each feature. 3.4.1 Global The new organisation is effective at operating in an increasingly global economy. We have explained the reasons for the emergence of the global economy and the importance for organisations to be part of it in Section 3.2.1. The global business environment is more complex than the domestic environment and managers of organisations operating in the international marketplace have to deal with a much broader set of environmental forces. Management challenges The managers of organisations competing in the complex global environment require global leadership skills. For example, managers should establish networks with suppliers and customers in other countries in order to compete worldwide and that requires international management skills25. It is vitally important for the managers of any organisation competing in the global marketplace to understand the diverse cultures of the individuals involved. Whether managing culturally diverse individuals within a single location or communicating with diverse individuals at CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 57 PART I: Introduction remote locations around the globe, an appreciation of the differences among cultures is crucial and training in cross-cultural communication is essential for managers26. Finally, the ability to think and operate globally is one of the major challenges for the managers of new organisations. Lane and DiStefano27 identified a profile of effective global managers after reviewing a wide range of literature dealing with global leadership. According to them, managers of global organisations should have the ability to: r EFWFMPQBOEVTFHMPCBMTUSBUFHJDTLJMMT r NBOBHFDIBOHFBOEUSBOTJUJPO r NBOBHFDVMUVSBMEJWFSTJUZ r EFTJHOBOEGVODUJPOJOŴFYJCMFPSHBOJTBUJPOTUSVDUVSFT r XPSLXJUIPUIFSTBOEJOUFBNT r DPNNVOJDBUFFŲFDUJWFMZ r MFBSOBOEUSBOTGFSLOPXMFEHFJOBOPSHBOJTBUJPO %PJOHCVTJOFTTJO"GSJDB28 The key to successful business dealings elsewhere in Africa is a good understanding of African business culture. Success or failure in doing business in Africa depends on the ability to understand and adjust to Africa’s dynamic market. The complex and changing African environment requires business people to have a degree of flexibility. In addition, the potential for turbulence requires them to monitor and assess the political risks in the countries with which they are doing business. Some aspects to consider include the following: r People are sensitive about how you pronounce their names. r Business people should avoid patronising and condescending behaviour or demonstrating prejudice, bias, or stereotypical beliefs. r In Senegal and Ghana, parents teach children not to look adults in the eye since they consider it an act of defiance or a lack of respect. This means that eye contact, considered as a mark of trust or truthfulness elsewhere in the world, may have a different meaning in some African countries. r In most African cultures, greeting is very important and it is common to see the same greeting, such as a welcome, repeated several times. Africans often shake hands to greet people and the greeting could range from a simple handshake to prolonged and sometimes vigorous forms of handshaking. It is common to find younger people, women, or subordinates offering both hands as a mark of respect. 58 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES r In many African countries, using the left hand to receive or give a gift is considered impolite and therefore, unacceptable. r Africa’s considerable cultural diversity is not an impediment to successful business operations. To manage cultural differences, one must understand the need for personal relations and the role that connections play in African business and the African respect for hierarchy, titles and age. r One must also comprehend the concept of ‘African time’ and make provision for it when arranging business meetings and to ensure that there is considerable follow-up. r When practices, not tolerated or permitted in one’s own country, are rampant in another country, business people should follow the rule of thumb, which is to do what is legal and avoid what is illegal. It is essential to know the rules and to realise that laws are often openly broken because of lack of enforcement. r Africans tend to be communal, emphasising collectivism instead of individualism. The tendency is to take decisions more slowly, looking for unanimity before acting and a reluctance to contradict or challenge the system. Inter-cultural business is always a challenge; African business is no different, but if one keeps an open mind, you should be able to proceed with confidence and could reap the many profitable rewards the dynamic African market offers. CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges 3.4.2 Networked There is interdependence between individuals, groups and sub-units within the contemporary organisation: r 5FBNTBSFFNQIBTJTFEBTGVOEBNFOUBMVOJUTPGBDUJWJUZ SBUIFSUIBO individual jobs. r $SPTTGVODUJPOBMUFBNTEFWFMPQ DPNQSJTJOHQFPQMFGSPNEJŲFSFOU departments or sections of the organisation. r *OGPSNBUJPOJTXJEFMZTIBSFE WL Gore & Associates, Inc. (see opening case study) is a prime example of how the interdependence between employees can achieve successful results. Teams are the fundamental units of activity, to the point where a ten-or-so member team is the basic management unit. Gore ‘associates’ are encouraged to communicate directly with each other and are accountable to fellow members of their teams. Teams typically organise around opportunities, new product concepts, or businesses. The boundaries of the networked organisation are permeable or semi-permeable. This allows for frequent movement of information and people across the boundaries of the organisation. r 5IFPSHBOJTBUJPOGPSHFTDMPTFSFMBUJPOTIJQTXJUIJUTTVQQMJFST TIBSFT much more information with suppliers and develops higher levels of interdependence with them. For example, when an organisation integrates suppliers into the manufacturing process, the suppliers could deliver parts or products as needed by the organisation, eliminating the need to keep high levels of inventory. r 5IFGVODUJPOBMBSFBTPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPOUIBUEFWFMPQBOE produce products and services are in direct contact with certain customers – rather than relying on specialised departments such as marketing or customer service – to mediate between customer and organisation. r 0SHBOJTBUJPOTCVJMEDPBMJUJPOTUPXPSLUPHFUIFSXJUIDFSUBJO stakeholders, such as community groups, government agencies, or labour unions, rather than adopting a defensive or aggressive stance. r 0SHBOJTBUJPOTCVJMEBMMJBODFTBOEDPPQFSBUJWFOFUXPSLTXJUIPUIFS organisations. Management challenges30 Network organisations rely on teams, meaning that individual managers must develop their skills as team members and as team leaders. These skills include understanding the dynamics of team interaction, developing observation skills to examine team dynamics and learning how to diagnose team problems. Switching to teams requires processes within the organisation to facilitate the formation of effective teams. This means that organisations should develop team structures and processes for each kind of team in the organisation – and everybody in the organisation should clearly understand how the processes work. As far as the organisation’s interactions with its environment are CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 59 PART I: Introduction concerned, networks with outside organisations involve forming alliances with them. Forming and maintaining alliances with customers, suppliers and competitors often requires a delicate balancing between cooperation and competition, which poses challenges for managers. An organisation must, therefore, develop systems to manage information flows with the organisations with which it forms alliances. Long-term alliances with supplier or key customers require different systems for management than short-term alliances. Developing and continuously adapting these information systems is one of the major managerial challenges of operating an external network. 3.4.3 Flatter and leaner The most common characteristic of the new organisation is that it is flat, which is considered the best practice today. The trend in recent years has been for large organisations to remove several layers of management, resulting in much flatter organisations. By employing fewer people (becoming leaner) and by improving their turnover in sales, organisations can significantly improve productivity. Flattening of the hierarchy causes changes in the authority relationships of new organisations. Decision-making takes place at the level where the information resides. The unit responsible for the implementation of a decision has the authority to make the decision or, at the very least, to participate in the decision-making process. WL Gore & Associates Inc., for example, has a flat, lattice-like organisational structure where there are neither chains of command nor predetermined channels of communication. Reasons for the shift to flatter and leaner organisations are many and varied, depending on the environmental factors influencing change, but the following factors may influence the decision of some organisations to opt for a flatter structure: r 0SHBOJTBUJPOTOFFEUPCFŴFYJCMFUPSFTQPOERVJDLMZUPDIBOHFTJO the environment and flatter organisations are more agile. r 5IFUSBEJUJPOBMSPMFPG NJEEMFNBOBHFNFOUUPDPMMFDUBOE disseminate information and to control the activities of employees at the operational level are replaced by information systems that enable organisations to monitor and adjust operational activities continuously. r *ODSFBTFEHMPCBMDPNQFUJUJPOBOEQSFTTVSFGSPNTIBSFIPMEFSTGPS improved financial performance force organisations to cut costs and retrenching managers can cut costs significantly. Management challenges32 In the flat organisation, managers cannot rely on the authority relationships created by the traditional organisational hierarchy, such as chain of command and unity of command. Instead, they must work with individuals, groups and teams who report to various managers, have different priorities, and are motivated by different incentives. In the flat organisation, managers must develop negotiating skills 60 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges to enable them to negotiate win-win situations for all involved in the different organisational processes. In addition, the flat organisation does not allow for the normal progress up the organisational ladder – there are fewer opportunities for promotion. The organisation must provide alternative incentive systems and new concepts of career planning involving more horizontal than vertical movement. In flat organisations, more individuals are working across the external boundaries of the organisation, interacting with customers, suppliers and other stakeholders. It can be difficult to remain committed to one’s own organisation while cooperating with other organisations. Organisations with flat structures need to manage the interaction between employees and suppliers, customers and competitors to maintain cooperation but also to keep employees committed to the interests of the organisation. The drift worldwide towards flatter and leaner organisations requires more frequent and effective communication between senior and junior managers. In South Africa, a widening skills gap often prevents effective communication. Experienced managers are in short supply, and affirmative action is rapidly changing career patterns and corporate cultures, often causing a hindrance to effective communication. This presents a major challenge for South African managers. 3.4.4 Flexibility Flexibility is a key feature of new organisations because organisations need to respond to changes in their environment, changing customer needs, intense competition and the needs of a diverse workforce. Organisations have to be innovative and creative to respond to these challenges and they may actively encourage initiatives for innovation and change on the part of employees. The systems and processes in flexible organisations respond differently to different situations. Flexible organisations have fewer rules and standard operating procedures. WL Gore & Associates, Inc. is a flexible organisation where hands-on product innovation and prototyping are encouraged and teams typically organise around opportunities, new product concepts, or businesses. This is a good example of an organisation where employees configure according to challenges and opportunities in the environment. Part of the flexibility in new organisations is the growing use of temporary or contingent workers, which relates to diversity in the workforce – another characteristic of the new organisation. Management challenges Managers in flexible organisations need to work on more than one project simultaneously. They are also members of various teams at any given time. Developing managers’ skills in multi-tasking is crucial if organisations want them to work productively at several tasks. Flexible organisations must also have flexible labour practices to deal with their flexible working practices. Employees, independent knowledge workers, and prospective work applicants need to33: CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 61 PART I: Introduction r r r r r r CFŴFYJCMFBOEQSPBDUJWFJOJNQSPWJOHUIFJSQFSGPSNBODF MFBSOUPBEBQUUPDIBOHF CFJOOPWBUJWF CBMBODFXPSLBOEOPOXPSLBDUJWJUJFT NBJOUBJOBTFOTFPG SFTQPOTJCJMJUZGPSUIFJSDBSFFST BEBQUUPBOFXQTZDIPMPHJDBMDPOUSBDUXIFSFMJGFMPOHFNQMPZNFOU with one organisation is unlikely r BDDFQUUIBUFNQMPZNFOUDPOUJOVJUZmSBUIFSUIBOKPCTFDVSJUZ – means continuous development, retraining and renewal of knowledge. The flexible organisation is a learning organisation and its wealth lies in how it uses knowledge. Organisations that use information and ideas intelligently govern by consent and participation rather than by command, as is the case at WL Gore & Associates, Inc., where leadership is more about recognising and communicating a decision already made than barking out orders. When it comes to new product innovation, teams decide whether to go ahead with the project or not. Legitimised authority in flexible organisations insures that people contribute because they identify with the core values and exciting work opportunities existing at the organisation. For managers who aspire to advance in flatter, more agile organisations, technical skills and financial acumen are not enough. Leadership, people skills, a positive attitude and maturity are critical for personal progress. -FUFNQMPZFFTDIPPTFXIFSFUIFZXPSL34 Not so long ago, occupying the corner office was a sign that a manager has ‘made it’ to the top. However, all that is changing as the permission for a manager to work from home signals greater power and autonomy within the organisation. ‘In this sense, Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer’s ban on working from home was viewed as much as an attack on individual freedom as an attack on the family. Paradoxically, FastCompany.com published an article that same week about how “employees work beyond the cube”, showcasing Plantronics’ decision to give its employees the choice of working from home, commuting to headquarters or joining one of three San Francisco Bay locations of NextSpace (shared workspaces). The decision was heralded as a win-win for workers and their companies, with proximity, diversity and choice of location all stimulating creativity.’ 62 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Google then joined the conversation stating that it does not even have a policy that says when and where people need to work because if a workplace is comfortable, healthy and inviting, people would want to be there. These examples illustrate the principle of autonomy – control of employers over how employees use time and space. Working from home, employees have total control over time and space. Another solution is to create private and common spaces at work. Private spaces are where people can work uninterruptedly and common areas where they might share ideas and critical ‘face time’. Every organisation has to find its own balance between private and common spaces and the balance will depend on the organisation’s unique goals and challenges. CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges 3.4.5 Workforce diversity One of the most important and broad-based challenges currently facing organisations is adapting to the diversity of their employees. In South Africa, the Employment Equity Act gives legal weight to the requirements of XPSLGPSDFEJWFSTJUZ. Workforce diversity is a term that describes the fact that organisations are becoming more heterogeneous in terms of gender, race and ethnicity. We examine diversity in Chapter 9; our discussion here focuses only on the reasons for workforce diversity in the new organisation. A characteristic of the traditional organisation is the ‘corporate man’ – a male executive, committed to serving the interests of the organisation in return for lifelong employment. Employment contributes to the incumbent’s social identity and by a style where a predetermined and standardised set of rules governs every situation35. In contemporary organisations exhibiting the features of new organisations, the workforce is heterogeneous in terms of gender, race, and ethnicity, and it includes people who are part of the organisation, but in unconventional ways, such as full-time contract workers or former employees working as consultants (especially in South Africa). There is part-time work and home-based telework, and various other forms of employment, which may depend on employees’ own interests and family situations. YQTMHQTEGFKXGTUKV[ a term that describes the fact that organisations are becoming more heterogeneous in terms of gender, race and ethnicity .BOBHFNFOUDIBMMFOHFT Workforce diversity has crucial implications for managers because they need to shift their philosophy from treating everyone alike to acknowledging differences and responding to those differences in ways that will ensure employee retention and greater productivity. This includes, for example, training in diversity and developing listening skills36. Managers need to focus on creating environments that utilise the potential of all sources of difference within an organisation’s workforce. By listening to diverse perspectives in their organisations, for example, managers can rethink their approaches to tasks and markets, gaining competitive advantage in the process. The organisation must also develop systems for conflict resolution. Diversity, when positively managed, can increase creativity and innovation. When an organisation does not manage diversity properly, there is the potential for ineffective communication and interpersonal conflict37. We discuss conflict and conflict resolution in Chapter 7. People with different needs and expectations present challenges to the human resources policies of organisations. Working parents with children often require adaptations to work schedules or day care facilities. Disabled people may require special access to buildings and specially designed work areas. Part-time workers may need to arrange to share jobs so that organisations can benefit from their skills and abilities. The global environment adds another layer of complexity to workforce diversity. To be effective, managers should understand cultural differences around the world. In addition, workforce diversity in organisations causes their culture CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 63 PART I: Introduction to change in terms of values, rituals and assumptions to support the heterogeneous values of the diverse groups working in modern organisations. For example, social activities that are rituals in male cultures will need to change to allow ready access by female members of the workforce38. We examine organisational culture in Chapter 6. This concludes our discussion on the features of emerging organisation forms and the challenges managers of contemporary organisations face. Some South African organisations already feature many of the characteristics discussed in this chapter – they understand the challenges of the new world of work. Others do not. Whichever way organisations look at it, change is part of the South African business environment, and managers will have to deal with it in order for their organisations to survive. 64 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Chapter 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Cite reasons why organisations change. Organisations are open systems. They influence their environments and vice versa. During the previous century, the environment was much more stable and the traditional form of organisation, the bureaucracy, worked well. Contemporary organisations function in an environment characterised by major, ongoing change, hence the emergence of ‘new’ organisation forms. 2. Identify and discuss the forces that stimulate change in organisations. The forces that stimulate change are: • globalisation and the global economy • advances in technology • radical transformation of the world of work • increased power and demands of the customer • growing importance of intellectual capital and learning • the learning organisation • new roles and expectations of workers. 3. Defend the statement that bureaucracy fails to provide for the needs of modern organisations. While the bureaucracy still works well for many organisations, the very strengths of the model became weaknesses for organisations operating in dynamic and turbulent environments. • Organisations operating in turbulent environments have to respond to increased competition in terms of customer service, continuous improvement in manufacturing, and greater diversity of products, services and customers. For these organisations, the strengths of predictability and stability of the bureaucracy turned into weaknesses. • The Total Quality Management development in the 1980s contrasted with the quest for specialisation – a feature of the bureaucracy. The strict division between departments made it difficult to implement quality initiatives, which depend on cooperation between functions and departments. • New information technology changed the information channels in organisations, moving away from the traditional chain of command. • Finally, international competition and expanding global markets demand more effective ways to manage the international operations of the organisation than those provided by the specialised ‘international’ managers. 4. Expound on the features of the new emerging organisation. To answer this question, you need to study the sections in the chapter dealing with the features of the new organisation: • global • networked, internally and externally Contemporary Management Principles EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:42 PM via UNISA AN: 707010 ; Vrba, M. J., Brevis, Tersia.; Contemporary Management Principles Contemporary.indb 65 Account: s7393698 65 2013/11/20 4:24 PM Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part I: Introduction • flat and lean • flexible • diverse. 5. Identify and discuss the challenges faced by managers of the new organisation. Each of the possible features of contemporary organisations poses difficult challenges to their managers. In the text, we described these challenges under the heading of each feature. The table below provides a summary of the challenges managers of contemporary organisations face. Features Management challenges Develop and use global strategic skills to manage change and transition Manage cultural diversity Design and function in flexible organisational structures Work with others and in teams Communicate effectively Learn and transfer knowledge in an organisation Global • • • • • • Networked, internally and externally • Individual managers must develop their skills as team members and team leaders • Team structures and processes must be developed for each kind of team in the organisation • Networks with outside organisations involve forming alliances with customers, suppliers and competitors and an organisation must develop systems to manage information flows with the organisations with which it forms alliances Flat and lean • Managers must develop negotiating skills, to enable them to negotiate win-win situations for all involved in flat structures • The organisation must provide alternative incentive systems and new concepts of career planning that involve more horizontal than vertical movement • More frequent and effective communication between senior and junior managers Flexible • Multi-tasking • Flexible labour practices Diverse • Managers will need to shift their philosophy from treating everyone alike to recognising differences and responding to those differences in ways that will ensure employee retention and greater productivity • Training in diversity • Developing listening skills Source: Adapted from: Ancona D., Kochan D.A., Scully M., van Maanen J. & Westney, D.E. 2005. Managing for the future: Organisational behaviour and processes. 2nd edition. Cincinnati: South-Western College Publishing, p M1–12. 66 Contemporary Management Principles EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:42 PM via UNISA AN: 707010 ; Vrba, M. J., Brevis, Tersia.; Contemporary Management Principles Contemporary.indb 66 Account: s7393698 2013/11/20 4:24 PM CHAPTER 3 Features of contemporary organisations and new management challenges KEY TERMS bureaucracy customer capital distributed computing diversity globalisation Generation Y flat structure flexible organisations human capital intellectual capital knowledge management networked organisations (internal and external) organisational learning outsourcing structural capital systems thinking teams temporariness REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Consider the opening case study on WL Gore & Associates, Inc. Explain how the features of the new organisation are evident at the organisation. 2. Explain why WL Gore & Associates, Inc. is so successful. 3. Do an internet search on one of the global South African organisations. Write an essay describing the major changes faced by the organisation during the last decade and describe the challenges these changes presented to the managers of the organisation. 4. Write an essay on Generation Y, people born between 1980 and 2000, and the possible changes they may bring about in organisations when they join the workforce. END NOTES 1 (i) The case study is adapted from: Reingold, J. 2007. A job that lets you pick your own boss. Fortune, October 8, 2007. [Online] Available from: http://money.cnn.com/2007/10/08/magazines/fortune/goretex.fortune/index.htm. Accessed on 12 August 2010. (ii) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W._L._Gore_and_Associates. Accessed on 22 August 2011; http://www. gore.com/en_xx/aboutus/culture/index.html. Accessed on 21 August 2011. 2 Palmer, I. & Dunford, R. 2009. New organization forms: the career of a concept. In Barry, D. & Hansen, H. 2009. The Sage handbook of new approaches in management and organization. London: Sage, pp 567–568. 3 Ancona, D., Kochan, T.A., Scully, M., Van Maanen, J. & Westney, D.E. 2009. Managing for the future: organizational behavior and processes. 3rd edition. Cincinnati: South-Western College Publishing, p M1–13. 4 Lane, H.W. & DiStefano, J.J. 1992. International management behavior. 2nd edition. Boston: PWS-Kent, p 73. 5 Burnes, B. 2009. Managing change. 5th edition. Essex: Prentice Hall, p 597. 6 Ancona et al, op. cit., pp M1–12 to M1–13. 7 Castells, M. 1996. The rise of the network society. Oxford: Blackwell, pp 92–93. 8 Excerpts from: Africa Business Pages. Business guide internet Edition. Africa joins the internet bandwagon. [Online] Available from: http://www.africa-business.com/features/internet.html. Accessed on 5 August 2010. 9 Marquardt, M.J. & Berger, N.O. 2000. Global leaders for the twenty-first century. New York: State University of New York Press, p 17. 10 Reich, R.B. 2000. The future of success: Work and life in the new economy. London: William Heinemann, p 25. 11 Reich, op. cit., p 10. 12 Lewis, P.S., Goodman, S.H. & Fandt, P.M. 2001. Management: Challenges in the 21st century. 3rd edition. Cincinnati: South-Western College Publishing, p 17. 13 Hackett, B. 2000. Beyond knowledge management: New ways to learn. The Conference Board Research Report 1262–00RR. New York: The Conference Board Inc, pp 10–11. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 67 PART I: Introduction 14 Robbins, S.P. & Judge, T.A. 2009. Organizational behavior. 13th edition. Upper Saddle River: Prentice-Hall, p 57. 15 Stein, J. The new greatest generation. Time, May 20, 2013, pp 30–35. 16 Ibid., p 30, p 35. 17 Hellriegel, D., Jackson, S.E. & Slocum, J.W. 2002. Management: A competency-based approach. 9th edition. Ontario: South-Western College Publishing, p 46. 18 Ancona et al, op. cit., p M1–11. 19 Ancona et al, op. cit., p M1–7. 20 Hellriegel et al, op. cit., p 47. 21 Hellriegel, op. cit., p 49. 22 Ancona et al, op. cit., pp M1–12 to M1–13. 23 Managing on the edge. 2009. Fortune, 9 October, 17: 28–32. 24 Ibid. 25 Lewis et al, op. cit., p 2. 26 Nelson, D.L. & Quick, J.C. 2002. Understanding organizational behavior: A multimedia approach. Cincinnati: SouthWestern College Publishing, p 34. 27 Lane & DiStefano, op. cit., p 50. 28 Adapted from: The changing face of Africa. Business Guide: internet edition: [Online] Available: http://www.africabusiness.com/features/changing.html. Accessed on 5 August 2010. 29 Ancona et al, op. cit., p M1–8. 30 Ancona et al, op. cit., p M1–14. 31 Ibid., p M1–14. 32 Ibid., p M1–15. 33 Paul, op. cit., p v. 34 Folkman, J. 2013. Let employees choose where they work. Harvard Business School Publishing Corp. Distributed by The New York Times Syndicate and accessed in Finweek, 18 April, 2013, p 38. 35 Ancona et al, op. cit., p M1–15. 36 Robbins & Judge, op. cit., pp 52–54. 37 Ibid., p 54. 38 Champoux, J.E. 2000. Organizational behavior: Essential tenets for a new millennium. Ontario: South-Western College Publishing, p 24. 68 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES PART II Management in a changing environment Chapter 4 Composition of the management environment Tersia Brevis PART II: Management in a changing environment OPENING CASE Vodacom1 Vodacom is the leading cellular network in South Africa with an estimated market share of 58 per cent and more than 23 million customers. Vodacom was born in the new South Africa and started commercial operations in 1994 after it was awarded one of two available GSM licences in South Africa. Since 1994, the company has become an important agent of change, not only in this country, but also in Africa. The group has built networks in Lesotho, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Tanzania and Mozambique, putting cell phones in the hands of well over 35 million people. Millions more have gained meaningful access to telephones through thousands of Vodacom phone shops in these countries. Vodacom has been certified as one of South Africa’s Best Employers GPSCZUIF$3'*OTUJUVUF*OEFQFOEFOU research into their employee offerings showed this company is outstanding for being a: r DPNQBOZUIBUDBSFT r WJCSBOU FOFSHFUJDUFBN r IJHIMZJOOPWBUJWFXPSLJOHFOWJSPONFOU r ZPVOHPSHBOJTBUJPO r WFSZQSPEVDUJWFPSHBOJTBUJPO r HSFBUQMBDFUPXPSL Initially, Vodacom was owned on a 50:50 basis by the South African telecommunications group Telkom and the British mobile phone operator Vodafone. On November 6, 2008, Vodafone announced that it had agreed to increase its stake to 65 per cent and Telkom listed its remaining holding on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange. The introduction of the Electronic Communications Act in South Africa has enabled Vodacom to widen its scope far beyond telecommunications to make cellular telephones essential lifestyle tools beyond just voice communications. It has the potential to democratise the internet and e-mail in Africa on the same scale that telephone access has been made available. Vodacom’s global alliance with ‘Vodafone live’ has put mobile television, internet access, e-mail and entertainment on cell phones. 70 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Vodacom’s culture is shaped by a winning spirit, a passion for the job and an unwavering belief in the Vodacom team. Vodacom is a company that demands the best from the people who work for it and special effort and dedication are accepted as the norm. The group’s progressive human resources policies are designed to nurture its human capital. Potential restrictions on the company are the regulatory environment in which Vodacom operates, as well as legislation such as the Registration of Information Act. Due to the huge demand worldwide for ICT (Information, Communication and Technology) skills in what is still a relatively young industry, it is one of the Vodacom Group’s human resources priorities to meet this challenge, especially as the company prepares to enter the new spheres opened up by the Electronic Communications Act. The company is in the fortunate position to cherry pick the best ICT talent in South Africa. At the same time, the company acknowledges the importance of nurturing and developing their growing pool of skilled and competent workforce. At the same time, Vodacom is striving to address the challenges of transformation. Empowerment, and by extension gender empowerment, is a top priority for Vodacom. Top managers are aware of the need to ensure that women and previously disadvantaged individuals (PDIs) are recognised and fill strategic positions within the company and not just support roles. The ICT workforce is young, which means that they are mobile and eager to find the next big career opportunity. For this reason, Vodacom has devised a retention programme that hinges on providing staff stretching assignments and encouraging learning and growth – factors which are just as important as an impressive salary when it comes to holding onto top talent. For example, employees are able to spend time with Vodacom’s equipment suppliers, such as Motorola and Siemens, learning about the latest technologies and devices. This has the additional benefit of giving talented staff international exposure, which in turn will benefit Vodacom. Furthermore, CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment rewards and benefits to employees are constantly reviewed. This includes addressing issues that BŲFDU UIFJS XPSLMJGF CBMBODF JNQMFNFOUJOH incentive programmes as well as high level recognition to top performers. The company has a comprehensive skills development framework in place, with training programmes targeting various occupational levels within the organisation. Depth of management and long term succession planning is underpinned by various initiatives such as the Vodacom Executive Programme and Conversations in Leadership. Vodacom strives to be an employer of choice. It participates in annual remuneration surveys and benchmark salaries above the fiftieth percentile. It is essential that employees share the company’s values, which are summarised in ‘The Vodacom Way’, a powerful statement of Vodacom’s ethical intents of being a fair company with a winning attitude. It is Vodacom’s belief that government alone cannot address the vast need for social development. A pan-African company like Vodacom is well placed to join hands with governments to help create stable, peaceful and socio-economically healthy communities. The Vodacom Foundation was established in 1999 to achieve this objective and its cumulative corporate social investment to date totals millions of Rands in various social development areas, especially in disadvantaged communities. These activities focus on education, health, safety and security. Vodacom is following the worldwide trend of cellular networks entering the fixed line market. It has established a new company called Vodacom Converged Solutions, which will build infrastructure to create additional capacity for the huge demand for data, especially in the corporate market. Projects such as these will ensure the long term survival and sustainability of the company. LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of the chapter is to provide an overview of the composition of the management environment. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Understand the importance of the management environment when making management decisions. 2. Depict diagrammatically and explain the concepts of the process, systems and contingency approaches in management. 3. Understand the structure and dynamics of the management environment. 4. Conduct a basic analysis of the management environment. 4.1 THE IMPORTANCE OF THE MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENT AND ITS IMPACT ON MANAGERIAL DECISION-MAKING With the end of the Cold War in the late 1980s, the management environment became increasingly complex and interdependent, with change becoming more rapid, discontinuous and turbulent. The fall of the Berlin Wall and the advent of globalisation signalled a radical transformation of the world that is continuing daily. According to Angell2, this change is not closely related to the kind and magnitude of the changes of the past, but rather a severe and total dislocation with the past. Information technology and other new technologies have provoked profound structural changes in the world economy and these are resulting in unimaginable levels of complexity. Furthermore, the LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Understand the importance of the management environment when making management decisions. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 71 PART II: Management in a changing environment environment is characterised by a growth in interdependence and linkages between politics, economics, the social dimension and technology at the global, regional and national levels, providing powerful threats and exciting opportunities for any organisation and its management. The pace of events and the speed with which effects are transmitted between parts of the management environment create difficulties in terms of the manager’s comprehension due to the sheer scale of it all. In this environment, everything can appear relevant and the manager’s task of sorting that which is important to his or her specific organisation from that which is not, can appear to be almost impossible. Taking into account the increasing costs of management mistakes and failures, it is essential to provide managers with the means to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats within the environment correctly to empower them to make better critical choices and choose more feasible courses of action in executing their planning, organising, leading and controlling functions. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Depict diagrammatically and explain the concepts of the process, systems and contingency approaches in management. process approach to management performance of the planning, organising, leading and controlling functions within an organisation is circular and continuous systems approach to management a system is a set of interrelated and interdependent parts arranged in a manner that produces a unified whole contingency approach to management the application of management principles depends on the specific situation that managers face at a given point in time 72 4.2 MANAGEMENT THEORIES AND THE MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENT In Chapter 1, the evolution of management theories was discussed in detail. Understanding the evolution of management theories helps managers to make sense of realities that they face, within the business environment, on a daily basis. In this chapter, and throughout this book, we focus on some of the more contemporary management theories. The process approach, the systems approach and the contingency approach are used to describe and explain the complexity of the modern business organisation in relation to the environment in which it functions. The process approach to management is based on the four main functions of management. According to this approach, the performance of the planning, organising, leading and controlling functions within the organisation is seen as circular and continuous. The systems approach to management views a system as a set of interrelated and interdependent parts. Systems can be either closed or open. Closed systems do not interact with its environment, whereas open systems recognise the dynamic interaction of the system with its environment. The organisation, which is a system in its own right, is therefore in constant interaction with its environment and is influenced by both the industry-specific and general environments which we discuss in the following section in greater detail. The contingency approach to management is based on the systems approach. The basic premise of the contingency approach is that the application of management principles depends on the specific situation that managers face at a given point in time. The contingency theory acknowledges that every organisation, even every department or unit within the same organisation, is unique. Every organisation exists in a unique environment with unique goals and strategies. By combining these three approaches, Figure 4.1 on the next page illustrates the relationship between the modern business organisation and its environment. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT ORGANISATION AND ITS INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT INPUT TRANSFORMATION OUTPUT Organisation receives inputs from the environment such as human resources, capital, technology and information Organisation transforms inputs to outputs by means of technology, operating systems, administrative systems, control systems and the management process Organisation makes outputs such as products/services, proƂts/losses, jobs, available to the environment Figure 4.1: The organisation and its environment 4.2.1 The environment Viewed at an elementary level, the management process entails inputs from the external environment into the organisational system, the conversion of these inputs within the organisational system and subsequent outputs/outcomes fed back into the external environment. Inputs include human resources, capital, technology and information. The transformation process turns these inputs into finished products and/or services (the principles of the systems approach to management). The success of the system is largely determined by the efficiency and effectiveness illustrated by its management in performing planning, organising, leading and controlling functions (the principles of the process approach to management). Furthermore, the system’s success depends on successful interactions with its environment. In this context, the environment includes other sub-environments such as suppliers, labour unions, financial institutions, customers and so on. The organisation is dependent on its external environment. Management must therefore understand the structure and dynamics of the unique management environment of their organisations and, even more important, the unique strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats pertaining to the environment that impact directly or indirectly on the success of the organisation (the principles of the contingency approach to management). CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 73 PART II: Management in a changing environment 5IFNBOBHFNFOUPGUBMFOUJODPOUFNQPSBSZPSHBOJTBUJPOT Human resources play a pivotal role in an organisation’s ability to attain its vision, mission, goals and objectives. The management of human resources talent has become an essential element in sustainable organisational performance. Leonardo da Vinci used his talent to further the world which just emerged from the period called the Dark Ages3. Considered today as one of the most talented people in the world, da Vinci was born in 1452 as the illegitimate son of a minor public figure in Florence. He was apprenticed at the age of fourteen to the artist Verrocchio, who had one of the finest workshops at that time in Florence. His close association with Verrocchio can be seen as part of his future success as he was exposed to theoretical training and a vast range of technical skills such as drafting, chemistry, carpentry, mechanics and various artistic skills. He was called an Italian Renaissance polymath, painter, sculptor, architect, musician, scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist and writer. In his life Leonardo’s talent was identified by various role players such as Verrocchio and Lorenzo de Medici who was the de facto ruler of the Florentine Republic. He later worked for the Count of Milan, Lodiwicko il More. His talent was later used by the son of Pope Alexander VI to protect Rome LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 Understand the structure and dynamics of the management environment. from outside forces and helped to establish what is today called modern Italy. This shows that talent can be a sustainable competitive advantage. In the twenty-first century, executives and top management should view their talent strategies as a top priority in order to build and sustain businesses with superior performance. Having aligned and engaged talent is crucial to achieving strategic objectives. The days of fragmented talent management systems, processes and practices are long gone. Too many companies are not sufficiently focused on building talent management capabilities across the organisation. As competition for talent increases in the market, especially in South Africa, such companies are increasingly facing shortfalls in critical workforce segments. Truly talent-powered organisations are adept at defining the talent needs of their organisation, discovering diverse sources of talent, developing individual and collective talents and deploying talent in ways that align people with the vision, mission and strategic objectives of the organisation. Talent is not a rare commodity – people are talented in many ways. However, managers need to release people’s talents and give it strategic and holistic attention to obtain sustainable organisational performance. 4.3 THE STRUCTURE AND DYNAMICS OF THE MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENT As a first step to a better understanding of the management environment, its opportunities and threats, it is important for the manager to take account of its structure and dynamics. Without such an understanding, no realistic strategising and planning can take place. Structurally, the management environment can be divided into the micro-environment, the market environment and the remote environment. 4.3.1 The micro- or internal environment The NJDSPFOWJSPONFOU can also be referred to as the internal the organisation itself over which environment and includes the organisation’s functions, policies, strategies, goals, objectives and resources available. From the opening management has full control case, various factors can be identified that originate from the microenvironment of Vodacom, for example: microenXironment 74 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment r r r r r r r r r DIBOHFTJOPXOFSTIJQPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO BDVMUVSFDIBSBDUFSJTFECZBXJOOJOHTQJSJUBOEQBTTJPOGPSUIFKPC QSPHSFTTJWFIVNBOSFTPVSDFTQPMJDJFT DPNNJUNFOUUPUSBOTGPSNBUJPO JOWFTUNFOUJOTPDJBMEFWFMPQNFOUQSPHSBNNFT TVDDFTTGVMTUBŲSFUFOUJPOQSPHSBNNFT PŲFSJOHDPNQFUJUJWFSFNVOFSBUJPOQBDLBHFT TVDDFTTGVMTLJMMTEFWFMPQNFOUQSPHSBNNFT DPNNJUNFOUUPFUIJDBMDPOEVDUBOETPDJBMEFWFMPQNFOU 5IFDPNQPTJUJPOPG UIFNJDSPFOWJSPONFOUJTJMMVTUSBUFEJO'JHVSF Resources Goals and objectives Microenvironment Strategies Organisational functions Policies Figure 4.2: Composition of the micro-environment 4.3.2 The macro- or external environment 5IFmacro-environment PSFYUFSOBMFOWJSPONFOU DPNQSJTFTUXP NBKPS DPNQPOFOUT OBNFMZ UIF NBSLFU FOWJSPONFOU BOE UIF SFNPUF FOWJSPONFOU5IFNBDSPFOWJSPONFOUBMTPEFTJHOBUFTUIFBSFBPVUTJEF PGUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOPWFSXIJDIUIFNBOBHFSIBTOPDPOUSPM BMUIPVHIUIF PSHBOJTBUJPO NBZ CF BCMF UP FYFSU TPNF JOŴVFODF JO DFSUBJO JOTUBODFT PWFS UIF NBDSPFOWJSPONFOU UIF SFNPUF FOWJSPONFOU UP B MFTTFS FYUFOUUIBOUIFNBSLFUFOWJSPONFOU The market environment 5IFmarket environment MJFTCFUXFFOUIFNJDSPFOWJSPONFOUBOE UIFSFNPUFFOWJSPONFOUBOEGPSNTBCVŲFSCFUXFFOUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO BOE UIF SFNPUF FOWJSPONFOU 4PNF BVUIPST BMTP SFGFS UP JU BT UIF PQFSBUJOH DPNQFUJUJWFPSUBTLFOWJSPONFOU0UIFSBVUIPSTBHBJOSFGFS UPJUBTUIFANFTPFOWJSPONFOUPSUIFJOUFSNFEJBUFFOWJSPONFOU'PS macro-environment area outside of the organisation over which management has no control market environment the environment that surrounds the organisation in which competition within a specific industry takes place CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 75 PART II: Management in a changing environment UIFQVSQPTFPG UIJTCPPLXFTIBMMSFGFSUPJUBTUIFANBSLFUFOWJSPONFOU 5IFNBSLFUFOWJSPONFOUDPNQSJTFTUIFGPMMPXJOHTVCFOWJSPONFOUT r DVTUPNFST DMJFOUT UIFJSOFFET QVSDIBTJOHQPXFS CFIBWJPVSBOE CBSHBJOJOHQPXFS r TVQQMJFSTPG DBQJUBM NBUFSJBMTBOEMBCPVSBOEUIFCBSHBJOJOHQPXFS PG TVQQMJFST r UIFQPQVMBUJPOGSPNXIJDIUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOSFDSVJUTJUTMBCPVSGPSDF BOEUIFVOJPOTSFQSFTFOUJOHJU r DPNQFUJUPST JODMVEJOHOFXFOUSBOUT FYJTUJOHDPNQFUJUPST BOEUIF BWBJMBCJMJUZPG TVCTUJUVUFQSPEVDUTPSTFSWJDFT r JOUFSNFEJBSJFTTVDIBTXIPMFTBMFST SFUBJMFST BHFOUTBOECSPLFST 5IFDPNQPTJUJPOPG UIFNBSLFUFOWJSPONFOUJTJMMVTUSBUFEJO'JHVSF Customers Market environment Suppliers Competitors Intermediaries Labour market and labour unions Figure 4.3: Composition of the market environment &BDIPG UIFTFTVCFOWJSPONFOUTJTEJTDVTTFEJONPSFEFUBJMJOUIFOFYU TFDUJPO customer the people or organisations that buy products or services from other people and other organisations 76 The customer 5IFcustomerDBOCFEFųOFEBTBMMUIFQFPQMFPSPSHBOJTBUJPOTUIBU CVZ QSPEVDUT PS TFSWJDFT GSPN PUIFS QFPQMF BOE PUIFS PSHBOJTBUJPOT 5IF NBSLFU GPS UIF PSHBOJTBUJPOT QSPEVDU BOEPS TFSWJDF DPOTJTUT PG QFPQMF XIP IBWF OFFET UP CF TBUJTųFE BOE UIF ųOBODJBM NFBOT XJUI XIJDI UP TBUJTGZ UIFJS OFFET 5IF DVTUPNFS BOE UIF NBSLFU GPS BO PSHBOJTBUJPOT QSPEVDU BOEPS TFSWJDF JT UIF NBJO SFBTPO XIZ BO PSHBOJTBUJPO FYJTUT 5IJT JT USVF GPS CPUI QSJWBUF BOE QVCMJDTFDUPS FOUJUJFT'PSCVTJOFTTFOUJUJFTJOUIFQSJWBUFTFDUPSUPIBWFOPDVTUPNFST JT UP IBWF OP SFWFOVF BOE OP QSPųUT UIFJS TVSWJWBM EFQFOET PO UIF CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment customer. On the other hand, owing to their annual budget allocations from government, public-service entities’ survival does not depend on their products or services to their customer, which is the community. Poor service may, however, negatively influence their credibility within the community, making their performance extremely difficult, especially those departments whose success depends on good relationships with the community, for example, a police service that is seen to be inefficient or partisan in its dealings with the public; or a clinic at which staff is rude and repeatedly administers inappropriate treatments. Ultimately the community’s sentiment may be reflected in election results. Therefore, even for public-sector organisations, it is imperative to have an in-depth understanding of the characteristics, needs and expectations of the organisation’s customers. Customers also portray buyer behaviour, which is influenced by variables in the macro-environment. For example, demographic trends affect the number of customers, economic trends influence the purchasing power of consumers and cultural values can influence the buying behaviour of most customers. Customers for products and services try to force prices down, they obtain more or higher quality products and they increase competition among sellers by playing the one seller against the other. Customers’ bargaining power is likely to be relatively high under the following circumstances: r MBSHFWPMVNFT SFMBUJWFUPUIFTVQQMJFSTUPUBMTBMFTWPMVNF BSF purchased by the customers r UIFQSPEVDUPSTFSWJDFSFQSFTFOUTBTJHOJųDBOUFYQFOEJUVSFCZUIF customer r MBSHFDVTUPNFSTQPTFBUISFBUJGUIFZQVSDIBTFPOFPSNPSFPG JUT suppliers as a cost-cutting or quality enhancing strategy r DVTUPNFSTIBWFBWBJMBCMFBMUFSOBUJWFTGPSUIFTBNFQSPEVDUPS service. Competition Aside from customers, competitors are the single most important day-to-day force facing an organisation. $PNQFUJUJPO in the market environment can be defined as a situation in which different organisations with more or less the same product or service compete for the business patronage of the same consumers. Every organisation that tries to market B TFSWJDF BOEPS QSPEVDU JO UIF NBSLFU FOWJSPONFOU JT DPOTUBOUMZ VQ against existing competition. In the case of business organisations, it is other businesses currently active in the same market sector competing for a share of the market. New entrants refer to the relative ease with which new organisations can compete with established organisations in the same market. The following factors create barriers to new entrants: r &DPOPNJFTPGTDBMF&YJTUJOHPSHBOJTBUJPOTJOBQBSUJDVMBSNBSLFU can achieve economies of scale when increased volume lowers the unit cost of a product or service produced by an organisation. The higher the economy of scale, the greater the entry barrier for new entrants. competition a situation in which different organisations with more or less the same product or service compete for the business patronage of the same consumers CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 77 PART II: Management in a changing environment r 1SPEVDUEJŲFSFOUJBUJPO5IJTSFGFSTUPUIFVOJRVFOFTTJORVBMJUZ QSJDF EFTJHO CSBOEJNBHF PSDVTUPNFSTFSWJDFUIBUHJWFT POFPSHBOJTBUJPOTQSPEVDUPSTFSWJDFBOFEHFPWFSBOPUIFS PSHBOJTBUJPOTQSPEVDU1SPEVDUEJŲFSFOUJBUJPOJTPGUFOVTFECZ PSHBOJTBUJPOTUPMPDLJODVTUPNFSMPZBMUZUPJUTQSPEVDUTBOEPS TFSWJDFT r $BQJUBMSFRVJSFNFOUT5IJTSFGFSTUPUIFBNPVOUPGDBQJUBMOFFEFE UPųOBODFFRVJQNFOUBOENBDIJOFSZ QVSDIBTFTUPDL QVSDIBTFPS MFBTFMBOEBOECVJMEJOHT IJSFDPNQFUFOUBOETLJMMFETUBŲBOETPPO r (PWFSONFOUSFHVMBUJPO*OTPNFJOTUBODFT HPWFSONFOUSFHVMBUJPO DBOQSPIJCJUPSSFTUSJDUQPUFOUJBMOFXFOUSBOUTUPBOJOEVTUSZ 4VCTUJUVUFQSPEVDUTPSTFSWJDFTSFGFSUPQSPEVDUTBOETFSWJDFTUIBUDBO FBTJMZ SFQMBDF BOPUIFS PSHBOJTBUJPOT QSPEVDUT PS TFSWJDFT 4VCTUJUVUFT BSF B QPXFSGVM GPSDF FTQFDJBMMZ JO UIF QIBSNBDFVUJDBM JOEVTUSZ 5IF UISFBUPG TVCTUJUVUJPOJTMBSHFMZCBTFEPOUIFGPSNVMBJOUIFQBUFOU5IF QSJDF EJŲFSFODF CFUXFFO B ACSBOEFE BOE HFOFSJD ESVH JT PGUFO NPSF UIBOQFSDFOU " UIPSPVHI DPNQFUJUPS BOBMZTJT DBO IFMQ BO PSHBOJTBUJPO UP VOEFSTUBOE JOUFSQSFUBOEQSFEJDUJUTDPNQFUJUPSTBDUJPOTBOESFTQPOTFT 6OEFSTUBOEJOH UIF BDUJPOT PG DPNQFUJUPST DMFBSMZ DPOUSJCVUFT UP UIF PSHBOJTBUJPOTBCJMJUZUPDPNQFUFTVDDFTTGVMMZ labour market comprised of many different markets, such as those for various skill levels, occupations, age groups, industries, sexes and geographical regions Labour market "MUIPVHI UIF labour market JT JO FDPOPNJD UIFPSZ FRVBUFE UP PUIFSNBSLFUTTVDIBTUIFųOBODJBMNBSLFUPSUIFNBSLFUGPSQSPEVDUT BOE TFSWJDFT JU IBT JUT PXO VOJRVF DIBSBDUFSJTUJDT 5IF MBCPVS NBSLFU JTDPNQSJTFEPG NBOZEJŲFSFOUNBSLFUT TVDIBTUIPTFGPSWBSJPVTTLJMM MFWFMT PDDVQBUJPOT BHF HSPVQT JOEVTUSJFT TFYFT BOE HFPHSBQIJDBM SFHJPOT5IFTFNBSLFUTBSFUPTPNFFYUFOUJOUFSDIBOHFBCMF ZFUCBSSJFST UPNPCJMJUZEPFYJTU"OPUIFSJNQPSUBOUEJŲFSFODFCFUXFFOUIFMBCPVS NBSLFUBOEPUIFSNBSLFUTJTUIFUFNQPSBSZOBUVSFPG UIFFNQMPZNFOU SFMBUJPOTIJQT 0ODF B QVSDIBTFS CVZT QSPEVDUT GPS DPOTVNQUJPO JU CFDPNFTUIFQSPQFSUZPG UIFCVZFS5IJTJTOPUTPXJUIUIFFNQMPZNFOU SFMBUJPOTIJQ&JUIFSUIFFNQMPZFSPSFNQMPZFFNBZEFDJEFUPUFSNJOBUF UIFSFMBUJPOTIJQ5IJTMFBETUPHSFBUFSŴVJEJUZBOEVOQSFEJDUBCJMJUZJOUIF MBCPVS NBSLFU "O PSHBOJTBUJPOT BCJMJUZ UP BUUSBDU BOE SFUBJO DBQBCMF FNQMPZFFTGSPNUIFMBCPVSNBSLFUJTFTTFOUJBMUPJUTTVDDFTT)PXFWFS BO PSHBOJTBUJPOT QFSTPOOFM SFDSVJUNFOU BOE TFMFDUJPO BMUFSOBUJWFT PGUFOBSFJOŴVFODFECZUIFOBUVSFPG CPUIJUTFYUFSOBMBOEJUTJOUFSOBM FOWJSPONFOUT"OPSHBOJTBUJPOTBDDFTTUPOFFEFEQFSTPOOFMJTBŲFDUFE QSJNBSJMZ CZ UISFF GBDUPST OBNFMZ UIF PSHBOJTBUJPOT SFQVUBUJPO BT BO FNQMPZFS MPDBM FDPOPNJD DPOEJUJPOT BOE TVCTFRVFOU FNQMPZNFOU SBUFT BT XFMM BT UIF BWBJMBCJMJUZ PG QFPQMF XJUI UIF SFRVJSFE TLJMMT 0SHBOJTBUJPOTUIVTDPNQFUFBMTPGPSTLJMMFEBOEDPNQFUFOUMBCPVSXJUI PUIFSPSHBOJTBUJPOT XIFSFMBCPVSVOJPOTQMBZBOJOUFHSBMSPMF intermediaries act as middlemen between manufacturers and final consumers 78 Intermediaries #FTJEFTDPOTVNFST DPNQFUJUPST UIFMBCPVSNBSLFUBOEMBCPVSVOJPOT JO UIF NBSLFU FOWJSPONFOU intermediaries BMTP QMBZ BO JNQPSUBOU CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment role and affect the organisation directly and indirectly. Intermediaries act as middlemen between the manufacturer of products and services and the final consumer thereof. Intermediaries include wholesalers, retailers, agents and brokers, all of which play a role in bringing a product or service from manufacturer to the final consumer. Financial intermediaries, such as banks, insurers and other financial institutions, play a role in providing an organisation with the necessary capital to start up and run a business successfully. Suppliers In Section 4.2 and Figure 4.1 of this chapter, the systems and process approaches to management were discussed, where the organisation is regarded as a system that attracts inputs from its external environment. The inputs that an organisation requires were identified as human resources, capital, technology and information. The organisation depends on suppliers to provide regular supplies of these inputs. Most of the inputs used by the organisation form part of a valuecreation process manifested in the value chain. The value chain can be described as a chain of activities that an organisation, operating in a specific industry, performs in order to deliver a valuable product or service for the market that it serves. The value chain will be discussed in more detail in Chapter 16. In the case of public-sector organisations the final consumer is represented by the community. Through the use of a value chain, value can be created for all role-players and a sustainable competitive advantage created for the organisation. The concentration of suppliers and the availability of substitutes are, on the one hand, of extreme importance to the effective functioning and survival of the organisation, and, on the other, also significant factors in determining supplier bargaining power. The bargaining power of suppliers often controls how much they can raise prices of their products or services above their costs or reduce the quality of goods and services they provide before losing customers. From the opening case, various factors can be identified that originate from the market environment of Vodacom, for example the high demand for ICT skills in their labour market and an ICT workforce that is young, mobile and eager to advance their careers to higher levels. These factors will influence the strategies and activities of Vodacom to a large extent. The remote environment The remote environment refers to the broader environment within which the organisation must function. It surrounds the market environment and includes all external influences that do not fall directly within the sphere of influence of the organisation, but which do have a bearing on its activities. When analysing the remote environment the emphasis falls on the changes that the uncontrollable variables at the macro-level cause and the strategic implications these hold for the organisation. For the purpose of systematic analysis a number of subenvironments can be distinguished within the remote environment, namely the political/legislative, economic, cultural, technological and suppliers provide regular supplies of necessary inputs to produce outputs value chain chain of activities that an organisation, operating in a specific industry, performs in order to deliver a valuable product or service for the market that it serves remote environment the broader environment within which the organisation functions and that surrounds the market environment CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 79 PART II: Management in a changing environment ecological/physical environments. Figure 4.4 below illustrates the composition of the remote environment. Ecological/ physical environment Technological environment Remote environment Cultural environment Political/ legislative environment Economic environment Figure 4.4: Composition of the remote environment Each of the sub-environments of the remote environment will be discussed in more detail in the next section. Technological environment The technological environment is primarily responsible for changes in the remote environment. Technology can be defined as the knowledge, tools, actions and techniques that are used to transform ideas, information, raw materials and components into finished products and services. Furthermore, technology encapsulates the physical elements of human invention and innovation. Many new technologies are radical enough to force organisations, especially in high tech industries, to reconsider their vision, purpose and methods of operation or face extinction. Consider the following examples: r 8JUIPOMJOF SFBMUJNFųOBODJBMNBOBHFNFOUTZTUFNT NBOBHFST can determine profit and loss positions of their organisations on a daily basis, which was impossible with manual methods and earlier stages of computer technology. r 3FUBJMCBOLJOHDVTUPNFSTDBOQFSGPSNOVNFSPVTCBOLJOH functions from remote locations, reducing banking costs and fees considerably. r 5IFJOUFSOFUBOE8PSME8JEF8FCNBEFPOMJOFPSEFSJOH distribution and sales of products possible and also changed the way that many organisations compete for customers. The most basic effect of technology and technological innovation is probably higher productivity. The ability of an organisation to produce 80 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment more and better products poses a threat to competitors, compelling them to reassess their strategic plans, organisational structures, production methods, markets and other functional strategies. Effective management of technology and innovation can be an extremely important source of competitive advantage for an organisation. Economic environment After technology, the economic environment plays a huge role in the remote environment. Organisations are influenced by factors such as business cycles, interest rates, inflation, unemployment, trends with regard to the gross national product (GNP) and economic growth rate, monetary and fiscal policy, trends in the balance of payments, the current and provisional status of the economy in terms of recession and depression, the influence of resources, and so on. The economy, in turn, is affected by technology, politics, the ecology, social trends and the international environment. These cross-influences constantly cause changes in the economy, affecting organisations and its management. Economic changes and trends therefore demand constant vigilance from management and may require them to revisit the organisation’s vision, mission statement, goals and strategies. Political/legislative environment The state is a major role player in the remote environment of an organisation, since it influences the organisation primarily as a regulating force. The state enforces laws, directly affecting the way that organisations operate. Tax regulations, for instance, have a direct influence on each and every organisation. Value added taxes in South Africa, for instance, are currently 14 per cent. Besides value-added taxes, companies are also influenced by companies’ taxes. Individuals need to pay individual taxes on income earned. Changes in income tax laws will have a direct effect on the purchasing power of an organisation’s customers, consequently also affecting the sales figures of organisations. Cultural environment Cultural forces, underlying a society and surrounding an organisation, are often not as visible as other general environmental forces. Culture refers to the unique pattern of shared characteristics, such as values, that distinguish the members of one group of people from another group. A value can be defined as the basic belief about a certain condition that has considerable importance and meaning to individuals. People’s values are relatively stable over time. A value system comprises multiple beliefs that are compatible and supportive of one another. Managers need to appreciate the significance of the values and value systems of themselves and of others. Values and value systems greatly affect how a manager: r WJFXT PUIFS QFPQMF BOE HSPVQT UIJT JOŴVFODFT UIFJS PXO JOUFS personal relationships and the relationships between other people) r QFSDFJWFTTJUVBUJPOTBOEQSPCMFNT r HPFTBCPVUTPMWJOHQSPCMFNT r EFUFSNJOFTXIBUJTBOEXIBUJTOPUFUIJDBMCFIBWJPVS CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 81 PART II: Management in a changing environment r MFBETBOEDPOUSPMTFNQMPZFFT r VOEFSTUBOETBOEQSFEJDUTPUIFSTFYQFDUBUJPOTBOEBWPJETDVMUVSBM QJUGBMMT (MPCBMJTBUJPO BOE HMPCBM DPNQFUJUJPO JT B SFBMJUZ BOE UIF OVNCFS PG PSHBOJTBUJPOT UIBU BDDFQU DPOUSBDUT BOE PUIFS BTTJHONFOUT JO PUIFS DPVOUSJFT JT SBQJEMZ JODSFBTJOH 3FBMJTJOH UIF JNQPSUBODF PG DVMUVSBM EJWFSTJUZDBOIFMQNBOBHFSTVOEFSTUBOEUIFJSJOUFSOBUJPOBMQBSUOFSTBOE VMUJNBUFMZUPCFNPSFFŲFDUJWFBOEFŵDJFOUNBOBHFST Ecological/physical environment 5IF FDPMPHJDBM FOWJSPONFOU DPOUBJOT UIF MJNJUFE OBUVSBM SFTPVSDFT GSPN XIJDI BO PSHBOJTBUJPO PCUBJOT JUT SBX NBUFSJBMT 5IF FDPMPHJDBM FOWJSPONFOUDPOTJTUTPG UIFOBUVSBMFOWJSPONFOUBTXFMMBTNBONBEF JOGSBTUSVDUVSF 5IF DMJNBUF OBUVSBM SFTPVSDFT SBX NBUFSJBMT TPJM PS XBUFSGPSFYBNQMF DPOTFSWBUJPOBHSFFNFOUTBOEDPOWFOUJPOTBMMGPSN QBSU PG UIF OBUVSBM FOWJSPONFOU .BONBEF JOGSBTUSVDUVSF SFGFST UP UIF SPBET SBJMXBZT BJSQPSUT IBSCPVST DPNNVOJDBUJPO JOGSBTUSVDUVSF BOEFOFSHZTVQQMJFTUIBUIBWFBOJOŴVFODFPOBMMPSHBOJTBUJPOT"MNPTU BMM PSHBOJTBUJPOT BMTP EJTQPTF PG UIFJS TPMJE BOE MJRVJE XBTUF JOUP UIF FDPMPHJDBMFOWJSPONFOU 0SHBOJTBUJPOT BSF CFDPNJOH JODSFBTJOHMZ BXBSF PG UIF JOUFSEFQFOEFODF CFUXFFO PSHBOJTBUJPOT BOE UIF OBUVSBM FOWJSPONFOU 5IJTJOUFSEFQFOEFODFQSFTFOUTPQQPSUVOJUJFTBOEUISFBUTUPPSHBOJTBUJPOT 0OFPG UIFNBKPSUISFBUTJTBTIPSUBHFPG OBUVSBMSFTPVSDFT FTQFDJBMMZ JO UFSNT PG XBUFS BOE FOFSHZ 5IF SJTJOH DPTU PG FOFSHZ EVF UP BO FWFSEJNJOJTIJOHTVQQMZ QPMMVUJPOBOEDMJNBUFDIBOHFBSFBMMUISFBUTUP PSHBOJTBUJPOBMTUBCJMJUZ.BOBHFSTTIPVMEUBLFUJNFMZTUFQTųSTU UPFOTVSF UIBUOPBDUJPOTPOUIFQBSUPG UIFJSPSHBOJTBUJPOIBWFEFUSJNFOUBMFŲFDUT PO UIF FOWJSPONFOU 4VTUBJOBCJMJUZ JTTVFT TVDI BT HSFFO JOEVTUSJFT CVJMEJOHTBOEUSBOTQPSU IBWFCFDPNFDSVDJBMGPSNBOBHFNFOU 7BSJPVT GBDUPST GSPN 7PEBDPNT SFNPUF FOWJSPONFOU BSF FWJEFOU GSPN UIF PQFOJOH DBTF TVDI BT UIF DPNQBOJFT NBSLFU FYQBOTJPO UP -FTPUIP 5BO[BOJB %FNPDSBUJD3FQVCMJDPG UIF$POHPBOE.P[BNCJRVF BOEMFHJTMBUJPOTVDIBTUIF&MFDUSPOJD$PNNVOJDBUJPOT"DU5IFTFJNQBDU POUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOTTUSBUFHJFTBOEBDUJWJUJFT'JHVSFTVNNBSJTFTUIF DPNQPTJUJPOPG UIFNBOBHFNFOUFOWJSPONFOU Internal environment resources organisational functions policies strategies goals and objectives Market environment customers intermediaries labour market and unions suppliers competitors Remote environment ecological/physical environment political/legislative environment economic environment cultural environment technological environment Figure 4.5: The composition of the management environment 82 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 4.4 ANALYSIS OF THE MANAGEMENT ENVIRONMENT Conduct a basic analysis of the management environment. A key element in the effective management of an organisation is to determine the ideal alignment between the environment and the organisation and then working to achieve and maintain that alignment. In order to do so, an analysis of the management environment is necessary. Conducting an analysis of the management environment in such a manner that it contributes to the management process in a meaningful way, requires an understanding of the theory of the environment as explained above, as well as an appreciation of where and how the analysis fits into the management process. The phases involved in conducting an environmental analysis are the identification of the key environmental variables, an evaluation and selection of a technique for analysing the environment, the development of an environmental profile, and the continuous control over the variables, trends and the environment. These phases are discussed below. Phase 1: Identify key environmental variables. When we speak of conducting an analysis of the environment, the contingency approach (discussed in Chapter 1) becomes applicable. The contingency approach states that since organisations are diverse in terms of the specific industry that the organisation is competing in, its objectives, size and so on, it would be surprising to find that there would be large numbers of universally applicable variables within the environment that would apply to all organisations and in all situations. The same variables, especially variables from the external environment, will in many instances IBWF B EJŲFSFOU JNQBDU JO UFSNT PG UZQF BOEPS EFHSFF PO EJŲFSFOU organisations. Thus, managers are required to take into account the unique nature and characteristics of the organisation they serve and to identify key variables that will specifically apply to the organisation or have bearing on it within a specific situation. This is usually the task of top management, partly because of their assumed experience over a number of years within a specific industry or organisation and also the fact that they are responsible for the organisation as a whole, its vision, mission and long-term survival strategies. Phase 2: Evaluate and select a technique for analysing the environment. The next step in conducting an analysis of the environment is the evaluation and selection of a technique or techniques that will assist the manager in conducting the analysis. There are literally hundreds, if not thousands, of methods and techniques to choose from. In order to assist the manager in this process the following criteria are important in the evaluation and selection process: r Explicitness. Explicitness applies when a technique is so completely specified that any individual can apply the method without having to make independent judgements and come up with the same results4. The technique can be taken apart, its components examined for the plausibility of underlying assumptions and their consistency checked. This has a number of advantages, namely: CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 83 PART II: Management in a changing environment i. r r r r r 84 it allows the initial user of the technique to go on to other tasks, leaving his or her knowledge embedded in the technique so that others can apply it, thereby saving time and money ii. no hidden biases of the user can be introduced, because all of the assumptions are expressed within the steps of the technique (except if the method conveys its own hidden biases or preconceptions) iii. it tends to raise the level of discussion and by so doing enhances the quality of decision-making. $PNQSFIFOTJWFOFTT$PNQSFIFOTJWFOFTTSFGFSTUPUIFEFHSFFPG inclusion and integration of the interactions within and between all the dimensions within the internal and external environments, whether mathematically or judgementally derived, without reverting to unfounded speculation. Taking into consideration the constraints of time, money and personnel, the technique must allow an overview of the maximum number of factors potentially relevant to the problem, so that the manager can decide which, and how many, he or she deems necessary to consider in order to make an informed decision. 4JNQMJDJUZ"TDIFSBOE0WFSIPMU5 stress three aspects that should be kept in mind in terms of practicality when selecting a technique. The first is that complicated methods are often difficult to employ. They are cumbersome, difficult to ‘debug’, and intimidating to their users and even their creators. Second, simplicity eases the understanding of the method and of the real-life situation. The usefulness of complicated techniques is often negated by a lack of understanding on the part of the manager. The third aspect relates to the fact that the simpler the technique, the easier it is to assess in terms of consistency and the plausibility of the underlying assumptions. 4FOTJUJWJUZUPOVBODFT"UFDIOJRVFBMMPXJOHGPSTFOTJUJWJUZUP nuances with regard to a particular situation is another criterion that should be considered. Subtle differences in the meaning of the on-going events, or in the configuration of factors or variables, can have a substantial effect on the results achieved and may result in misinformed decisions and incorrect options being implemented. 5JNFMJOFTT*OUFSNTPG UIFUJNFJUUBLFTUPQSPEVDFUIFSFRVJSFE information, the methodology of the technique must be able to provide the manager with the required information within the deadline that has been set. Information that is made available after a decision should already have been taken is rarely of any use. Incomplete information that is known before the decision-making stage but which reduces the level of ‘uncertainty’ partially, is better than complete information that reduces ‘uncertainty’ totally but is obtained too late6. $PTUFŲFDUJWFOFTT5IFVTFPG BOZUFDIOJRVFNVTUBMTPCFKVEHFE in terms of its cost-effectiveness. Time, equipment (such as computer hardware and software) and techniques as inputs must be related to the potential value of the information as output. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment Efficiency and effectiveness are achieved where the relation of input to output is optimised7. Examples of two simple, yet powerful, techniques that comply with the above criteria are the classic linear trend estimation (a form of time series analysis) and a SWOT analysis. -JOFBS USFOE FTUJNBUJPO is a technique that uses regression analysis to project future trends. It is based on the analysis of numerical values (for example, interest rate figures, crime statistics, sales figures, and so on) collected at multiple points in time (current and historical) and presented chronologically. 4805BOBMZTJTis one of the most common and simple, yet powerful, techniques to aid analysis of the environment. SWOT stands for: S – strengths; W – weaknesses; O – opportunities and T – threats. It involves identifying the most important opportunities and threats in the organisation’s external environment and the key strengths and weaknesses in its internal environment. A SWOT analysis is based on the assumption that an effective strategy derives from a sound ‘fit’ between an organisation’s internal resources (strengths and weaknesses) and its external situation (opportunities and threats). A good fit maximises an organisation’s strengths and opportunities and minimises its weaknesses and threats8. Understanding the key opportunities and threats facing an organisation is essential when managers are identifying realistic options in terms of strategising and planning9. The four elements of the acronym can CFEFųOFEBTGPMMPXT4USFOHUITBSFUIFSFTPVSDFTBOEPSDPNQFUFODJFT available to an organisation which represent distinctive advantages (relative to its competitors) that allow it to achieve its objectives10. A high market share, good financial position, low staff turnover rate, and a skilled and competent human resource team are all examples of organisational strengths. Weaknesses, in contrast, are the limitations or deficiencies in one or more resource or competency (relative to competitors) that impede an organisation’s effective performance and may prevent it from achieving its objectives11. A poor financial position, high staff turnover rate, shortage in skilled and competent human resources, low productivity and obsolete production techniques are all examples of organisational weaknesses. Opportunities are favourable situations12 or trends13 in an organisation’s external environment upon which it can capitalise and improve its position. Economic growth, low interest rates, low inflation rates, political stability, government incentives and legislation supporting an organisation’s growth are examples of opportunities originating from an organisation’s external environment. Threats are unfavourable situations or trends in an organisation’s external environment that are key impediments to its current or desired position14. Examples of threats include terrorism, political instability, nationalisation of strategic assets by newly constituted governments, new or revised legislation or industry regulations, poor government administration and service delivery, slowing economic growth, high inflation, increasing interest rates, rising oil prices, pandemics such BT )*7"JET IJHI DSJNF SBUFT JOBEFRVBUF USBOTQPSU BOE FMFDUSJDJUZ infrastructure, climate change, new competitors entering the market, revolutionary technological innovations by competitors and poor service delivery by suppliers or suppliers going out of business. linear trend estimation uses regression analysis to project future trends S9OT analysis identifies opportunities and threats in the external environment and strengths and weaknesses in the internal environment CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 85 PART II: Management in a changing environment The previous two techniques are often used by organisations when analysing the environment. It provides a basis upon which more sophisticated techniques can be executed. Phase 3: Develop an environmental profile. An environmental profile entails summarising the results of the analysis of the management environment in a useful and user-friendly way. In terms of the SWOT analysis technique this means summarising opportunities and threats, together with their potential impact on the organisation, as well as strengths and weaknesses in a useful and user-friendly way. Phase 4: Monitor the variables, trends and environment continuously. Once the environmental profile has been completed, the key variables identified have to be continuously monitored to ensure they are still valid, providing timeous warning as to changes in trends, and identifying potential new opportunities, threats, strengths and weaknesses so that strategies and plans can be proactively implemented if required. Figure 4.6 summarises the basic framework for conducting an analysis of the environment. Phase 1 Identify key environmental variables Phase 4 Monitor the variables, trends and environment continuously Phase 2 Evaluate and select a technique for analysing the environment Phase 3 Develop an environmental proƂle Figure 4.6: Framework for conducting an environmental analysis 86 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Chapter 4 Composition of the management environment CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Understand the importance of the management environment when making management decisions. • The management environment is complex and interdependent. • Change is becoming more rapid, discontinuous and turbulent. • Management mistakes are becoming increasingly costly. • Managers need a means to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats within the environment to empower them to make better critical choices and choose more feasible courses of action in executing planning, organising, leading and controlling functions. 2. Depict diagrammatically and explain the concepts of the process, systems and contingency approaches in management. • The process approach to management is based on the four main functions of management. According to this approach, the performance of the planning, organising, leading and controlling functions within the organisation is seen as circular and continuous. The process approach focuses on managing the total organisation. • The systems approach to management defines a system as a set of interrelated and interdependent parts arranged in a manner that produces a unified whole. The organisation, which is a system in its own right, is therefore in constant interaction with its environment and is influenced by both the industry-specific and general environments. • The contingency approach to management is based on the systems approach. The basic premise of the contingency approach is that the application of management principles depends on the specific situation that managers face at a given point in time. The concepts of the process, systems and contingency approaches are depicted in Figure 4.1. 3. Understand the structure and dynamics of the management environment. The management environment can be divided into the micro-environment, the market environment and the remote environment. • The micro-environment can also be referred to as the internal environment and includes the organisation’s functions, policies, strategies, goals, objectives, resources available and also designate the area over which the manager has total or full control. • The market environment is the environment that surrounds the organisation in which competition within a specific industry takes place. • The broader environment within which the organisation functions and that surrounds the market environment is called the remote environment. 4. Conduct a basic analysis of the environment. The phases involved in conducting an environmental analysis are the following: Phase 1: Identify key environmental variables. Phase 2: Evaluate and select a technique for analysing the environment. Phase 3: Develop an environmental profile. Phase 4: Monitor the variables, trends and environment continuously. Contemporary Management Principles EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:43 PM via UNISA AN: 707010 ; Vrba, M. J., Brevis, Tersia.; Contemporary Management Principles Contemporary.indb 87 Account: s7393698 87 2013/11/20 4:24 PM PART II: Management in a changing environment KEY TERMS bargaining power of customers bargaining power of suppliers competitors contingency approach to management cultural environment customer needs customers FDPMPHJDBMQIZTJDBMFOWJSPONFOU economic environment environmental analysis environmental profile existing competitors goals and objectives intermediaries labour market labour unions linear trend estimation macro-environment management environment market environment micro-environment new entrants opportunity organisational functions policies QPMJUJDBMMFHJTMBUJWFFOWJSPONFOU process approach to management purchasing behaviour of customers remote environment resources strategies strength substitutes suppliers SWOT analysis systems approach to management technological environment threat weakness REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Differentiate between the process, systems and contingency approaches to management. 2. Explain the importance of management in a changing environment. 3. Discuss the micro-environment as well as the variables in this environment. 4. Explain the market environment as well as the sub-environments within it that have an influence on the management of organisations. 5. Discuss the remote environment with an explanation of all the sub-environments in this environment affecting the organisation and its management. 6. Depict the management environment diagrammatically. 7. Discuss the various phases that a manager should follow in conducting an environmental analysis. 88 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 4 Composition of the management environment END NOTES L KWWSZZZWRSHPSOR\HUVFR]D%(67(PSOR\HUV%HVW(PSOR\HUV$FFHVVHGRQ$XJXVW LL KWWSHQZLNLSHGLDRUJZLNL9RGDFRP$FFHVVHGRQ-XQH $QJHOO,The New Barbarian Manifesto: How to Survive the Information Age/RQGRQ.RJDQS KWWSZZZELRJUDSK\FRPSHRSOHOHRQDUGRGDYLQFL$FFHVVHGRQ-XQH $VFKHU: 2YHUKROW:+Strategic Planning and Forecasting. 1HZ<RUN-RKQ:LOH\ 6RQVS $VFKHU 2YHUKROWRSFLWS .URRQ- General ManagementQGHGLWLRQ3UHWRULD+$803XEOLVKHUVS $VFKHU 2YHUKROWRSFLWS *RRGPDQ6+)DQGW300LFKOLWVFK-) /HZLV36Management: Challenges for Tomorrow’s Leaders 0DVRQ7KRPVRQ6RXWK:HVWHUQS 3HDUFH 5RELQVRQRSFLWS ,ELG ,ELG ,ELG *RRGPDQHWDORSFLWS 3HDUFH 5RELQVRQRSFLWS CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 89 Chapter 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress OPENING CASE Mari Vrba OPENING CASE The reinvention of Pick n Pay1 Raymond Ackerman listed his seven Pick n Pay supermarkets at 4 cents a share on the (then) Johannesburg Stock Exchange ( JSE) in 1968. The event marked the beginning of the rise of a company that grew into the largest food retailer in South Africa. Pick n Pay, a household name in the country, was a winner – the darling of food retailing, a tough competitor, with loyal customers and satisfied shareholders – and its magic lasted for 40 years. In the year that ended in February 2009, Pick n Pay reported a headline profit of R989m – a massive return on equity (RoE) of 132.7 per cent for its shareholders. Then suddenly the magic ended – by February 2011 the RoE dropped to 47.2 per cent and by March 2013 it was the worst in three years of consecutive decline. What went wrong? Ironically, the phenomenal return on equity it earned for its shareholders was the first sign that Pick n Pay was not investing enough2 in its sustainability. Pick n Pay was raking in the profits3 for management and shareholders, but failed to reinvest in the company. Meanwhile competitors Shoprite, Spar and Woolworths were eroding Pick n Pay’s market share in both the lower LSM (lifestyle measure) and the upper LSM respectively. The booming economy during the previous 17 years gave a false sense of performance to Pick n Pay in respect of its market share because it showed substantial year on year increases. However, the recession of 2009 revealed the weaknesses in its business model. Pick n Pay was steadily losing market share and it failed to follow its major competitors in adopting central distribution. It had a bloated labour force and a fragmented corporate structure. In addition, Pick n Pay’s acquisition of Australian retailer Franklins in 2001 was a drain on its capital resources and management time and the acquisition was not a success. The retailer needed to embark on a complex reinvention programme to regain what was lost during years of complacency. Reinventing Pick n Pay Pick n Pay appointed Nick Badminton as CEO in 2007 – analysts described him as a key driver of change – and in 2011 appointed Richard van Rensburg as his Deputy CEO and the head of a transformation team responsible for implementing the change programme. The first change they implemented was an initiative by the previous CEO Sean Summers, in the pipeline since 2005. It entailed replacing the company’s old technology platform (an in-house developed system) with a SAP fully integrated system providing improved instore disciplines, more efficient business processes and more timely information thus enabling better and more rapid decision-making across the organisation. This was a costly process. CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress A second area that needed attention was Pick n Pay’s labour policies. The retailer and the SA Commercial, Catering & Allied Workers Union reached an agreement in 1995 to implement a 9 am to 5 pm working-hour arrangement for their labour force. This resulted in an expensive increase in staff, which the company could have mitigated if the labour union was prepared to be more flexible – which they were not. Pick n Pay returned to the negotiation table and an arbitration process of which the findings were largely in favour of the retailer. At the end of 2011, Pick n Pay retrenched 3 137 employees and decreased their labour costs substantially. Yet another change intervention involved the consolidation of the company’s fragmented corporate structure to a more centralised structure resulting in lower costs, but also in a more efficient structure. The biggest challenge was changing Pick n Pay’s outdated approach to procurement and distribution. Analysts attributed some of the company’s loss in market share to its lagging behind Shoprite and other competitors in adopting centralised distribution. This hampered Pick n Pay’s ability to meet the demand for large numbers of smaller shops – only 15 per cent of Pick n Pay shops were in areas where customers wanted them. In contrast, its competitors could place up to 60 per cent of their stores in locations where their customers prefer to shop. In a 2011 interview, Raymond Ackerman4 defended Pick n Pay’s position arguing that its management realised as early as the 1970s that direct store delivery was inefficient and that centralisation was a better option. However, key suppliers opposed such a change. Shoprite, however, switched to centralised distribution – in the face of strong opposition from the major food producers, but CEO Whitey Basson persevered and soon Shoprite’s market share grew and the retailer gained a decisive advantage in this respect. Pick n Pay embarked on the costly process of adopting centralised distribution. The retailer implemented operational improvements at Longmeadow, its Gauteng distribution centre, which became operational in mid-2010. In 2012, the Cape Town and Durban centralised distribution centres came into operation and the R2b centralised distribution system, including an inland facility, will become operational in 2014. Another Pick n Pay strategy to win back market share was the launching of its Smart Shopper loyalty programme, which, according to Pick n Pay management would help to stabilise the retailer’s market share and provide valuable information regarding its customer’s needs and preferences. A new CEO In February 2013, Richard Brasher, with 26 years of experience at Tesco in the United Kingdom, replaced Badminton as CEO of Pick n Pay. Once South Africa’s largest food retailer, Pick n Pay is still trailing its competitors despite spending billions on its massive change programme. The new CEO has plans to convert the capital expenditure of the last few years into profit. He stated that the pace of change at Pick n Pay has been rapid and he wants the management team to shift their focus on what they have and to make it work rather than initiate more change. The retailer’s future rests on the skills and leadership of its new CEO to help it rebound. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 91 PART II: Management in a changing environment LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to investigate the management of change in organisations. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Identify and discuss the forces of change. 2. Discuss the dimensions of change. 3. Explain why organisations and individuals resist change. 4. Provide advice to managers on how to overcome resistance to change. 5. Discuss the approaches to managing change. 6. Identify the areas of organisational change. 7. Discuss the nature of stress. 8. Identify the sources of managerial stress. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Identify and discuss the forces of change. 92 5.1 FORCES OF ORGANISATIONAL CHANGE Organisations need to anticipate and react to changes in their business environment. The ‘frog and boiling water’ metaphor illustrates this well. When you put a frog in a pot containing very warm water, it will immediately react and jump out; if you fill the pot with cold water and gradually turn up the heat, the frog will stay in the water, not noticing that its environment is changing and that it will perish. Similarly, some organisations change when their environment changes, they ‘jump out of the pot’, others fail to react to the change and cease to exist or they implement radical change interventions in order to survive. The opening case study illustrates how Pick n Pay, the successful South African food retailer, failed to react to important changes in its business environment. The management and shareholders of the retailer became complacent and did not reinvest in the sustainability of the organisation operating in a changing environment. The company lost market share because it did not implement crucial changes timeously, such as an advanced information system, centralised distribution and a centralised corporate structure. These changes were required to maintain its competitive position in the food retailing industry. Change in the environment of an organisation can emanate from forces within the organisation or outside the organisation. You may want to revisit Chapter 4, where we describe the organisation as an open system, in continuous interaction with its market- and macroenvironments. When change occurs in the external environment, it affects the internal (micro-) environment of an organisation. In Chapter 3, we discuss the unique variables that cause organisations to adapt to new forms of organisation, such as becoming flatter, more flexible, networked, diverse and global. In the current chapter, we identify and discuss additional external and internal variables that force organisations to change. The primary focus of the chapter is on how organisations implement change: the dimensions of change, why organisations and their employees resist change and how managers CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress could overcome barriers to change. The approaches to change are many and varied, but we limit our discussion to two well-known approaches, those of Kurt Lewin and John Kotter. We conclude the chapter with a discussion on the consequences of change on individuals, namely stress, and how to manage personal stress. 5.1.1 Internal forces of change The reasons for individual organisations to change are different for every organisation and emanate from the specific context of the change initiative in an organisation. We discuss a few internal forces for change in the section below5. r $IBOHFJOTUSBUFHZ"DIBOHFJOUIFTUSBUFHJDEJSFDUJPOPGBO organisation would inadvertently cause change in any or all of the following areas: structure, culture, the balance of power or the technology it uses. We discuss the areas of change in more detail elsewhere in the chapter. r 1PPSQFSGPSNBODF1PPSQFSGPSNBODFSFTVMUTNBZUSJHHFSDIBOHFJO organisations. After delivering spectacular results for 40 years, Pick n Pay’s performance declined and management realised that they had to embark on a change programme to put the retailer back on track. r 1SFTTVSFUPHSPX5IFQSFTTVSFGSPNTUBLFIPMEFSTDPVMEGPSDF organisations to initiate change efforts in order to stimulate growth. Pick n Pay implemented a change programme in order to function more efficiently, regain the market share it had lost to competitors and to stimulate growth. r 8PSLGPSDFQSPCMFNT1SPCMFNTXJUIJUTXPSLGPSDFNBZQSPNQUBO organisation to change, for example, by entering into a favourable agreement with the labour union representing its workforce to save on labour costs as Pick n Pay did, enabling it to retrench more than 3 000 employees. r *NQMFNFOUBUJPOPG OFXUFDIOPMPHZ5IFBWBJMBCJMJUZPG OFX technology may force organisations to change in order to remain competitive. (We discuss this in Chapter 3.) Implementing new technology may bring about much change and resistance to change from employees. r $IBOHFTJOUPQNBOBHFNFOU$IBOHFTJOUIFUPQNBOBHFNFOUPG organisations often lead to change within organisations because a new CEO or a new management team often ring in the changes soon after they take office. This is sometimes referred to as the ‘new broom’ effect6. r 1PXFSBOEQPMJUJDT1SFTTVSFUPDIBOHFNBZEFWFMPQGSPNQPXFS sources and political struggles within organisations. The opening case study in Chapter 7 describes the events that led to the appointment and resignation of a powerful CEO at the helm of a giant manufacturing organisation. The case study illustrates how a shift in power can lead to internal conflict and change. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 93 PART II: Management in a changing environment r -BDLPG JOOPWBUJPO*OOPWBUJPOJTBCPVUUIFDPNNFSDJBM exploitation and application of ideas, services and inventions. A lack of innovation in an organisation may result in stagnation and will become a force for the organisation to change. This is especially true in industries where continuous innovation is required in order to compete in that industry and to survive. An example is Silicone Valley in California, where organisations have to offer new innovative products and services in order to compete in an environment characterised by innovation and change7. 5.1.2 External forces of change OCTMGVGPXKTQPOGPV comprises consumers, competitors, suppliers of resources and intermediates such as banks OCETQGPXKTQPOGPV comprises several subenvironments, including the technological, economic, social, political, ecological and international environments 94 External forces for change in organisations mainly stem from the NBSLFU FOWJSPONFOU and macro-environments of organisations. Changes in the needs and behaviour of consumers, the offerings of competitors, or the changes in the availability of key suppliers may force the organisation to change its products or services to meet the demands of the market. The NBDSPFOWJSPONFOU comprises several sub-environments, including the technological, economic, social, political, ecological and international environments. A change in any one of these subenvironments may cause change in the other sub-environments, in the market environment and in the internal (or micro-) environment of an organisation. The sources of change emanating from the external macro- sub-environments include: r /FXUFDIOPMPHZDSFBUFTUIFBWBJMBCJMJUZPGOFXQSPDFTTFT systems, materials and equipment and accelerates change and innovation because it enables organisations to develop new and innovative products and services. Advanced information systems can disseminate essential information faster and more efficiently and new processes can increase the productivity of organisations. New technology results in increased competition and forces organisations to use the latest technology in order to remain competitive. You may want to revisit the discussion in Chapter 1 on the Information Revolution and the changes it brought to profoundly influence how contemporary organisations function. r &DPOPNJDGPSDFTBŲFDUPSHBOJTBUJPOTBOEGPSDFUIFNUPDIBOHF"O FYBNQMFIFSFJTUIFSFDFTTJPOJO XIJDIBŲFDUFEDPOTVNFS behaviour and forced organisations to adapt to the changing needs of their customers. r 4PDJBMGPSDFTTUFNNJOHGSPNFDPOPNJD UFDIOPMPHJDBMBOEDVMUVSBM environments affect people such as employees and consumers, which in turn, forces organisations to change. Demographic trends, levels and quality of education, ethical, gender and race issues, and changes in lifestyle are variables that act as forces for organisations to change. Technological advances in medicine and medical care enable people to live longer, which in turn can affect organisations such as insurance companies, forcing them to change the products UIFZPŲFS0OUIFPUIFSIBOE IFBMUIJTTVFTTVDIBT)*7"JETBOE CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress antibiotic-resistant tuberculosis force organisations to change their human resources policies and practices. r &DPMPHJDBMBOEQIZTJDBMGPSDFTPGDIBOHFQFSUBJOUPUIFOBUVSBM resources from which organisations obtain raw materials and the environment into which organisations discharge their waste. In recent years, issues such as climate change and sustainability are enjoying a prominent place on the agendas of international forums. This in turn forces countries to promulgate legislation to govern the impact of organisations on the environments where they operate. In South Africa, there is a call for organisations to report on their sustainability and their impact on the environment (see Chapter 8). Clearly, the worldwide interest in environmental issues forces organisations to change their operations and this trend will continue in the future. r 1PMJUJDBMGPSDFTPGDIBOHFJODMVEFUIFQPMJUJDBMSJTLHPWFSONFOUT create by their actions, governance (such as corruption and grafting) and the integrity of courts, policies and laws that affect the stability and thus the level of direct foreign investment in a country. It also influences the decisions of existing organisations pertaining to plans to expand, decrease or cease their operations in the country. Labour and other laws that govern economic activity in the private sector could determine whether it is a suitable environment for local and international entrepreneurs to do business in a country. In South Africa, laws that govern the employment decisions of organisations, such as the Employment Equity Act and various other labour laws have a crucial impact on organisations and the way they operate, forcing them to change their labour components and investigating alternative (technological) production methods. r &WFOUTUIBUPDDVSJOPOFDPVOUSZNBZBŲFDUBOEMFBEUPDIBOHF in organisations operating in other countries because of the integration and interdependence of world markets. The financial crises in the United States of America and elsewhere in the world had a direct impact on most economies and many organisations in the world. The two variables that had the most profound impact on organisations since the late 1990s are advances in information technology and globalisation (see Chapter 3). Globalisation has changed the way in which organisations are operating across national boundaries because of the threats posed by the increase in competition but also because of the opportunities the expanded markets could offer. Furthermore, the benefits of international cooperation agreements such as the European Union, Nepad and the Commonwealth of Nations, enable organisations to trade under favourable conditions in other countries. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 95 PART II: Management in a changing environment LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Discuss the dimensions of change. 5.2 THE DIMENSIONS OF CHANGE Change in organisations takes many forms. Figure 5.1 depicts four dimensions of change in the form of a continuum. The process of change ranges from carefully planned to reactive change; the scope of change varies from incremental to revolutionary change; the source of change ranges from top down to bottom up; and the nature of the pace of change varies from punctuated to continuous change. PROCESS SCOPE SOURCE PACING Planned Revolutionary Top down Punctuated Reactive Incremental Bottom up Continuous Figure 5.1: The dimensions of change Source: Adapted from: Ancona, D., Kochen, T.A., Scully, M., Van Maanen, J. & Westney, D.E. 2005. Managing for the future: organizational behavior and processes. 3rd edition. Cincinnati, OH: South-Western College, p M8–16. 5.2.1 Planned change versus reactive change planned change reactive change Managers initiate and implement planned change8 to solve problems, to adapt to changes in the environment, to improve performance or to prepare the organisation for future changes. Reactive change takes place in the course of events or when external forces inflict change on organisations. Organisations react to these changes in order to minimise the negative effects of change, limit disruption, maintain the status quo or improve on the current situation. takes place when organisations react to change in their environments 5.2.2 Revolutionary change versus incremental change9 change that is planned and implemented by managers to adapt to or prepare for change in the environment revolutionary change involves major, radical, strategic, transformational and rapid change incremental change a process whereby individual and other parts of the organisation deal incrementally with one problem at a time 96 Revolutionary change involves major, radical, strategic, transformational and rapid change. Changes such as downsizing, reengineering and restructuring may change the characteristics of the organisation and are transformational in nature. Incremental change is a process whereby individual and other parts of the organisation deal incrementally with one problem at a time. In response to pressures in the internal and external environments, the organisation transforms over time. The underlying idea is that change will take place through consecutive, limited and negotiated shifts in systems, processes or structures. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress change incremental change punctuated change continuous change time Figure 5.2: Incremental change, punctuated change and continuous change 5.2.3 Punctuated change versus continuous change10 Punctuated change implies that organisations evolve through relatively long periods of stability (equilibrium periods), but these are interrupted by relatively short bursts of fundamental change. These revolutionary periods disrupt activity patterns and create the basis for new equilibrium periods. The triggers for change usually include changes in the internal or external environment, for example, new technologies, process redesign, or industry deregulation. Continuous change entails a pattern of uninterrupted adjustments in work processes and social practices driven by organisational instability and cumulative reactions to daily events. For organisations in industries with short product cycles in highly competitive markets, the ability to change rapidly and continuously is a core competency, entrenched in their culture and comprises a crucial capability for survival. punctuated change 5.3 RESISTANCE TO CHANGE LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 5.3.1 Organisational barriers to change Explain why organisations and individuals resist change. Change initiatives in organisations often encounter some form of resistance. One barrier to change is organisational inertia (inactivity). Organisations resist change because the forces for and against change are equally strong and therefore the organisation remains in the same position. Another organisational barrier to change is the unforeseen consequences11 of implementing change initiatives because of the interdependencies in organisations. Change in one part of the organisation may lead to (sometimes unwanted) change in other parts of the organisation. an organisation evolves through relatively long periods of stability interrupted by relatively short bursts of fundamental change continuous change a pattern of uninterrupted adjustments in work processes and social practices driven by organisational instability and cumulative reactions to daily events organisational inertia organisations resist change because the forces for and against change are equally strong and therefore the organisation remains in the same position 5.3.2 Individual resistance to change The general view is that the natural human aversion to change results in the resistance of people to change. However, a contrary view is that people may resist change initiatives because managers impose it on them rather than involve them to improve their own work experience CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 97 PART II: Management in a changing environment by implementing the change initiatives. We shall discuss this and other methods to overcome resistance to change elsewhere in this chapter. People in organisations may resist change for a number of reasons12: r 1FSDFJWFEUISFBUUPJOEJWJEVBMPSHSPVQJOUFSFTUT5IFQFSDFQUJPO that they may have to give up something because of a change initiative may cause people to resist change. In Chapter 20 (Workforce motivation), we explain that individual behaviour is mostly motivated by self-interest and in the chapter on organisational power and politics (Chapter 7), we discuss how individuals will use their power to protect their own interests and the interests of the groups to which they belong. If an individual or group of individuals perceive that a change initiative may pose a threat to their interests, they will resist the change. r .JTVOEFSTUBOEJOHBOEMBDLPG USVTU8IFONBOBHFNFOUGBJM to convey the implications, benefits and disadvantages of change initiatives to employees, it may cause misunderstanding, confusion, rumours and eventually resistance to change. Similarly, if employees do not trust the management of the organisations where they work, attempts to implement change may be met with resistance from the employees. r -PXUPMFSBODFGPSDIBOHF5IFIVNBOGFBSPGUIFVOLOPXONBZ cause resistance to change. People fear that they will not be able to learn a new skill, understand and operate a new information system or change their behaviour to meet the challenges of a new job. They may feel that they cannot change soon enough and are emotionally unable to change. Kotter and Schlesinger13 remarked that if changes are significant and the individual’s tolerance for change is low, the person will resist the change even if he or she is not sure why. In addition, a person may be reluctant to admit that a previous decision or action was wrong, or succumb to pressure from peers to resist change. r &UIJDBMDPOWJDUJPOT3FTJTUBODFUPDIBOHFNBZFNBOBUFGSPNBDMBTI between an individual’s ethical convictions and the nature of the change. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 5.4 OVERCOMING RESISTANCE TO CHANGE Provide advice to managers on how to overcome resistance to change. Managers could deal with their employees’ resistance to change in a number of ways. Managers should understand the various methods at their disposal to address resistance to change initiatives. Different factors cause different forms of resistance, as explained in the previous section. This requires that managers use the correct method when dealing with the resistance in the most effective manner. 5.4.1 Methods to deal with resistance to change r &EVDBUJPOBOEDPNNVOJDBUJPO8IFOUIFDBVTFPGSFTJTUBODFJT a lack of information, or the wrong information, education and communication regarding the change initiative can be an effective way to overcome the resistance. Precise communication of the 98 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress r r r r r extent and consequences of a change initiative can eliminate the barriers of misinformation regarding the logic and need for change. Education can take many forms, including focus groups, information sessions, one-to-one discussions, documents posted on the intranet, or e-mails. 1BSUJDJQBUJPOBOEJOWPMWFNFOU0OFPGUIFNPTUFŲFDUJWFXBZT to get buy-in and commitment for a change initiative is to allow the people whom the change initiative will affect to participate in the design and implementation of the initiative. The downside of this method is that it may not obtain the optimum solution and it could be time consuming, therefore managers need to manage the process carefully. 'BDJMJUBUJPOBOETVQQPSU5IJTNFUIPEJTFŲFDUJWFXIFOGFBSBOE anxiety is the cause of resistance to change and involves facilitating individuals and offering them support such as training, time off work or emotional support. The condition for using this method is that the managers should be prepared to invest time, money and patience to deal with the resistance and they should be prepared to accept failure despite their best efforts. /FHPUJBUJPOBOEBHSFFNFOU.BOBHFSTSFTPSUUPOFHPUJBUJPOBOE agreement when someone stands to lose something because of the change initiative, but has enough power to resist the change. This entails the offering of incentives or negotiating a deal with the person. As we explain in Chapter 7, the aim of negotiation is that the parties reach an agreement that is mutually acceptable, but managers should be careful to avoid agreements that violate their organisation’s ethical code of conduct by thinking that the ‘end justifies the means’, as such thinking can lead to undesirable consequences. .BOJQVMBUJPOBOEDPPQUBUJPO.BOJQVMBUJPOBTBNFUIPEUP overcome resistance involves the ‘selective use of information and the conscious structuring of events’15. The purpose of co-opting an individual or the leader of the group by giving him or her a role in the design or implementation of a change initiative is, in this context, not to obtain the participation of the individual, but rather to secure his or her endorsement of the initiative. The problem that could occur with using this method is that the resistance will increase if the individual or group leader perceives that his or her co-optation happened under false pretences. &YQMJDJUBOEJNQMJDJUDPFSDJPO.BOBHFSTVTFUIJTNFUIPEXIFO time is of the essence for the change. It involves managers forcing people to accept change by threatening them and by using their power (see Chapter 7) to withhold promotion, rewards, retrenchment and so on. This is a risky method and may not achieve the desired outcome or even have the opposite effect. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 99 PART II: Management in a changing environment 5.4.2 The situational factors that influence the strategic choices of managers when planning a change effort16 When they design and implement change, managers make certain strategic choices and they encounter various forms of resistance to the anticipated change efforts. To this end, a number of situational factors could influence such choices. The variables are the: r BOUJDJQBUFETUSFOHUIPG UIFSFTJTUBODFUPDIBOHF r QPTJUJPOPG UIFDIBOHFJOJUJBUPSJOUFSNTPG QPXFSXIFODPNQBSFE to the resistors r BOUJDJQBUFEOFFEPG UIFDIBOHFJOJUJBUPSPSJOJUJBUPSTGPSJOGPSNBUJPO and commitment from others to help design and implement the change effort r TUBLFTJOWPMWFEJOUIFJNQMFNFOUBUJPOPGBDIBOHFFŲPSUJOUFSNT of the potential short-term risks to the performance of the organisation and its survival. 5BCMFTIPXTXIJDIPQUJPOTBSFBWBJMBCMFGPSNBOBHFST Table 5.1: The situational factors that inƃuence choices when designing and implementing a change effort Situational Anticipated strength of factors resistance Available options Pace of the change process Position of change initiator vis-à-vis resistors in terms of power Need for information and commitment from others by the change initiator/s Potential for risks to short-term organisational performance and survival Weak Strong Weak Strong Little Lots Little Great rapid slow slow rapid rapid slow rapid slow clear plan not a clear plan not clearly preplanned clear plan clear plan not clearly clear plan not clearly prepreplanned planned Involvement little of others lots lots little little lots little lots Dealing with attempt to overcome any resistance resistance – fait accompli reduce resistance to a minimum reduce resistance to a minimum attempt to overcome any resistance – fait accompli attempt to overcome any resistance – fait accompli reduce resistance to a minimum attempt to overcome any resistance reduce resistance to a minimum Extent to which the change is planned Source: Adapted from Kotter, J.P. & Schlesinger, L.A. 1979. Choosing strategies for change. Harvard Business Review, March–April, p 112. 100 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress 5.5 APPROACHES TO CHANGE LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 One of the major theories of planned change is Kurt Lewin’s three-step change model, which focuses on implementing planned change. The model entails three steps: unfreezing, moving (or change) and refreezing. Discuss the approaches to managing change. 5.5.1 Lewin’s change model Lewin’s model provides a general framework for understanding organisational change and researchers have used, modified and elaborated upon the model since Lewin published his model17. 4UFQ Unfreezing. Lewin asserted that the basis of stability of human behaviour is a RVBTJTUBUJPOBSZFRVJMJCSJVN, which is the inability of organisations or groups to change in step with the environment in which they operate. The more successful an organisation or group has been in the past, the greater the inertia to change will be. Pick n Pay, for example, was highly successful for 40 years before large-scale change in the food retail environment forced it to embark on a major change programme. Lewin argued that, in order for an organisation to change, the forces of inertia (equilibrium) need to be destabilised (‘unfreeze’) before the old behaviour will be unlearned and discarded. 4UFQChange. This step requires individuals and groups to move towards a more acceptable set of behaviours. It involves interventions to bring about change in behaviour, values and attitudes through changes in processes, systems and structures. 4UFQRefreeze. The last step, ‘refreezing’ seeks to establish a new quasi-equilibrium to ensure that the new behaviours do not regress to the previous behaviours. Refreezing often requires changes in organisational culture, norms, policies and practices. Suasistationary eSuilibrium an equilibrium supported by a field of driving and restraining forces causing inertia 5.5.2 Kotter’s Eight Step Process of successful change John Kotter is a renowned expert in the management of change. He developed the Eight Step Process18 emphasising that it is a change process and not a checklist. He emphasised that successful change of any scale should go through the steps in the correct sequence without omitting any one of the steps. Kotter and Holger Rathgeber19 also wrote the popular bestseller Our iceberg is melting – a fable about a penguin colony in Antarctica. They used the Eight Step Process to vividly illustrate how organisations could manage change initiatives effectively. Kotter identified eight errors, which in his opinion, cause organisations to fail in their change efforts20. The errors include allowing too much complacency, failing to create an effective guiding team to lead change, underestimating the power of vision and not communicating it sufficiently, failing to remove the obstacles that block the new vision, failing to celebrate short-term wins, declaring victory too soon and failing to change the culture to support the new vision. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 101 PART II: Management in a changing environment The consequences of these errors are serious, because organisations fail to implement new strategies effectively because of the mistakes they make. Kotter identified several strategies and linked the failure of some organisations to implement the strategies successfully to the negative consequences of the errors they make, for example: r BDRVJTJUJPOTmGBJMUPQSPEVDFFYQFDUFETZOFSHJFT r SFFOHJOFFSJOHmUJNFBOEDPTUTPWFSSVOT r EPXOTJ[JOHmDPTUTOPUVOEFSDPOUSPM r RVBMJUZQSPHSBNNFTmEPOPUEFMJWFSBOUJDJQBUFESFTVMUT Kotter’s Eight Step Process for successful change includes the following steps21: 4UFQ Create a sense of urgency. Create urgency in others by stressing the need for change and explain to them that it is essential to act immediately. This step also involves examining the market and macro environments to identify threats and opportunities. 4UFQ Form a guiding team. It is essential to form a guiding team to lead change. This team should have enough power to lead the change and should be able to work together in a cohesive manner. The team should have ‘leadership skills, credibility, communication ability, authority, analytical skills and a sense of urgency’22. 4UFQCreate a change vision and strategy. Create a desirable picture of the future. Clarify how the future will differ from the past and explain the steps towards making such a future a reality. Develop strategies to make the vision a reality. 4UFQ Communicate the vision. Ensure that others understand and accept the vision and strategy. The guiding team should set the example for teaching new behaviours. 4UFQ Empower others to act. It is crucial to remove any barriers in order to empower those who want to embrace the change such as changing systems and processes. This step also involves encouraging risk taking (if appropriate) and encouraging people to offer innovative ideas and perform activities to achieve the new vision. 4UFQProduce short-term wins. Plan and create visible performance improvements. Recognise and reward those employees who make the improvements. 4UFQ Consolidate improvements and produce more change. Do not give up and maintain the pace and the strength of the change initiative until the vision is a reality. Use the credibility earned through implementing the previous steps to change more systems, structures and policies that do not comply with the new vision. Hire, promote and develop employees to implement the vision. Initiate new projects and themes to reinforce the new vision. 4UFQCreate a new culture. Work to maintain the new behaviours until they become ‘the way we do things here’. Communicate the relatedness of new behaviours and organisational success. Develop a process of leadership development and succession. 102 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress 5.6 AREAS OF ORGANISATIONAL CHANGE In this chapter, we have dealt with many aspects of organisational change, but the question arises where in the organisation these changes take place. In general, organisations affect change in four areas, namely in strategy, structure, technology and people. As explained elsewhere in the chapter, organisations are open systems and when they implement change in one part of their organisations, in general it will affect the other parts of the organisations and cause change there as well. We examine the four areas of change more closely23. r 4USBUFHJDDIBOHF4USBUFHJDQMBOOJOHAJTUIFQSPDFTTPGQSPBDUJWFMZ aligning the organisation’s resources (internal environment) with threats and opportunities caused by changes in the external environment’24. Furthermore, a change in strategy inevitably results in change in other areas of the organisation. In Chapter 11, we discuss the process of strategic planning and explain how the top managers of an organisation formulate strategies to compete with other organisations in the same industry through their competitive advantage to use opportunities and avoid threats in their market and macro-environments. Pick n Pay’s strategy, for example, was to regain their lost market share in the food retailing industry. The strategy involved a restructuring process, implementing a new information system and reaching an agreement with the labour union representing the organisation’s labour force. r $IBOHFTJOPSHBOJTBUJPOTUSVDUVSFBOEEFTJHO$IBOHFJOUIF structure of an organisation may involve a complete restructuring of the organisation, or focus on the grouping of functions (departmentalisation), the linking mechanisms that coordinate the activities of individuals and groups in an organisation (cooperation mechanisms), or the alignment of the design with organisational systems and processes, such as incentive schemes and training programmes. In Chapter 15, we discuss organisation structure and design and in Chapter 3, we explain that organisations are opting for flatter and more flexible structures to cope with large-scale change in their environments. Pick n Pay, for example, opted for a centralised structure to replace its fragmented decentralised structure and reaped the benefits of lower costs and a more efficient structure. r $IBOHFJOUFDIOPMPHZ$IBOHFTJOUIJTBSFBPGUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO might involve changes in the use of information technology, for example, Pick n Pay replaced the company’s old technology platform (an in-house developed system) with a SAP fully integrated system providing improved in-store disciplines, more efficient business processes and more timely information thus enabling better and faster decision-making across the organisation. Other forms of change in the technological area include switching to new technologically advanced equipment and changing work processes or work sequences because of the availability of new technology. For an organisation wishing to improve the quality LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 Identify the areas of organisational change. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 103 PART II: Management in a changing environment of its products, the implementation of new control systems may improve the quality of an organisation’s products and thus its completive position. r $IBOHJOHQFPQMF1FPQMFBSFUIFNPTUJNQPSUBOUSFTPVSDFPGBO organisation as they are the activators of the other resources. In other words, people activate the financial, physical and informational resources of organisations by organising finance, operating the information system or operating the equipment. Changes in the human resources of an organisation may involve initiatives to change the abilities and skills of employees by providing training programmes. Changing the values and attitudes of organisational members may be difficult as we explain in Chapter 17, but organisations can implement initiatives to align individual values and attitudes with the espoused values of the organisation. Organisations can attempt to change the perceptions and expectations of organisational members by, for example, being transparent about their remuneration and incentive systems and educating employees about the rationale behind their compensation packages. Lastly, organisations may implement programmes to improve the performance of their employees by, for example, incentive schemes linked to performance. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7 5.7 MANAGING WORK STRESS Discuss the nature of stress. Change is stressful and managers and other employees working in contemporary organisations have to deal with constant change in their work environments and in their lives outside the office. In this final section of the chapter on organisational change, we focus on the effects of change and its consequence, namely stress, on the human resources and specifically the managers of contemporary organisations. The right amount of stress could enhance job performance and personal welfare, but too much stress reduces both satisfaction and performance. Since the work individuals perform connects with their identity, stress in the workplace inevitably spills over into their private MJWFT5IFPWFSBMMSFTVMUJTBDPNQMJDBUFEBOEJOUFSDPOOFDUFEXPSLMJGF existence where one component of life directly influences the other. For some people the price of professional success is high with distressing consequences such as divorce, estranged children, ulcers or coronary heart disease. Yet, others maintain effectiveness and lead a full and satisfactory life outside the office. What is the difference? Research indicates that the explanation lies in the quality of stress that spills over from one sphere of an individual’s life into the other and the extent to which the person has a sensitivity valve capable of shutting off the pressures of work while at home and vice versa. Furthermore, the phase of a person’s career also plays an important role because people tend to cope with the conflicts that are inherent in their lifestyles by concentrating predominately on one of them in each phase. In general, people in their twenties concentrate on their careers; by their late thirties spouse and family come to the fore, and in their forties and beyond they take one of two paths: either they have 104 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress an integrated professional and private life or they are patching up peace between those factions. 5.7.1 The nature of stress ‘Stress’ is a term derived from science and is used to describe an excessive detrimental overloading of an object. For example, a steel object will have a certain strain capacity and under stress, when the strain exceeds a certain level, a rupture or a fracture will occur. The same concept emerged in medical terminology at the beginning of the twentieth century referring to the overloading of the human body. Physicians related the stress concept to balance in the body. For example, when extreme coldness or great excitement activates the sympathetic nervous system and the endocrine system, an individual endures stress. The endocrinologist Selye26 adapted this theory to describe the human body’s response to emotions, such as fear and anger, as stress. Selye was interested in the common features relating to the response of the body to any demand placed upon it. These features constituted what Selye termed the General Adaptation Syndrome, or GAS27, the syndrome by which the body manifests stress. The GAS consists of the following three phases: r First phase: An alarm response. The non-specific response of the body to an environmental demand or stressor such as a germ, an overload on a group of muscles, a loud noise, extreme heat or cold, or conflict at work and involves the body’s endocrine system. The pituitary, a cherry-sized organ resting on the base of the brain, signals the alarm stage of the body by sending a chemical messenger in the form of a hormone ACTH to the adrenals. During this stage, the body is, in a sense, in retreat, experiencing a temporary, minor loss of efficiency until it can rally its forces of resistance. r Second phase: A resistance phase. The adrenals, in response to ACTH, signal the second stage of the GAS, the resistance stage, by secreting its own hormones, adrenaline and noradrenalin, collectively called ‘catecholamines’. These enter the bloodstream and trigger a succession of changes in the body chemistry, such as the level of fatty acids in the blood and the blood’s clotting chemistry and alter the digestive process. During the resistance phase, these processes eventually have the effect of enabling the organism to neutralise, isolate or minimise the damage to the integrity of the organism as a whole; the body seems to adapt to the demand. r Third phase: Exhaustion or recovery. Selye believed that any organ has, since birth, only a fixed, limited amount of adaptation energy. Every stress response of the body uses some of this precious asset. Whatever is used, the body cannot replace. Thus, the resistance phase of the GAS cannot continue indefinitely. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 105 PART II: Management in a changing environment When subjected to environmental stressors of sufficient strength for a sufficiently long time, the adaptive energies of the organism deplete and exhaustion or collapse follows. The exhaustion may take the form of depression, bed rest, or some other temporary lapse. This appears to allow the body to transfer some of its fixed store of adaptation energy from long-term reserves to a shortterm supply. The body, however, cannot replace this transfer, and if the process continues, eventually the entire stock of adaptation energy drops to nothing and life ends. STRESSOR Pituitary send ACTH to adrenals Life ends Adaptation energy depleted ALARM Body in retreat Environmental stressors present for prolonged period Adrenals secrete catecholamine EXHAUSTION RECOVERY – return to normal RESISTANCE Body chemistry neuralises/isolates/ minimises damage Figure 5.3: The nature of stress 5.7.2 Emotional stressors28 A series of Selye’s experiments has a more direct bearing on organisations. When he held a rat so it could only struggle without a chance to escape, Selye found that although he did not injure the rat, 106 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress it had the same physiological responses (the GAS). Selye concluded that strong emotions such as anger or frustration activated the stress response of the adrenals. An organisational example is a manager who lashes out at a subordinate. The words, tone of voice and facial expressions of the manager provide cues that evoke strong emotional responses in the subordinate such as anger, fear or anxiety, which triggers the body’s stress response. The body’s stress response enables it to fight or run, but neither response is appropriate in this context. The quickened pulse, increased sugar and fat levels in the blood, quickened clotting time of the blood and the constriction of the blood vessels do no good, but are actually a waste of the body’s fixed store of adaptation energy. 5.7.3 Eustress versus distress and performance A certain amount of stress is essential to well-being. Selye remarked that ‘complete freedom from stress only comes with death’29. In fact, most people perform well when they endure an optimum amount of stress. Selye referred to the optimal amount and type of stress as eustress. When people experience eustress, it results in positive outcomes for themselves and the organisation. The right amount of adrenalin may enhance problem-solving abilities and creativity because the right amount of adrenalin and other hormones appear in the blood and guide the individual towards maximum performance. However, even a positive form of stress, if experienced over a prolonged period, can have negative consequences. It often results in disease as it breaks down the body’s mental and physical systems and weakens and deters performance30. Figure 5.4 illustrates the relationship between stress and job performance. eustress the optimum amount and type of stress and is a positive force in our lives High Eustress Job performance Low High (Distress) Level of stress Figure 5.4: The relationship between stress and job performance Source: Schemerhorn, J.R., Hunt, J.G. & Osborne, R.N. 1985. Managing organizational behaviour. New York: John Willey & Sons, p 652. 5.7.4 Stress and health Excessive stress can lead to health problems such as heart attack, stroke, hypertension, ulcers, drug, alcohol or tobacco dependency, muscle aches and many other diseases. The symptoms of stress are multiple CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 107 PART II: Management in a changing environment and varied and can be categorised into three areas that chronic stress affects: the body, the emotions and thoughts, as Figure 5.5 illustrates. THOUGHTS … r lacM of concentration EMOTIONS … r daydreaming Feelings Relationships r suicidal tendencies r irritable r withdrawn r low selfesteem r depressed r Ƃght with friends r helplessness r uptight r Ƃght with colleagues r doubting future r tired r Ƃght with spouse r loser mentality r rundown r feeling alienated r chronic anger r insensitive r urge to cry r urge to run r feels alone BODY … r feels helpless Physical Behaviour r diseases of the heart r eat too much r diseases of the stomach r eat too little r diseases of the sMin r smoMing r sweaty palms r drinMing r di\\iness r drugs r nightmares r sleep more/less r hyperventilation r increase/decrease in sex r startled by small sounds r lethargic r anxiety r accident prone r impulsive behaviour r irritable Figure 5.5: Areas affected by chronic stress Source: Adapted from Scott, D. 1985. Managing stress: a workbook designed for a seminar held by Whitehead Morris (Pty) Ltd, October 1985. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 8 5.7.5 The sources of managerial stress Identify the sources of managerial stress. The cost of managerial stress is twofold. A highly stressed individual cannot work effectively. Managers especially cannot work productively under excessive stress. They have lots of interaction with people and their work often requires creative and intensive capacity, which diminishes when individuals experience excessive stress. Furthermore, highly stressed managers hinder organisational efforts to achieve goals. 108 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress The second cost of stress manifests in unhappy personal lives. Stress causes a reduction in the quality of interpersonal relationships with family and friends. Stressed people are tired, and uninterested in interpersonal relationships, hobbies and sporting activities. The sources of managerial stress are job overload, role ambiguity, role conflict, job fit, too much responsibility, bad relationships at work, career development and career disappointments, organisational structure, organisational culture, an inability to change and life changes. r +PCPWFSMPBEDBOUBLFUXPGPSNT"OJOEJWJEVBMDPVMEIBWFUPP much work to do, or a promotion could lead to job overload if the organisation promotes an individual to a level above his or her competence. Both types of job overload could produce symptoms of psychological and physical stress. r 3PMFDPOŴJDUFYJTUTXIFOBOJOEJWJEVBMJOBQBSUJDVMBSXPSLSPMF experiences conflicting job demands, or must do things he or she does not want to do, or does not consider them as part of his or her job description. We discuss job conflict in more detail in Chapter 18. r +PCųU31 is one of the major causes of negative emotional spill-over from managers’ professional lives into their private lives. A perfect fit between an individual and his or her job occurs when the person feels competent, enjoys his or her work and feels that his or her work and moral values coincide. If these feelings are absent, managers experience stress and tension. r .BOBHFSTSFMBUJPOTIJQTBUXPSLTUFNGSPNGPVSEJSFDUJPOTGSPN superiors, juniors, peers and people outside the organisation32. Managers must bring all four components into balance to enable them to deal with the stress inherent in managerial work. If these relationships are out of balance, managers will experience stress. r 5IFUXPNBKPSDMVTUFSTPGQPUFOUJBMTUSFTTPSTBSFBMBDLPG KPC security, emanating from fear of retrenchment or fear of being forced into early retirement; and status incongruity, which includes under or over-promotion or having to deal with the frustration at having reached one’s career ceiling. r 0SHBOJTBUJPOBMTUSVDUVSFBOEDVMUVSFDBOUISFBUFOBOJOEJWJEVBMT freedom, autonomy and identity and could cause stress. Little or no participation in decision-making, no sense of belonging, a lack of effective consultation and communication, excessive restrictions on behaviour and office politics are potential sources of stress33. r 1FPQMFXPSLJOHJODPOUFNQPSBSZPSHBOJTBUJPOTNVTUDPQFXJUI much more change in their lives than previous generations. Toffler34 points out that as the rate of change increases, people who cannot adjust to new jobs, a mobile lifestyle and impermanent working conditions will experience stress. Managers, who must often perform new and varied tasks, experience a higher proportion of risk on this dimension of stress than other occupational groups. r 5IFNBOZDIBOHFTQFPQMFIBWFUPEFBMXJUIJOUIFJSFWFSZEBZMJWFT ranging from the death of a family member to moving house or CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 109 PART II: Management in a changing environment going on holiday, result in stress, which could influence a manager’s effectiveness at work. 5.7.6 Managing stress The most resilient individuals are those who obtain a life balanced by participating in activities in each segment of the circle. Well-balanced people who engage in cultural, physical, spiritual, family, social and intellectual activities in addition to work, are more productive and less stressed than workaholics who live only to work35. Stress is unavoidable, but good habits should help to keep the damage to a minimum. These include breathing deeply, taking holidays, socialising, exercising regularly, eating plenty of fruit and vegetables, developing a regular sleeping routine and doing what one loves36. In addition37, improving one’s work habits, developing positive self-talk and demanding less than perfection from oneself, are techniques to help people cope with stress. 110 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Identify and discuss the forces of change. Internal forces for change: • • • • • • • • a change in the strategic direction of an organisation poor performance pressure from stakeholders to grow workforce problems the availability of new technology changes in the top management of organisations pressure to change a lack of innovation. External forces for change: • changes in market environment • new technology • economic forces • social forces • ecological and physical forces • political forces • globalisation. 2. Discuss the dimensions of change. • Planned change is the response of organisations to anticipated changes in their environments. • Reactive change takes place when organisations react to changes in the environment to minimise the negative effects of the change, limit disruption, maintain the status quo or improve on the current situation. • Revolutionary change involves major, radical, strategic, transformational and rapid change. • Incremental change is a process whereby individuals and other parts of the organisation deal incrementally with one problem at a time in response to pressures in the internal and external environments. • Punctuated equilibrium change implies that organisations evolve through relatively long periods of stability (equilibrium periods) maintaining their basic activity patterns, interrupted by relatively short bursts of fundamental change. • Continuous change entails a pattern of uninterrupted adjustments in work processes and social practices, driven by organisational instability and cumulative reactions to daily eventualities. 3. Explain why organisations and individuals resist change. Organisational barriers to change: • organisational inertia • unforeseen consequences of implementing change initiatives. Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:44 PM via UNISA 111 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part II: Management in a changing environment Individual barriers to change: • Perceived threat to individual or group interests occur because people have the perception that they may have to give up something and therefore they resist change. • Misunderstanding and lack of trust become barriers to change when management fails to convey the implications, benefits and disadvantages of change initiatives to employees and if employees do not trust the management of the organisations where they work. • Low tolerance for change pertains to the human fear of the unknown, which may cause resistance to change. • Ethical convictions may be a cause of resistance to change when a clash exists between an individual’s ethical convictions and the nature of the change. 4. Provide advice to managers on how to overcome resistance to change. • • • • • • education and communication participation and involvement facilitation and support negotiation and agreement manipulation and co-optation explicit and implicit coercion. 5. Discuss the approaches to managing change. Lewin’s change model: • Step 1: Unfreezing • Step 2: Change • Step 3: Refreeze. Kotter’s Eight Step Process of successful change: • Step 1: Create a sense of urgency • Step 2: Form a guiding team • Step 3: Create a change vision and strategy • Step 4: Communicate the vision • Step 5: Empower others to act • Step 6: Produce short-term wins • Step 7: Consolidate improvements and produce more change • Step 8: Create a new culture. 6. Identify the areas of change. • • • • 112 strategic change changes in organisation structure and design change in technology changing people. Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:44 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress 7. Discuss the nature of stress. • First phase: An alarm response • Second phase: A resistance phase • Third phase: Exhaustion or recovery. 8. Identify the sources of managerial stress. • • • • • • • • job overload role conflict job fit relationships at work job security and status incongruity organisational structure and culture coping with change life changes. KEY TERMS alarm phase change change in technology change process changes in organisation structure and design changing people continuous change coping with change distress education and communication emotional stressors ethical convictions eustress exhaustion phase explicit and implicit coercion external forces for change facilitation and support general adaptation syndrome (gas) incremental change internal forces for change job fit job overload job security life changes low tolerance for change manipulation and co-optation misunderstanding and lack of trust negotiation and agreement organisational culture organisational structure pace of change participation and involvement perceived threat to individual or group interests planned change punctuated equilibrium change reactive change recovery phase refreezing relationships at work resistance phase revolutionary change role conflict scope of change source of change strategic change unfreezing Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:44 PM via UNISA 113 PART II: Management in a changing environment REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Consider the opening case study on Pick n Pay and describe the internal and external variables that forced the retailer to implement a change programme. 2. Discuss the circumstances under which each of the methods that managers could use to overcome resistance to their change initiatives would be appropriate to use and mention why each of the methods may fail. 3. Discuss the situational factors that influence the strategic choices of managers when planning a change effort. 4. Discuss Lewin’s change model. 5. Explain why organisations fail to implement new strategies effectively because of the specific errors they make when preparing for and implementing change interventions. 6. Consider the sources of managerial stress and discuss those that apply to you and your work environment. END NOTES 1 (i) Adapted from Thomas, S. 2011. The big rejig. Financial Mail, 26 August, pp 32–36. (ii) Thomas, S. 2013. Pick n Pay: Burst packet. Financial Mail, 3 May, pp 48–4. 2 Gareth Ackerman as quoted in Financial Mail, 26 August 2013, pp 32–33. 3 Nick Badminton as quoted in Financial Mail, 26 August 2013, p 32. 4 Raymond Ackerman as quoted in Financial Mail, 26 August 2013, p 35. 5 Palmer, I., Dunford, R. & Akin, G. 2009. Managing organizational change. 2nd edition. Singapore: McGraw-Hill, pp 65–68. 6 Ibid., p 67. 7 Smith, D. 2010. Exploring innovation. 2nd edition. Berkshire: McGraw-Hill, p 6. 8 Cummings T.G. & Worley, C.G. 2001. Essentials of organization development & change. Ohio, Cincinnati: SouthWestern College Publication, p 17. 9 Burnes, B. 2009, Managing change. 5th edition. Edinburgh: Pearson Education Limited, p 351. 10 Ibid. 11 Ancona, op. cit., pp. M8–6 to M8–7. 12 Kotter, J.P. & Schlesinger, L.A. 1979. Choosing strategies for change. Harvard Business Review, March–April, pp 106–114. 13 Ibid., p 109. 14 Ibid., p 111. 15 Ibid., p 110. 16 Ibid., pp 112–113. 17 Lewin, K. 1947. Frontiers in group dynamics: concept, method, and reality in social science; social equilibria and social change. Human Relations, (1)5: 5–41. 18 Kotter, J. 1996. Leading change. Boston: Harvard Business School Press. 19 Kotter, J. & Rathgeber, H. 2006. Our iceberg is melting, changing and succeeding under any conditions. Oxford: Macmillan Press, pp 130–131. 20 Kotter op. cit., 1996, p 16. 21 (i) Kotter, J.P. 1995. Leading change: why transformation efforts fail. Harvard Business Review, March–April, p 61. (ii) Kotter and Rathgeber, 2006, pp 130–131. 22 Kotter and Rathgeber, op. cit. 23 Griffen, R.W. 2011. Management principles and practices. 10th edition. China: South Westerm Cengage Learning, pp 551–556. 114 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 5 Managing organisational change and individual stress 6PLW3-&URQMH*G-%UHYLV7 9UED0-Management Principles: a contemporary edition for Africa. WKHGLWLRQ&DSH7RZQ-XWD3XEOLVKHUVS %UHYLV7 9UED0-Management Principles: a contemporary edition for SAPS.&DSH7RZQ-XWD3XEOLVKHUV 6HO\H+The stress of life in New York0F*UDZ+LOO,Q6FRWW'0DQDJLQJVWUHVVDZRUNERRNGHVLJQHG IRUDVHPLQDUKHOGE\:KLWHKHDG0RUULV 3W\ /WG2FWREHU %DVHGRQDGLVFXVVLRQRI*$6,Q2UJDQ': +DPQHU&:Organisational behavior: an applied psychological approach.7H[DV3ODQR%XVLQHVV3XEOLFDWLRQV,QF ,ELGS 6HO\H+Stress without distress. 3KLODGHOSKLD/LSSHQFRWWS 6FKHPHUKRUQ-5+XQW-* 2VERUQH51Managing organizational behaviour.1HZ<RUN-RKQ:LOH\ 6RQV S %DUWRORPÒ) (YDQV3$0XVWVXFFHVVFRVWVRPXFK"Harvard Business Review0DUFK$SULOSSŋ 0RUULV-0DQDJHULDOVWUHVVDQGWKHŁFURVVRIUHODWLRQVKLSVłManagerial stress. (GLWHGE\&RZOHU' /HJJH. &DPEULJH8QLYHUVLW\3ULQWLQJ+RXVH 0DUVKDOO- &RRSHU*/Executives under pressure./RQGRQ0DFPLOODQ3UHVV 7RIĠHU$Future Shock. 1HZ<RUN5DQGRP+RXVH :KHWWHQ'$ &DPHURQ.6Developing Management SkillsWKHGLWLRQ8SSHU6DGGOH5LYHU3UHQWLFH+DOO S Time)HEUXDU\ 'X%ULQ$Management essentialsWKHGLWLRQ6RXWK:HVWHUQ&HQJDJH/HDUQLQJS CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 115 Chapter 6 Corporate culture OPENING CASE Mari Vrba OPENING CASE Boeing1 0WFSWJFX Boeing has been the leading manufacturer of commercial jetliners for more than 40 years. In 1997, Boeing merged with McDonnell Douglas Corp. The distinct cultures of the two companies never integrated and the differences caused rivalries and infighting. In 2006, Boeing appointed a new CEO Mr WI McNerney. Boeing was at an all-time low, wracked by a series of serious ethical scandals, including the jailing of Boeing’s former Chief Financial Officer and the judicial finding that Boeing had abused attorneyclient privilege. Scandals involving various forms of misconduct in various locations and in nearly every division at Boeing, led McNerney to conclude that the renowned company had a ‘poisonous culture’2. Having spent his first six months as CEO in a sense-making exercise of the company, McNerney came to believe that the ‘internal rivalry caused by the merger was at the root of the company’s ethical scandals and it prevented managers from cutting costs and sharing good ideas’3. His remedies to change the Boeing culture included exerting effective central leadership over Boeing’s three divisions, changing the way executives were paid and encouraging managers to use the huge manufacturer’s cost-cutting competitive advantage to the full. More importantly, he encouraged managers to ‘talk more openly about Boeing’s severe ethical lapses’4. McNerney believed that the company could do better. He believed that the ethical scandals and bitter infighting had adversely influenced the company’s performance. ‘If we can get the values lined up with performance, then this is an absolutely unbeatable company’5, said McNerney. However, for all of Boeing’s internal problems, McNerney still inherited a company that was flourishing because the aerospace industry started to recover during 2005. Its first new aircraft in ten years highlighted Boeing’s success: the lightweight 787 Dreamliner, which carries 220 passengers and burns 20 per cent less fuel than similar-sized airplanes. 5IF%SFBNMJOFS Touted as the aircraft of the future – a revolutionary plane that would use new technology to bring aircraft design into the twenty-first century – the Dreamliner is made of ‘carbon-fibre reinforced plastic composite and Boeing replaced pneumatic and hydraulic systems with electric systems’. Boeing delivered the first Dreamliner planes to Nippon Airways in 2011. However, the aircrafts were years late and billions of dollars over budget. Although Boeing could have expected teething problems with the new technology, a series of serious problems plagued the Dreamliner aircrafts. Towards the beginning of 2013, Boeing faced a huge challenge as regulators around the world grounded all fifty Dreamliner aeroplanes after battery fires occurred in two of them. Ray LaHood, the U.S. Transportation Secretary, declared that the CHAPTER 6 Corporate culture Dreamliner would not fly again in the United States of America until regulators are sure of its safety6. 8IBUXFOUXSPOH The main reason cited for the serious problems the Dreamliner aircraft encountered, was Boeing’s decision to increase the percentage of parts it sourced from outside contractors on a massive scale, which in turn emanated from the clashing sub-culture of engineers and finance people at Boeing. To understand why Boeing embarked on a strategy of outsourcing the manufacturing of crucial aircraft parts, one needs to revisit the merger between Boeing and McDonnell Douglas. Technically, Boeing bought McDonnell Douglas but, as a noted industry analyst remarked to the New Yorker, ‘McDonnell Douglas in effect acquired Boeing with Boeing’s money’7. McDonnell Douglas executives became key players in the merged company and the McDonnell Douglas culture, averse to risk and passionate for cost cutting, weakened Boeing’s historical commitment to making big investments in new products. The analyst added that after the merger, there was an internal rivalry between the engineers and the finance and sales people. The finance and sales people increasingly marginalised the engineers8. Under these conditions, getting the company to commit to a major project like the Dreamliner was difficult. According to the New Yorker, the Dreamliner’s supporters at Boeing came up with a development strategy that was supposed to be cheaper and quicker than the traditional approach – outsourcing. Boeing did not outsource just the manufacturing of parts but also the engineering, and the manufacture of entire sections of the plane. Boeing built less than forty per cent of the plane9. The finance people loved the outsourcing strategy since it meant that Boeing had to put up less money. However, the strategy presented a problem for the engineers; they did not like it because it meant that they lost control of the manufacturing process, as they had to work with approximately fifty ‘strategic partners’10. Boeing had far less control than it would have if more of the operation had been in-house. The outsourcing parts led to three years of delays as parts did not fit together, shims used to bridge small parts were not attached properly and Boeing had to rework the tails of many of the planes extensively. In an attempt to remedy the situation, Boeing took over some of their suppliers, in order to resume control over the supply of the parts for the aircraft11. The case study highlights the strong influence of organisational culture in the success or failure of strategies such as a merger and the development of a major new product. The two rival sub-culture at Boeing, after the merger with McDonnell Douglas Corporation, may have contributed to the implementation of a strategy that led to the temporary grounding of fifty Boeing aircraft. LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of the chapter is to examine organisational culture.The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Describe the concept of culture. . DeƂne organisational culture. 3. Explain the levels of culture. 4. Differentiate between the various types of cultures in organisations. 5. Discuss the elements of culture. 6. Compare the different types of culture. 7. Explain how organisations change their culture. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 117 PART II: Management in a changing environment LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 6.1 THE CONCEPT OF CULTURE Describe the concept of culture. The common understanding of the word ‘culture’ has connotations with proper behaviour and good education. Indeed, the only definition of culture cited in an early version of the (South African) Oxford Pocket Dictionary is that it is ‘a refined understanding of the arts and other human intellectual achievement’12. The implication of this definition is that, for example, a person who can distinguish between the paintings of two sixteenth century artists and who is able to comment on their artistic styles, ‘has culture’! However, from a social sciences perspective, the word ‘culture’ has a far broader meaning. Social scientists see culture as a fundamental aspect of life. According to them, all people ‘have culture’ and the only requirement for ‘being cultured’ is to be human13. In Webster’s Third New International Dictionary one of the definitions of culture is: ‘the total pattern of human behaviour and its products embodied in thought, speech, action and artefacts and dependent on man’s capacity for learning and transmitting knowledge to succeeding generations through the use of tools, language and systems of abstract thought’14. Many studies, dating back from as early as the 1930s until today, focused on the distinctive cultures of organisations, which are considered to be communities with their own cultures. According to Morgan: ‘Organizations are mini-societies that have their own distinctive culture and sub-culture. … [S]uch patterns of belief or shared meaning, fragmented or integrated, and supported by various operating norms and rituals can exert a decisive influence on the overall ability of the organization to deal with the challenges that it faces’15. History plays a crucial part in the culture of societies, and as ‘minisocieties’, history shapes the cultures of organisations. To a large extent, the current culture of an organisation is the heritage of its history. An analysis of key historical events that shaped the direction, successes or failures of an organisation, the environmental challenges that affected the organisation and the ways in which the organisation responded to threats and opportunities provide clues of how the current culture of the organisation developed16. How people speak about the history of an organisation also relates to the organisational culture. People in an organisation are ‘meaning makers, identity carriers, moral actors, users of symbols and storytellers’17 and their narratives form part of the shared assumptions of organisational members, based on the organisation’s own history. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 6.2 ORGANISATIONAL CULTURE DeƂne organisational culture. The roots of the conceptual formulation of organisational culture stem from diverse fields, such as anthropology, sociology and the work of many management scientists, of which the work of Edgar H Schein is prominent18. Many of the subsequent definitions of organisational culture derive from his definition of the concept: 118 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 6 Corporate culture ‘Organizational culture is the pattern of basic assumptions, that a group has invented, discovered or developed in learning to cope with its problems of external adaptation and internal integration, and that have worked well enough to be considered to be valid, and, therefore, to be taught to new members as the correct way to perceive, think, and feel in relation to those problems’19. According to Schein, external adaptation tasks20 include developing consensus on: r UIFNJTTJPO GVODUJPOTBOEUBTLTPGUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOXJUIJOUIF context of its environment r UIFHPBMTPGUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO r UIFSFTPVSDFTUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOVTFTUPBDDPNQMJTIJUTHPBMT r UIFDSJUFSJBUIBUJTVTFEUPNFBTVSFSFTVMUT r UIFDPSSFDUJWFBDUJPOT TUSBUFHJFT VTFEJGHPBMTBSFOPUNFU external adaptation tasks Schein further explained the meaning of internal integration tasks21 as developing consensus on: r UIFDPNNPOMBOHVBHFBOEDPODFQUVBMTZTUFN JODMVEJOHDPODFQUT of time and space r UIFHSPVQCPVOEBSJFTBOEDSJUFSJBGPSJODMVTJPO r UIFDSJUFSJBGPSBMMPDBUJOHTUBUVT QPXFSBOEBVUIPSJUZ r UIFDSJUFSJBGPSJOUJNBDZ GSJFOETIJQBOEMPWF r DSJUFSJBGPSBMMPDBUJOHSFXBSETBOEQVOJTINFOUT r UIFDPODFQUTGPSNBOBHJOHUIFAVONBOBHFBCMF OBNFMZJEFPMPHZ and religion. internal integration tasks developing consensus on the mission, functions and tasks, the goals and resources of the organisation, the criteria for measuring results and the corrective actions (strategies) used if goals are not met include the language and conceptual system, group boundaries and criteria for inclusion, allocating status, power and authority, intimacy, friendship and love, allocating rewards and punishments and the concepts for managing ideology and religion Drawing from the work of Schein and other researchers, various theorists attempted to offer more simplified definitions of the concept of organisational culture. The definition of Achua and Lussier is typical of the numerous definitions of corporate culture found in management textbooks: according to them, culture is ‘the aggregate of beliefs, norms, attitudes, assumptions and ways of doing things that members of an organisation share and teach to new members’22. Burnes23 summarises the central ideas of a variety of definitions by stating that organisational culture: r EFųOFTIPXPSHBOJTBUJPOBMNFNCFSTTIPVMECFIBWFJOBHJWFO context r JTJODMVTJWFPGBMMPSHBOJTBUJPOBMNFNCFST r TFUTUIFZBSETUJDLGPSFYQFDUFEOPSNTPGCFIBWJPVSBHBJOTUXIJDI individual organisational members judge their own actions and also by which others judge their actions r MFHJUJNJTFTDFSUBJOGPSNTPG BDUJPOBOEQSPIJCJUTPUIFSGPSNTPG action. Consider the opening case in terms of the definitions of organisational culture. Boeing’s culture was a significant factor in the scandals that plagued the company in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The new CEO, CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 119 PART II: Management in a changing environment Mr WI McNerney, described the culture of the company as ‘poisonous’ and blamed the clashing cultures of the two merged companies, McDonnell Douglas Corporation and Boeing, as the main contributing factor to the development of the culture of ‘rivalry and infighting’ that developed. It seems as if this culture affected the functioning of the entire organisation and resulted in Boeing being at an all-time low point by the time McNerney took the helm at the company. According to a KPMG study of 700 deals over a two-year period, ‘83 per cent of all mergers and acquisitions failed to produce any benefit for the shareholders and over half actually destroyed value’24. Interviews of over 100 senior executives involved in these 700 deals revealed that the overwhelming cause for failure involved people and cultural differences25. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 6.3 THE LEVELS OF CULTURE Explain the levels of culture. The literature on organisational culture often illustrates Schein’s view of organisational culture by using the metaphor of the organisation as an iceberg floating in the ocean to illustrate the levels of culture. According to Schein, when one observes an organisation’s culture, it has three distinct levels26. The first level (the tip of the iceberg) comprises artefacts – what one feels and observes when entering an organisation. Artefacts are visible, but not always understandable. Artefacts include visible aspects of the organisation, from the dress code, the manner in which people communicate with one another and the physical layout of the premises to the emotional intensity, feel and smell of the place. It also includes the permanent archives of company records, statements of philosophy and annual reports27. An organisation will often publish their values in their annual statement or on their websites28. Values are the goals, ideals, norms, standards, moral principles and other premises which the organisation chooses to promote. Boeing, for example, currently uses words such as integrity, quality, people working together and good corporate citizenship on their website to describe their values29. Norms are the unwritten rules of behaviour in an organisation. Examples of norms include ‘do not argue with your manager’, or ‘on Friday afternoons we do not work too hard’. Most employees are able to identify the norms of their work groups when they have time to consider it. In our metaphor, the part of the iceberg just below the water surface represents this level. The core of the culture at an organisation (represented by the bulk of the iceberg far below the surface of the water) can only be distinguised by observing behaviour carefully, noting differences, contradictions or occurrences that remain unexplained and by trying to prompt from organisational insiders their underlying assumptions. These assumptions often have historical roots, but over time, they become taken-for-granted assumptions. An example of this phenomenon is ‘strategic drift’30, which is the tendency of organisations to develop strategies incrementally based on historical and cultural influences, but failing to keep pace with changes in the environment. They keep to the artefacts visible aspects of the organisation values the goals, ideals, norms, standards, moral principles and other premises which the organisation chooses to promote taken-for-granted assumptions form the core of an organisation’s culture and often have historical roots 120 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 6 Corporate culture familiar strategies, which have worked in the past (taken-for-granted assumptions) and only make incremental changes to the same strategies to meet environmental challenges. By focusing on erstwhile unique capabilities, which may not fit new circumstances, an organisation may become inflexible and unable to change to face current challenges. To illustrate the concepts of artefacts, values and assumptions and the way in which they manifest in a specific culture at any given organisation, Schein31 cited two examples of organisations that both claim to be ‘one big family’, but with very different cultures. Table 6.1 illustrates how the culture differs at two organisations in the same sector. Table 6.1: The organisational culture at two organisations Artefacts Values and beliefs AssuOptions ORGANISATION A A ten-year old rapidly growing South African private business school ORGANISATION B A Ƃfty-year old South African university r open ofƂce landscape r high degree of inforOality r high degree of positive conƃict resulting froO different perspectives r total lacM of status syObols r sense of high energy r strong identiƂcation with the organisation – lecturers are involved and expressing exciteOent about the developOent of an innovative curriculuO r r r r individual ofƂces closed doors forOal dress code high degree of forOality Oany status syObols people are addressed by their titles r politeness in Oeetings adhering strictly to the agenda and using forOal language r lecturers iOpleOent decisions Oade by OanageOent r dynaOic cutting-edge educational offerings r innovation and creativity r traditional approach to tuition and learning r worMing according to the nsysteOo that stood the test of tiOe r individual lecturers are the source of innovation r individual lecturers Oust challenge one another in order to Ƃnd the best solution r collaborative research is encouraged r staff are OeObers of a nbig faOilyo – loud bicMering positive creative r highly coOpetitive – Oust be able to coOpete against other private business schools r good ideas are derived froO professors – Lunior staff are expected to follow liMe ngoodo soldiers r individual research is encouraged r staff are OeObers of nfaOilyo – authoritarian and paternalistic systeO of eliciting loyalty and coOpliance in exchange for econoOic security r worM within a bureaucratic systeO Source: Adapted from Schein, E.H. 1990. Organizational culture. American Psychologist, 45(2): 113–114. The two examples clearly differentiate between the two ‘big family’ organisations in terms of their artefacts and values, but especially between the entrenched, taken-for-granted assumptions that determine their unique cultures. These examples emphasise the taken-for-granted assumptions as the core of the culture of an organisation and comprise aspects of CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 121 PART II: Management in a changing environment organisational life that people find difficult to identify and explain, but they represent the ‘collective experience of organisational members in dealing with the problems of external adaptation and internal integration’32. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 Differentiate between the various types of cultures in organisations. 6.4 THE DIFFERENT CULTURES EVIDENT IN A BUSINESS ORGANISATION Against the background of the levels of culture in organisations, it is necessary to investigate the variables that influence the development of organisational culture at a given organisation. Organisations do not have a single, uniform organisational culture because various internal and external variables influence the development of organisational culture, such as national and regional cultures, industry cultures and various subcultures within organisations. National and regional cultures In the globalised world of today, organisations operate across national borders in various different countries. National and regional national and regional cultures have an influence on the culture of organisations at their cultures plants, factories, offices or sites as they operate in different countries. differ in terms of attitudes National and regional cultures differ in terms of attitudes towards work, towards work, authority and authority and equality. Variables that influence the development of a equality and are influenced by national culture include history, religion and even climate33. history, religion and even climate Table 6.2: Hofstede’s dimensions of national culture National culture dimension Explanation of the dimension Power distance (PDI) r the degree to which the less powerful OeObers of a society accept and expect that power is distributed unequally IndividualisO (I) versus %ollectivisO (IDV) Individualism (‘Me’): r a preference for a non-cohesive social fraOeworM in which individuals are expected to taMe care of theOselves and their iOOediate faOilies only Collectivism (‘We’): r a preference for a cohesive fraOeworM in society in which individuals have the expectation that relatives or OeObers of a particular in-group will taMe care of theO in exchange for absolute loyalty Masculinity versus (eOininity (MAS) Masculinity r a preference in society for achieveOent heroisO assertiveness and Oaterial reward for success r the society is Oore coOpetitive Femininity r a preference for cooperation Oodesty caring for the weaM and quality of life r the society is Oore consensus-oriented Continued on the next page 122 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 6 Corporate culture National culture dimension Explanation of the dimension Uncertainty Avoidance (UAI) Uncertainty avoidance r the degree to which the OeObers of a society feel uncoOfortable with uncertainty and aObiguity r strong UAI societies Oaintain rigid codes of belief and behaviour and are intolerant of unorthodox behaviour and ideas r weaM UAI societies Oaintain a Oore relaxed attitude in which practice counts Oore than principles .ong-terO versus Short-terO orientation (LTO) (this diOension deals with societyos search for virtue) Short-term orientation societies r have a strong concern with establishing the absolute ntrutho r are norOative in their thinMing r exhibit great respect for traditions r have a relatively sOall propensity to save for the future r a focus on achieving quicM results Long-term orientation societies r believe that ntrutho depends on the situation context and tiOe r are able to adapt traditions when conditions change r have a strong propensity to save and invest r thriftiness and perseverance in achieving results Indulgence versus Restraint (IVR) Indulgence r a society that allows relatively free gratiƂcation of basic and natural huOan drives related to enjoying life and having fun Restraint r a society that suppresses gratiƂcation of needs and regulates it by Oeans of strict social norOs Adapted from: The Hofstede Centre. [Online] Available from: http://geert-hofstede.com/ organisational-culture-dimensions.html. Accessed on 3 March 2013. Other factors that influence national culture are the standards, values and expectations of workers. The research of Geert Hofstede made a significant contribution to our understanding of the differences between national cultures. He identified six dimensions of national culture, listed in Table 6.2, according to which the national culture in one country may differ from the national culture in another country34. The research of Hofstede suggests that cultural differences between nations seem to appear on the deepest level, on the level of the values of a society, which is hard to change. The culture of the country and region where an organisation operates seem to influence its organisational culture. Another variable that influences an organisation’s culture is the industry in which it operates. The industry culture Shared assumptions based on the technological and social histories of its industry influence the organisational culture of a given organisation. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 123 PART II: Management in a changing environment An organisational field35 is a community of organisations that interact frequently with one another, such as an industry or a sector. Organisations operating in the same organisational field are ‘entrenched in a social system of expectations, taken-for-granted ways of doing things, status and legitimacy, which exert a powerful influence on organisations and actors in organisations. The environment is a source of beliefs and values, rules of the game, interpretations and mindsets, fads and fashions shared across organisations that occupy the same social space’36. Organisations working in the private sector, for example, tend to have different cultures than organisations operating in the public sector. The organisational culture of companies such as Boeing, operating in the aviation industry, will differ in many ways from that of organisations in the agricultural industry; one reason for this is that their organisational fields are different. Organisational sub-cultures Within organisations, there is no uniform, single culture. According to Morgan37, many of the major cultural differences and similarities in organisations are occupational rather than national. The likenesses and differences associated with being a factory worker, a government official, a banker, a store assistant, an accountant or an engineer are as significant as those associated with national identity. Occupational groups within organisations may develop strong sub-cultures based on the work they do. At universities, for example, different sub-cultures often exist amongst the administrative and academic groups, based on differences stemming from their occupations. Sub-cultures may also form when groups are geographically isolated from the rest of the organisation. One can imagine that the sub-culture of an oil company at the oilrigs at sea is different from the culture at the headquarters of the same company in a major city. Professional or functional sub-cultures form in organisations and can create problems for the effective functioning of an organisation. In the opening case study, we saw how the clashing cultures between the engineers and the sales and finance people at Boeing might have contributed to the temporary grounding of the Dreamliner aircraft, presumably causing great financial losses to the company. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 6.5 THE ELEMENTS OF CULTURE Discuss the elements of culture. Employees learn culture in many ways. symbol represents an idea, a process, or a physical entity 124 Symbols A symbol represents an idea, a process or a physical entity. The purpose of a symbol is to communicate meaning. For example, wearing a pink ribbon is a symbolic action that communicates support and an awareness of breast cancer. A company logo can convey a specific message about the company, such as quality products (for example the well-known Mercedes Benz logo), good service (the Avis logo and red colour), status (the Rolls Royce emblem) or value for money (Pick n Pay logo and blue and white colours). CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 6 Corporate culture The interpretation of symbols is at the core of organisational culture. Organisations use material symbols (for example layout of offices, furniture or buildings) and ideological symbols (values and norms) to convey meaning. Symbols convey certain messages such as status (who is important), or what kind of behaviour is acceptable. Organisational members create symbols for specific purposes, and thus people and groups inside and outside the organisation must understand the intents of the originator or originators of symbols. Stories Stories about the organisation often reflect the core beliefs and assumptions held by organisational members. How stories about an organisation are told to newcomers relates to the specific strengths, weaknesses, successes, and failures of the organisation and it often reflects the prevailing culture. Furthermore, the way in which narrators describe ‘idols’ and ‘rogues’ and the norms and values attributed to them serve to convey elements of the organisational culture, such as risk taking or risk aversion. Another topic of stories often relate to legendary founders who had a significant impact on the organisation and its culture. Such stories serve to reinforce the culture at an organisation (see the example in the box on the next page). Peters and Waterman38, authors of the best-selling management book In search of excellence, recalled that when they did their research on excellent companies, the dominant use of the story, slogan and legend were evident as people tried to explain the features of their organisations. The authors found that the excellent companies were rich tapestries of anecdote, myth and fairy tale. (Fairy tales because most people who told the stories did not know, have not met or seen the ‘legends’ they were describing with such conviction.) Language Language is a strong conveyor of organisational culture and includes the unique terms for offices, people, suppliers, rituals and so on. Only members of the organisation understand these terms and newcomers are often overwhelmed when confronted by organisation-specific abbreviations and terminology. However, once they are familiar with the organisational language, language becomes a binding factor and unites members of a specific culture or sub-culture39. Metaphors are often used to describe an organisational culture concisely, for example, scandals involving various forms of misconduct in various locations and in nearly every division at Boeing prompted the new CEO McNerney to conclude that the renowned company had a ‘poisonous’40 culture. Rituals Organisational members assimilate the culture of the organisation by observing which rituals play key roles in the organisation and what behaviour the rituals encourage or discourage. A ritual is a set of actions, performed mainly for their symbolic value. In organisations, rituals often underpin the central values of the organisation. An example stories often reflect the core beliefs and assumptions held by organisational members language a strong conveyor of organisational culture because organisational members create unique terms for offices, people, suppliers, rituals and so on rituals sets of actions, performed mainly for their symbolic value CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 125 PART II: Management in a changing environment of a ritual is the graduation ceremony at a university where one of the most senior members at the university confers degrees to students who have successfully completed their degrees. The ceremony serves to reinforce the academic values of the university and many of the actions that take place during the ceremony have historical roots and symbolic meaning, such as the academic procession, the specific music and the ‘tapping on the head’ action delivered to each graduate by the presiding figurehead representing the university. The Brown Earth Company: A mini case study to illustrate the elements of organisational culture An adventurer named Tiny Brown, whose exploits in Africa were legendary, established the Brown Earth Company in 1950. Older employees at Brown Earth like to tell stories to new employees about Tiny’s many African adventures. People at Brown Earth Company still identify with Tiny’s colourful personality, his respect for nature and his active involvement in nature conservation [stories reinforce culture]. Every year on arbour day, all the employees participate enthusiastically in a tree-planting event [ritual]. Many of the company’s products are ‘green’ and sustainable and the company’s strong identification with indigenous fauna and flora is evident in, for example, the names of the conference room (the Acacia Room) and the cafeteria (The Baobab) [language]. The interaction between senior managers and employees is informal but respectful [the way we do things]. The company is planning to launch an innovative new product that will require substantial changes in the production and marketing departments of Brown Earth Company. In line with the changes the company wants to implement, its name will change to Green Planet Company. The new corporate colour will be green and a new logo, depicting a green ‘tree of life’ will appear on all packaging and company stationery [symbols]. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 6.6 TYPES OF CULTURE Compare the different types of culture. Various experts on organisational culture classify the types of culture found in organisations differently. The best-known, and perhaps the most enduring, category of organisational culture is offered by Charles Handy41 who typifies culture in terms of the norms, values and beliefs that reflect in different structures and systems of an organisation. Deal and Kennedy42 link culture to the risk and feedback characteristics of the specific market in which the organisation functions. Quinn and McGrath43 use various variables, such as leadership style, authority, and the goal and risk orientation of employees to identify four types of culture. Jones, Dunphy, Fishman, Larne and Canter44 categorised culture based on the influence of culture on the behaviour of individuals and groups in the organisation. Table 6.3 on the next page summarises these organisational culture typologies. It highlights the ideas of a few experts on categorising organisational culture, many others are not included in this discussion. The categories are all very different from one another, highlighting the difficulty of describing and categorising organisational culture. In addition, in a globalised world, the categories summarised in the table are Western culture-bound45 because they pertain mainly to organisations in the developed Western world and do not necessarily provide a framework to describe the cultures in, for example, Japanese, Chinese, Middle-Eastern or African organisations. 126 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 6 Corporate culture Table 6.3: Organisational culture typologies Charles Handy (1993) Sets of values and norms and beliefs – reƃected in different structures and systems Deal and Kennedy (2000) revised by Trompenaars and Prud’homme (2004) Links to external environment (market) of the organisation r The tough guy macho r The power culture a culture high risk single person or group rapid feedback (police dominates department sports and r The role culture work entertainment) by logic and rationality r The work hardplay hard r The task culture project culture low risk quick work associated with feedback on actions matrix-type structures (sales organisations) r The person culture r $et-your-company servicing the needs culture risks are high of the participating and feedback on actions members such as and decisions is slow advocateso chambers (companies investing doctorso medical centres heavily in projects that take a long time) r The process culture low risk and slow feedback on actions and decisions (public and government organisations) Quinn and McGrath (1985) Jones et al (2006) IdentiƂed four types of culture Attempts to group types of culture by how they impact on the behaviour of individuals and groups in an organisation r The Market rational decision-making and goal-centred employees r The Adhocracy risk-orientated and charismatic leaders and value-driven organisations r The %lan participation consensus and concern for others r The *ierarchy hierarchical rule-based authority that values stability and risk avoidance r %onstructive cultures members are encouraged to interact with others and approach tasks in ways that will help them meet their higher-order satisfaction needs r PassiveDefensive cultures members believe that they must interact with others in ways that will not threaten their own security r AggressiveDefensive cultures members are expected to approach tasks in vigorous ways in order to protect their own status and security Source: Adapted from Burnes, B. 2009, Managing change. 5th edition. Edinburgh: Pearson Education Limited, p 114 and Senior B. & Swailes, S. 2010, Organizational change. 4th edition. Edinburgh: Pearson Education Limited, pp 143–146. Peters and Waterman (In search of excellence) on the importance of culture ‘Without exception, the dominance and coherence strong cultures, too, but dysfunctional ones. They are of culture proved [in the companies the authors usually focused on internal politics, rather than on researched] to be an essential quality of excellent the customer, or they focus on ‘the numbers’ rather companies. Moreover, the stronger the culture and than on the product and the people who make and the more it was directed towards the marketplace, sell it. The top companies, on the other hand, always the less need was there for policy manuals, seem to recognize what the companies that only set organization charts, or detailed procedures and rules. financial targets don’t know or don’t deem important. In these companies, people way down the line know The excellent companies seem to understand that what they are supposed to do in most situations every man seeks meaning (not just the top fifty who because the handful of guiding values is crystal clear. are ‘in the bonus pool)’46. … [P]oorer-performing companies often have CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 127 PART II: Management in a changing environment LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7 6.7 CHANGING ORGANISATIONAL CULTURE Explain how organisations change their culture. Changing the culture of an organisation is difficult because culture develops over a long time. Thus, cultural change interventions often focus on the surface elements of culture such as norms and artefacts, because they are easier to change than values and basic assumptions. However, as we have seen in the discussion on the levels of culture, the core of an organisation’s culture is at the level of entrenched assumptions. The definition of culture by Schein (see Section 6.2) informs us that culture enables organisational members to ‘cope with problems of external adaptation and internal integration’47. Employees may resist attempts to change the culture as their basic assumptions provide them with defence mechanisms that have worked in the past to deal with difficult internal and external situations. However, it may become crucial for an organisation to change its culture in order to remain competitive or even to survive. A major event that had a serious impact on the organisation can trigger the need to change the culture of an organisation. For example, in the aftermath of the collapse of Enron and the demise of the accounting firm Arthur Anderson (see Chapter 8), the four major accounting firms worked hard to change their cultures to become more risk averse. Likewise, after the financial crisis in 2008, financial institutions worldwide attempted to change their cultures to fit the austerity measures imposed on them. Furthermore, mergers and acquisitions often result in changed cultures and organisations have to manage these changes. The well-documented merger between Absa and Barclays Bank is a case in point. The culture at the merged organisation had to change to reflect changes in the management, the balance of power and the processes and systems of the organisation. The opening case on Boeing illustrates how culture may become a liability for an organisation and why it may be crucial for the organisation to change its culture. In addition to a culture that may have become a liability, an organisation may also need to change its culture because it does not ‘fit’ with the size or the structure of the organisation, or it is out of step with a changing environment. The discussion of culture in this chapter underscores that organisational culture is an abstract concept and that different organisations face different sets of variables affecting the fit between their cultures and their environments, such as key historical influences that shaped their cultures, national and regional cultures, industry cultures, the sub-culture present in a given organisation and many other factors. Because of these differences, experts offer general and not specific guidelines for organisations to follow to change their cultures. The authors of an often-quoted book on organisational development and change, Cummings and Worley48 offer the following practical advice to serve as guidelines for cultural change: r 'PSNVMBUFBDMFBSTUSBUFHJDWJTJPOUPDBQUVSFUIFFTTFODFPGUIF new strategy and the shared values and behaviours that underpin the strategy. This vision should guide the purpose and direction of the intended culture change. 128 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 6 Corporate culture r 5PQNBOBHFNFOUTIPVMEEFNPOTUSBUFųSNDPNNJUNFOUUPUIF FTQPVTFEWBMVFTBOEUIFOFFEGPSDVMUVSFDIBOHFBOEUIFZTIPVME SFJOGPSDFUIFJSDPNNJUNFOUJOXPSEBOEEFFE r .PEFMDVMUVSFDIBOHFBUUIFIJHIFTUMFWFMXJUITFOJPSFYFDVUJWFT DPNNJUUFEUPDPNNVOJDBUFUIFOFXDVMUVSFUISPVHIUIFJSPXO BDUJPOT5IFJSCFIBWJPVSTTIPVMETZNCPMJTFUIFEFTJSFEWBMVFTBOE CFIBWJPVSTDPOHSVFOUXJUIUIFOFXDVMUVSF r .PEJGZUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOUPTVQQPSUPSHBOJTBUJPOBMDIBOHFBT DVMUVSBMDIBOHFOPSNBMMZFOUBJMTNPEJųDBUJPOTJOPSHBOJTBUJPOBM TUSVDUVSF IVNBOSFTPVSDFTTZTUFNT JOGPSNBUJPOBOEDPOUSPM TZTUFNTBOENBOBHFNFOUTUZMFT*OBEEJUJPOUPUIFTFDIBOHFTCFJOH OFDFTTBSZUPTVQQPSUUIFOFXDVMUVSF UIFZNBZTFSWFUPPSJFOUBUF UIFFNQMPZFFTCFIBWJPVSUPUIFOFXDVMUVSF r 4FMFDUJOHBOETPDJBMJTJOHOFXDPNFSTBOEUFSNJOBUJOHEFWJBOUT DIBOHFPSHBOJTBUJPOBMNFNCFSTIJQUPųUUIFOFXDVMUVSF5IF DBSFGVMTFMFDUJPOPG UIFASJHIUQFPQMF FŲFDUJWFTPDJBMJTJOH QSPHSBNNFTBOEUFSNJOBUJOHUIFTFSWJDFTPG QFPQMFXIPEPOPUųU UIFDVMUVSFBSFFŲFDUJWFNFUIPETUPFTUBCMJTIBOFXDVMUVSF5IJTJT QBSUJDVMBSMZSFMFWBOUGPSLFZMFBEFSTIJQQPTJUJPOTXIFSFQFPQMFBSF JOQPTJUJPOTXIFSFUIFZDBOJOŴVFODFPUIFST 5IJT DPODMVEFT PVS EJTDVTTJPO PO PSHBOJTBUJPOBM DVMUVSF XIJDI DPNNFODFE XJUI BO FYQMBOBUJPO PG UIF UFSNT DVMUVSF PSHBOJTBUJPOBM DVMUVSF OBUJPOBMBOESFHJPOBMDVMUVSFT JOEVTUSZDVMUVSFBOETVCDVMUVSF JO PSHBOJTBUJPOT 8F JOWFTUJHBUFE UIF MFWFMT FMFNFOUT BOE UZQFT PG PSHBOJTBUJPOBMDVMUVSFBOEUIFDIBQUFSDPODMVEFEXJUIBEJTDVTTJPOPO XIZJUJTTPEJŵDVMUUPDIBOHFUIFDVMUVSFPG BOPSHBOJTBUJPOBOETPNF BEWJDFPOHVJEFMJOFTUPDIBOHFPSHBOJTBUJPOBMDVMUVSF CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 129 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part II: Management in a changing environment CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Describe the concept of culture. Culture is the total pattern of human behaviour and its products personified in thought, speech, action and artefacts, and is dependent on man’s capacity for learning and transmitting knowledge to succeeding generations using tools, language and systems of abstract thought. 2. Define organisational culture. (See Edgar H Schein’s definition in Section 6.2.) One of the shorter definitions of organisational culture is that it comprises the aggregate of beliefs, norms, attitudes, assumptions and ways of doing things that members of an organisation share and teach to new members. The central ideas of a variety of definitions of organisational culture: • defines how organisational members should behave in a given context • is inclusive of all organisational members • sets the yardstick for expected norms of behaviour against which individual organisational members judge their own actions and also by which others judge their actions • legitimises certain forms of action and prohibits other forms of action. 3. Explain the levels of culture. One can distinguish between three levels of organisational culture, namely the first level comprising artefacts, the second level comprising values, including the goals, ideals, norms, standards and moral principles and lastly, basic assumptions. (See Section 6.3.) 4. Differentiate between the various types of cultures in organisations. The different types of culture evident in organisations derive from national and regional cultures, industry cultures and include various sub-cultures. • National and regional cultures differ in terms of attitudes towards work, authority and equality. Variables that influence the development of a national culture include history, religion and even climate. • Industry cultures form within an ‘organisational field’, which is a community of organisations that interact frequently with one another. Organisations operating in the same organisational field function in a social system of expectations, taken-for-granted ways of doing things, status and legitimacy, which exert a powerful influence on organisations and actors in them. • Within organisations, there is no uniform, single culture. Sub-cultures form based on occupational shared assumptions and sub-group histories. Many of the major cultural differences and similarities in organisations are occupational. Occupational groups within organisations may develop strong sub-cultures based on the work they do. Sub-cultures may also form when groups are geographically isolated from the rest of the organisation. Professional or functional sub-cultures form in organisations and can create problems for the effective functioning of an organisation. 5. Discuss the elements of culture. • A symbol is something that represents an idea, a process, or a physical entity. The purpose of a symbol is to communicate meaning and organisations use specific symbols to convey meaning. 130 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:45 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Chapter 6 Corporate culture • Stories about the organisation often reflect the core beliefs and assumptions held by organisational members. How the stories told to newcomers relate to the specific strengths, weaknesses, successes, and failures of the organisation, often reflect the prevailing culture. • Language is a strong conveyor of organisational culture because organisational members create unique terms to refer to various items and aspects of the organisation and only members of the organisation understand these terms. Newcomers are often overwhelmed when confronted by organisation-specific abbreviations and terminology. • A ritual is a set of actions, performed mainly for their symbolic value. In organisations, rituals often underpin the central values of the organisation. Organisational members assimilate the culture of the organisation by observing which rituals play key roles in the organisation and what behaviour the rituals encourage or discourage. 6. Compare the different types of culture. Various experts on organisational culture classify the types of culture found in organisations differently. In this chapter, a few of them were discussed: • Charles Handy typifies culture in terms of the norms, values and beliefs that reflect in different structures and systems of an organisation. • Deal and Kennedy link culture to the risk and feedback characteristics of the specific market in which the organisation functions. • Quinn and McGrath use various variables, such as leadership style, authority, and the goal and risk orientation of employees to identify four types of culture. • Jones, Dunphy, Fishman, Larne and Canter categorised culture based on the influence of culture on the behaviour of individuals and groups in the organisation. 7. Explain how organisations change culture: • formulate a clear strategic vision • firm commitment of top management to the espoused values and the need for culture change • model culture change at the highest level • modify the organisation to support organisational change • select and socialise newcomers and terminate deviants. KEY TERMS artefacts assumptions culture industry culture language national and regional cultures organisational culture organisational field organisational sub-culture rituals strategic drift stories symbols values Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:45 PM via UNISA 131 PART II: Management in a changing environment REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Consider the opening case study on Boeing. Use the levels of organisational culture to analyse why culture played such a big role in the misfortunes of Boeing. 2. Discuss the elements of organisational culture and use South African business examples from the business media to illustrate these elements. 3. National and regional cultures influence the organisational culture of organisations. One of the major characteristics of South African organisations is the diversity of their employees. In your view, what influence does the national culture in South Africa likely have on the organisational culture of international organisations operating in South Africa? 4. Do an internet search on the Absa and Barclay’s Bank merger. Write an essay describing how the merger between this British organisation and the South African Absa influenced the culture at the merged organisation. END NOTES 1 Adapted from: (i) Holmes, S. 2006. Cleaning up Boeing. Business Week, 12 March 2012. [Online] Available from: http:// www.businessweek.com/stories/2006-03-12/cleaning-up-boeing. Accessed on 22 February 2013. (ii) Surowiecki, J. 2013. Requiem for a Dreamliner? New Yorker, February 4, 2013. [Online] Available from: http://www.newyorker.com/ talk/financial/2013/02/04/130204ta_talk_surowiecki#ixzz2LK6vzWvP. Accessed on 22 February 2013. 2 Holmes, op. cit. 3 Ibid. 4 Ibid. 5 Ibid. 6 Surowiecki, op. cit. 7 Aboulafia, R. cited by Surowiecki, op. cit. 8 Ibid. 9 Ibid. 10 Ibid. 11 Boeing 787 Dreamliner Grounded. Guardian, 18 January 2013. [Online] Available from: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ business/2013/jan/18/boeing-787-dreamliner-grounded. Accessed on 22 February 2013. 12 The South African Pocket Oxford Dictionary. 1987. Cape Town: Oxford University Press, p 181. 13 Ferrar, G.P. 1994. The cultural dimensions of international business. 2nd edition. NJ: Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, p16. In Business Leadership and culture: national management styles in the global economy. Bjerke, B., p 4. 14 Webster’s Third New International Dictionary. 1993. Cologne: Könemann Verlagsgesellschaft MBH, p 552. 15 Morgan, G. 1997. Images of organization. 2nd edition. London: Sage. 16 Johnson, G., Whittington, R. & Scholes, K. 2011. Exploring strategy: text and cases. 9th edition. Financial Times. Prentice Hall, p 184. 17 Ancona, D., Kochen, T.A., Scully, M., Van Maanen, J. & Westney, D.E. 2005. Managing for the future: organizational behavior and processes. 3rd edition. Cincinnati, OH: South-Western College, p M2–57. 18 Achua, C. & Lussier, R.N. 2013. Effective Leadership. 5th edition. Canada: South Western, Gengage Learning, p 338. 19 Schein, E.H. 1990. Organizational culture. American Psychologist, 45(2): 111. 20 Ibid., p 113. 21 Ibid. 22 Achua & Lussier, op. cit., p 338. 23 Burnes. B. 2009. Managing change. 5th edition. Edinburgh: Pearson Education Limited, p 200. 24 Gitelson,G., Bing, J.W. & Laroche, L. The Impact of Culture on Mergers & Acquisitions P.E. [Online] Available from: http://www.itapintl.com/facultyandresources/articlelibrarymain/the-impact-of-culture-on-mergers-a-acquisitions.html. Accessed on 22 February 2013. 25 Ibid. 132 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 6 Corporate culture 6FKHLQRSFLWSSŋ $QFRQDHWDORSFLWS0ŋ ,ELG %RHLQJ$ERXWXV>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHIURPKWWSZZZERHLQJFRPDERXWXVFXOWXUHLQGH[KWPOYDOXHV$FFHVVHGRQ 0DUFK -RKQVRQRSFLWS 6FKHLQRSFLWSSŋ $QFRQDHWDORSFLWS0ŋ -RKQVRQHWDORSFLWS 7KH+RIVWHGH&HQWUH>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHIURPKWWSJHHUWKRIVWHGHFRPGLPHQVLRQVKWPOKWWSLPXQLYLHDFDW ğOHDGPLQXVHUBXSORDGSURMBZLQGVSHUJHU.)..I.&RXQWU\&XOWXUHSGI$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK -RKQVRQHWDORSFLWS $QFRQDHWDORSFLW0ŋ 0RUJDQRSFLWS 3HWHUV7- :DWHUPDQ5+-UIn search of excellence1HZ<RUN+DUSHU 5RZS 5REELQV63 -XGJH7$Organizational Behavior.WKHGLWLRQ1-8SSHU6DGGOH5LYHU3HDUVRQ(GXFDWLRQ S +ROPHVRSFLW +DQG\&8QGHUVWDQGLQJRUJDQL]DWLRQVUGHGLWLRQ3HQJXLQ+DUPRQGVZRUWK,QOrganizational change. (GLWHG E\ 6HQLRU% 6ZDLOHV6WKHGLWLRQ(GLQEXUJK3HDUVRQ(GXFDWLRQ/LPLWHGS 'HDO7 .HQQHG\$&XOWXUH$QHZORRNWKURXJKROGOHQVHVJournal of Applied Behavioural Science ŋ,QOrganizational change.(GLWHGE\ 6HQLRU%DQG6ZDLOHV6WKHGLWLRQ(GLQEXUJK3HDUVRQ(GXFDWLRQ /LPLWHGS 4XLQQ5( 0F*UDWK057KHWUDQVIRUPDWLRQRIRUJDQL]DWLRQDOFXOWXUHDFRPSHWLQJYDOXHVSHUVSHFWLYH,Q Managing change(GLWHGE\%XUQHV%WKHGLWLRQ(GLQEXUJK3HDUVRQ(GXFDWLRQ/LPLWHGS -RQHV4'XQSK\')LVKPDQ5/DUQH0 &DQWHU&,QManaging change(GLWHGE\%XUQHV%WKHGLWLRQ (GLQEXUJK3HDUVRQ(GXFDWLRQ/LPLWHGS /RZH60RRUH) &DUU$13DUDGLJPDSSLQJVWXGLHVRIFXOWXUHDQGRUJDQL]DWLRQInternational Journal of Cross Cultural Management 3HWHUV7- :DWHUPDQ5+In search of excellence.1HZ<RUN+DUSHU 5RZSSŋ 6FKHLQRSFLWS &XPPLQJV7* :RUOH\&*Organization development and change.WKHGLWLRQ&DQDGD6RXWK:HVWHUQ *HQJDJH/HDUQLQJSSŋ CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 133 Chapter 7 2QYGTRQNKVKEUEQPƃKEV resolution and negotiation OPENING CASE Mari Vrba OPENING CASE Power games 0WFSWJFX On a cold day in December, in an impersonal conference room in an airport, John Paterson met with three sombre directors representing the board of one of the world’s largest manufacturing companies. They called the company’s CEO for a highly controversial purpose: he had to convince them that he should remain the CEO of the company. The directors listened as the CEO, formally a successful trial lawyer, argued his case. The board members sought answers as to why a revolt had erupted against Paterson among his executive leadership team. As the meeting progressed, it was obvious that Paterson was losing his case. A day later, the company released an announcement stating that the 55-year-old CEO had retired from the company, with immediate effect. 1BUFSTPOKPJOTUIFDPNQBOZ Paterson had an outstanding résumé. He graduated from top universities and then joined a prestigious law firm where he became a formidable litigator. At the age of 40, he became general counsel at a top USA company where he rapidly climbed the corporate ladder. The manufacturing company took notice and recruited him for the position of general counsel, overseeing the more than 300 company’s lawyers worldwide. 5IFFY$&0XIPTUBZFEPOGPSNPSFUIBO BEFDBEF The executive who led the company during a decade of phenomenal growth – while it grew into a giant in its industry – was Josh Brown, a quiet man who did not like conflict and helped to shape a corporate culture that discouraged open conflict. However, in his own way, Brown had a strong ability to build alliances and to influence people. 5IFDBTU When he reached the mandatory retirement r +PTI#SPXO BGPSNFS$&0XIPDPVMEOPU age of 64, Brown stepped down as CEO. He had relinquish his power and quietly schemed to handpicked his colleague and friend Mark Lewis as undermine his two successors. r +VEJUI+BDLTPO UIFIVNBOSFTPVSDFTDIJFGXIP his successor. Although Brown had to relinquish his position as CEO, he remained a visible presence divided and ruled. and strong influence in the company for more than r +FŲ1BUFSTPO UIF$&0XIPTFMFBEFSTIJQTUZMF a decade, eventually outlasting both his successors. resulted in a revolt. The company contracted him as a consultant and r 5IFNFNCFSTPG 1BUFSTPOTFYFDVUJWF he had his own office and secretary at the company leadership team whose loyalty he had lost. headquarters. He received the title of Chairman Emeritus and thus retained his seat on the company CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation board. (Note: Any governance expert would regard such an arrangement as a potential source of conflict.) The company had reached its peak after a decade of remarkable growth and, although not evident at the time, it faced a period of decline. The company’s pipeline of new products could not support the growth the company had promised investors. Lewis, the new CEO, responded to these challenges by acquiring another massive manufacturing company. As the huge and ballooned company started to falter, Lewis seemed to spend more and more time away from headquarters, instead heading up industry trade groups, funding an institute in Africa to fight Aids and writing a book about reforming health care. The ex-CEO Josh Brown seemed willing and able to fill the resultant power void. He was a regular at the company’s headquarters, where he often joined his former colleagues for lunch in the cafeteria. Brown was always willing to listen and to participate quietly in conversations. Although not overly evident, his influence was substantial. The perception at the company headquarters was that he knew the company inside out and people held his opinion in high esteem. As the company slowed down, infighting at headquarters erupted. Lewis became convinced that Brown was undermining him and he attempted to end his consulting contract, a move that Brown could defend because of the support he enjoyed from the board. Brown and Lewis became bitter enemies. In anticipation of his eminent retirement, Lewis identified two veteran company ‘stars’ as possible candidates to succeed him. There was also a third candidate: Paterson. He had been at the company for three years and was a newcomer to the manufacturing industry. However, Paterson held a trump card namely Brown, who supported him and helped him to outmanoeuvre both rivals. The race for a new CEO divided the company into three camps. Each contender regularly met with a group of supporters to formulate their campaign strategy and defence strategies. Paterson conducted his campaign aggressively and meticulously with a single purpose: to become the next CEO. When the time came for Lewis to go, the board met to decide who would succeed him. Prior to their meeting the board received two anonymous letters from ‘senior staff members’ warning them against appointing Paterson, citing reasons such as micromanagement, constant reorganisation, and a muddled decision-making process. The board dismissed the warnings and selected Paterson as the new CEO. The company falters When Paterson took the helm as CEO, the company was still generating billions in profits but its business model was failing and its share price was falling. Paterson had worthy goals, such as promising to transform almost every aspect of the business in order to modernise the company and to develop new products. However, the company and its CEO faced many challenges. For example, when Paterson took over from his predecessor, there were two major new products in the pipeline – but rolling them out would end in disaster. Paterson had to retract a promising new product and consumers rejected another new product because of its awkward design. In response to the serious problems it faced, the company, under the leadership of Paterson, embarked on a huge downsizing exercise and 20 per cent of the workforce was retrenched. Ironically, even as he was making massive cuts, Paterson also made new acquisitions, first a handful of smaller purchases then acquiring another massive manufacturing company. In addition, the company’s R&D model was not working – bigger did not prove to be better when it came to producing new products – and Paterson instigated a messy R&D restructuring. Enter Judith Jackson Paterson was struggling to find answers in a complex industry where his own experience was limited. His leadership team changed constantly. Veterans departed and a prominent new appointee resigned suddenly citing personal reasons for her resignation. Paterson did not seem to trust the CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 135 PART II: Management in a changing environment old hands at the company and often turned to outsiders, especially consultants, to advise him. The only exception in this regard was Judith Jackson, the head of human resources (HR) who would become Paterson’s most trusted confidant and accrue much power in her own right. When Jackson took over the company’s human resources group, two years after Paterson’s appointment as CEO, the company was preparing for massive retrenchments and Jackson’s job was crucial. Although she immediately downsized the bloated HR group, Jackson did not seem overly concerned about the details of how the reorganised group would actually function. It was impossible for her staff to arrange a meeting with her and her preferred style of communication was to send e-mails. Jackson’s primary focus was on the CEO. She became Paterson’s shield and representative; she controlled access to him and was the messenger of his blunt directives. Paterson indulged her. Jackson was overheard using derogative terms to refer to senior executives, such as ‘not an A player’, ‘too ambitious’ and ‘a baby’ in his presence. Life at the top of the company became increasingly stressful. Paterson increased pressure on his deputies by demanding immediate responses to all his requests, without distinguishing between urgent matters and routine ones. Vacations became a vague memory for most of the senior executives. There were incidents where Paterson berated his deputies; on occasion, he could reduce senior staff members to tears. His decision-making style was erratic as he drilled down to the smallest details only to overturn approved decisions. The executive leadership team falls apart The main reason for Paterson’s departure from the company was that members of his executive leadership team were no longer loyal to him. One reason for the alienation was the influence of Judith Jackson over Paterson. She had his support, she was powerful and people inside the company feared her. Paterson seemed blind to her shortcomings, which created a split in the executive leadership team. One executive summed it up by saying that Paterson and Jackson were in one camp and the rest of them in another. 136 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES One incident set the process of Paterson’s departure in motion. The HR director had recently received the results of a survey of Jackson’s direct reports, which she sent to Jackson. The survey revealed that a third of the managers reporting to Jackson rated her performance out of 5 in key areas as 1 or 2. Jackson sent her response to all participants by e-mail expressing how sad and embarrassed she was with the outcome of the survey. She added that she was also sad for them because it was obvious that they worked in an environment that made them very unhappy. Someone forwarded Jackson’s e-mail to both Paterson and to the board, with an anonymous but detailed cover note identifying Jackson’s leadership as the real issue. The writer urged the board to do a thorough investigation into the matter, conducted by an independent party because Jackson’s deputies feared retaliation. The board appointed a lawyer to investigate Jackson and the HR group. After interviewing all of Jackson’s direct managers, the lawyer did not find anything illegal, but he concluded that HR was thoroughly ‘dysfunctional’, and fragmented by ‘inept management’. In his view, this was a ‘simple case of incompetence’. After receiving this report, Paterson accepted the resignation of his controversial HR chief, but he sweetened her departure with a generous severance package. The problems associated with the company’s HR chief focused the board’s attention on the CEO himself. How could he ignore the trouble Jackson was causing? His confidant’s issues had escalated into a crisis for Paterson. The company’s board resolved to conduct a survey among the members of Paterson’s executive team. Paterson sensed what was going on and he made his own calls to assess support for him. Tellingly, Brown, his long-time ally, did not return his calls. The results of the survey indicated that not one executive supported Paterson fully. All expressed the view that the situation was indefensible. A few of the executives expressed the view that the CEO needed to resign. The directors agreed to summon Paterson for a private meeting. CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation LEARNING OBJECTIVES 6Je purpose of tJis cJapter is to inXestigate tJe concepts of power interest inƃuence and political action in conteOporar[ organisations. 9e also eZaOine conƃict resolution tecJniSues and tJe negotiation process. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: . &eƂne and discuss power and organisational sources of power. 2. Explain the relationship between power and interest. . &iscuss how people use inƃuence tactics and political action to protect their interests. . Explain the various sources of organisational conƃict and identify the conƃict OanageOent strategies. 5. Provide guidelines on how to apply the two phases of the negotiation process: planning and the actual process. 7.1 POWER LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 The case study offers rare insight into the inner workings of a ‘real’ organisation and narrates the specific sequence of events during a stressful period in its history. It brings into sharp focus the use and abuse of power by senior executives of the organisation to satisfy their own personal needs. Bear in mind that many examples from the same organisation during the same period, would probably illustrate how executives and senior managers used their power to achieve various goals of the organisation effectively. This is because managers use their power to get things done in the organisation on a day-to-day basis. They also need power to secure scarce resources and to bring about change. A renowned expert on the subject, Jeffrey Pfeffer notes: ‘Any new strategy worth implementing has some controversy surrounding it and someone with a counter agenda fighting it. When push comes to shove, you need more than logic to carry the day. You need power’2. &GƂPGCPFFKUEWUURQYGT and organisational sources of power. 7.1.1 Defining power The question of what constitutes QPXFS has received much research interest. In the literature, definitions of power abound, as evident from the following definitions: ‘[t]he medium through which conflicts of interest are resolved … influences who gets what, when and how’3 – Morgan. ‘[t]he potential ability to influence behavior, to change the course of events, to overcome resistance, and to get people to do things they would not otherwise do’4 – Pfeffer. ‘[t]he ability of individuals or groups to persuade, induce or coerce others into following certain courses of action’… [I]t is rooted in control over or access to resources of a wide variety5 – Johnson, Whittington and Scholes. ‘[t]he ability to get one’s way in a social situation’6 – French & Bell. RQYGT the potential to influence behaviour, to change the cause of events, to overcome resistance, and to get people to do things they would not otherwise do CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 137 PART II: Management in a changing environment The different definitions of power capture the key terms associated with power: interest, influence and ‘to get people to do what they would not otherwise do’. Despite the slightly ‘dark’ connotations of the words that appear in the definitions of power, the use of power in organisations has a positive as well as a negative ‘face’. McClelland7 is one theorist who distinguishes between personal power (an individual who has a ‘me’ orientation) and social power (an individual who has a ‘we’ orientation). People with a personal power orientation may use power for their own purposes and to protect their own interests, in other words, they may use their power to pursue their own goals, as illustrated succinctly by the opening case study. French and Bell comment that ‘the negative face of power is characterised by a primitive, unsocialised need to have dominance over submissive others’8. McClelland9 describes the ‘good face’ of power (social power) as characterised by an individual’s concern for group goals, for helping the group to formulate goals and providing the means to attain the goals by empowering people to work hard to achieve the goals. Senior and Swailes describe positive power as deriving from a ‘more socialized need to initiate, influence and lead and to recognize other people’s needs to achieve their own goals as well as those of the organization’10. Despite the conflicting views of power, it is clear that power and people using their power are unavoidable occurrences in contemporary organisations. Machiavellian behaviour in organisations At the end of his career as a diplomat, Niccoló Machiavelli compiled his masterpiece The Prince in 1513. It was a study of power and politics and a manual of ruthlessness for any ambitious ruler. Today his ideas are as relevant as five centuries ago when Machiavelli wrote the book in conflict-ridden Italy. His book influenced major historical figures such as Napoleon and Frederick the Great. The Prince has become a foundation of modern political thought and made Machiavelli’s name synonymous with manipulative scheming11. The term Machiavellian is often used in modern organisations to refer to colleagues who have a high need for power (see the chapter on motivation) and believe that the end justifies the means. A recently published book, How to thrive in a world of lying, backstabbing and dirty tricks (published in 2013 by Vermillion) deals with Machiavellian behaviour in organisations. The author, Oliver James, views the Machiavellian type in organisations as a ‘game player’ … ‘[T]hey are often very compulsive and only feel comfortable if there is some kind of game going on where they can play and try to win’12. 7.1.2 The sources of power In the next section we investigate why some people in organisations have power and others are powerless. French and Raven (1959) French and Raven13 identified five sources of organisational power in 1959 that are still relevant today and cited in most discussions on the topic in management literature. The five sources derive from an individual’s hierarchical position, the ability to reward others or to 138 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation punish others, charisma and expertise – and are either personal or formal sources of power14. Formal power Organisations confer GPSNBM QPXFS on individuals in terms of their positions in the organisational hierarchy. r -FHJUJNBUF QPXFS 1FPQMF HBJO MFHJUJNBUF QPXFS CFDBVTF PG UIFJS formal positions in organisations, which allow them to make decisions pertaining to resource allocation, information flows, performance evaluations, task alignment and conflict resolution. r 3FXBSE QPXFS 3FXBSE QPXFS SFTUT XJUI BO JOEJWJEVBM TVDI BT B manager in an organisation who has the ability to give rewards to reward or reinforce desirable behaviour. In an organisational context, managers can use many ‘currencies’ to reward subordinates, such as salary increases, promotions, interesting assignments, admission to ‘in’ groups, access to crucial information, feedback and praise, to mention but a few. The flipside of this power source is that the recipients of the rewards must perceive the rewards as being of value to them. As we will see later on in Chapter 20 on workforce motivation, a reward is a motivator only if the recipient values the reward15. r $PFSDJWF QPXFS "O JOEJWJEVBM XIP DBO PŲFS PS SFTUSJDU CFOFųUT or inflict punishment or control the behaviour of another person has coercive power. This type of power is often associated with the negative face of power. Fear is the basis of coercive power because the person with power has the ability to inflict punishment or take action with adverse consequences for the other person. In an organisational context, managers can retrench people, withhold rewards such as promotions or directly or indirectly threaten subordinates with punishing actions. HQTOCNRQYGT formal power includes legitimate, reward and coercive power Personal power 1FSTPOBMQPXFS stems from the unique characteristics of an individual, RGTUQPCNRQYGT with or without formal power based on hierarchical position. includes referent and expert r 3FGFSFOU QPXFS 3FGFSFOU QPXFS SFGFST UP UIF QPXFS PG BO power individual because of his or her personal characteristics or charisma. People will follow and obey such an individual because they like and respect him or her and they accept that the person has power. In an organisational context the manager who depends on referent power must be ‘attractive’ to subordinates in the sense that they would want to identify with the manager, regardless of the other bases of power (legitimate power or power of reward) the manager may possess. (We discuss charisma in Chapter 1.) r &YQFSU QPXFS &YQFSU QPXFS SFGFST UP BO JOEJWJEVBMT QPXFS UIBU stems from the possession of scarce and valued expertise. Expertise is a source of power if it is the perception in the organisation that the individual possesses knowledge and understanding pertaining to a specific defined area. For example, the only professor at a university CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 139 PART II: Management in a changing environment with expert knowledge of the latest ground-breaking treatment for cancer may possess expert power. It is important that the recipients of a person’s expert power must perceive the person with expert power as credible, trustworthy and relevant16. Credibility means that the person has the right credentials in terms of knowledge and experience and must be able to show concrete evidence of this. In our example, the professor may prove her credibility by referring to the number of research articles she has published in accredited international medical journals, earning the respect of her colleagues. Trustworthiness means that the person with expert power must be honest and forthright. Finally, the knowledge or expertise of the person must have relevance in the context of his or her expertise. The professor in our example will have expert power as far as a specific cancer treatment is concerned, but not in respect of the latest breakthrough in nuclear science research. Morgan (1997) In addition to the sources mentioned above, Morgan17, in his influential book Images of organization (1997), argues that power influences ‘who gets what, when and how’ in organisations. In his view, power in organisations stems from a number of sources and we discuss these sources briefly in the following sections. r 'PSNBM BVUIPSJUZ 'PSNBM BVUIPSJUZ JT B GPSN PG MFHJUJNBUF QPXFS first described by the sociologist Max Weber18 (see Chapter 1) and still referred to by management theorists. Weber was interested in answering the question of why individuals in organisations obey commands. Weber made a distinction between power (the ability to force people to obey) and authority (where the recipients of orders obey them voluntarily). He distinguished between three types of legitimised (socially acceptable) authority: charismatic, traditional and rational-legal authority. Weber used the Greek term ‘charisma’ (gift of grace) to describe the individual personality attributes of people with charismatic authority, which define their right in the eyes of others to act on their behalf. In modern organisations, there are many examples of charismatic leaders who accrue great power based on their personal characteristics. Traditional authority rests on a belief in long standing traditions and the legitimacy of the authority of people who occupy a traditionally sanctioned position of authority. In a modern organisation, for example, when the son or daughter of the founding member of a family business takes over the reigns when their parent retires they acquire traditional authority. Individuals with rational-legal or bureaucratic authority gain their authority through their position in the organisation, such as a manager or a CEO (same as legitimate power). Authority attained through any of the three types serves as a form of power as long as the recipients respect and accept the nature of that authority: if they do not, the person will not have power. r $POUSPM PG TDBSDF SFTPVSDFT 0SHBOJTBUJPOT USBOTGPSN UIFJS resources into the products they produce or the services they render. Organisations are thus dependent – for their success and 140 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation r r r r survival – on the resources they need and on the suppliers of these resources. Those in the organisation who control and allocate resources such as financial, human, physical and informational resources (see Chapter 2), accrue power. The scarcer the resources and the more dependent an individual or a group in the organisation is on its availability, the more resource power the individuals or groups who control the resources accumulate. 0SHBOJTBUJPOBM TUSVDUVSF 5IF DIPJDF BOE VTF PG PSHBOJTBUJPOBM structure may be the outcome of a political process rather than the application of rational analysis and decision-making. Managers have significant scope when it comes to choices regarding organisational design, which they can exercise when deciding about aspects such as differentiation or integration, centralisation or decentralisation and departmentalisation. These choices may entail hidden agendas related to the power autonomy and interdependence of departments and individuals. Viewed from a political perspective, such decisions may become products of political action, which may enhance the power positions of the decision-makers. $POUSPMPG EFDJTJPOQSPDFTTFT5IFBCJMJUZPG BOJOEJWJEVBMUPDPOUSPM the outcomes of organisational decision-making processes can build power. Such outcomes include: r QSFNJTFT UIF DPOUSPM PG EFDJTJPO BHFOEBT XIJDI NBZ JOWPMWF preventing or promoting the appearance of a specific decision on the agenda) r QSPDFTTFT BTQFDUTPG EFDJTJPONBLJOHTVDIBTIPXUIFEFDJTJPO will be made, who will make the decision and when the decision will be made) r TIBQJOH JTTVFT BOE PCKFDUJWFT CZ QSFQBSJOH UIF SFQPSU BOE contributing to the discussion underpinning the decision). $POUSPM PG LOPXMFEHF BOE JOGPSNBUJPO *OEJWJEVBMT XIP DPOUSPM the knowledge and information that define the reality of decisionmaking processes, accrue power. Many principles of organising, such as the chain of command, division of work and the coordinating of sections and departments, enable individuals to control information flows, open and close channels of communication, filter, analyse and summarise information before disseminating it and consequently modelling information to suit their own views on issues and to advance their own interests. $POUSPM PG CPVOEBSJFT #Z DPOUSPMMJOH PSHBOJTBUJPOBM CPVOEBSJFT which form the interface between the different elements of the organisation internally (boundaries between different groups) and externally (boundaries between the organisation and its environment, including suppliers, customers, intermediaries and competitors), a person can accumulate considerable power. An individual with control of boundaries may be able to access crucial information regarding eminent changes and be in a position to plan to avoid or facilitate changes. People in leadership positions, project coordinators and organisational liaison officers can gain power by controlling organisational boundaries. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 141 PART II: Management in a changing environment r r r r r r r 142 The ability to cope with uncertainty. The ability to cope with environmental or operational uncertainty provides an individual, group or sub-unit with power because of the interdependencies that exists in organisations. Environmental uncertainties refer to issues such as the availability of resources, while operational uncertainties may include issues such as the breakdown of essential machinery, the closing of a plant and so on. Interdependencies, changes and uncertainties in one part of the organisation create uncertainty in other parts of the organisation (refer to Chapter 1 where we discuss the systems theory). The ability of an individual or a group to anticipate, plan for and control uncertainties, could be a source of power for them. People with this power base may attempt to preserve it by ensuring that the uncertainty lingers, or even by controlling situations to make them seem more uncertain than they actually are. $POUSPM PG UFDIOPMPHZ 5IF JOUSPEVDUJPO PG OFX UFDIOPMPHZ GPS example, the use of new machinery for the production of core products, the introduction of new computer hard- or software, or the implementation of a new information system, can affect the balance of power in organisations and can become the source of conflict. Individuals or groups who have expert knowledge of the new technology accumulate power. The control of technology relates to a crucial organisational objective, namely to increase productivity. Individuals or groups who control technology can manipulate this power by influencing productivity either directly or indirectly. *OGPSNBMJOUFSQFSTPOBMBMMJBODFTBOEOFUXPSLT5IFTFBSFFNFSHJOH sources of power, as we discussed elsewhere in the chapter. $POUSPM PG DPVOUFS PSHBOJTBUJPOT *OUFSBDUJPO BOE MJBJTPO XJUI significant counter organisations, such as labour unions or lobby groups, enhances the personal power of those who deal with such groups on behalf of the organisation. 4ZNCPMJTN BOE UIF NBOBHFNFOU PG NFBOJOH 4PNF PSHBOJTBUJPOBM leaders are effective users of cultural tools as discussed in Chapter 6 $PSQPSBUFDVMUVSF 4VDIMFBEFSTBSFBCMFUPVTFTZNCPMT SJUVBMT and stories to help others make sense of events in an organisation. In so doing, the leader wields symbolic power because he or she influences the way others think about and act regarding specific situations. (FOEFS BOE UIF NBOBHFNFOU PG HFOEFS SFMBUJPOT 5IF HFOEFS balance in many organisations is changing as more women go through the ‘glass ceiling’ that previously prevented them from PDDVQZJOHQPTJUJPOTPG QPXFS*O4PVUI"GSJDB MFHJTMBUJPOSFMBUJOHUP equal opportunities in the workplace makes provision for women and other previously disadvantaged people to have access to top positions in organisations, thus enabling them to accumulate power. 5IF EFFQ TUSVDUVSF PG QPXFS %FFQ TUSVDUVSFT VOEFSQJO QPXFS relations and may prevent individuals from using the power they CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation accrue. An analogy for deep structure19 is the ‘design of the playing field and the rules of the game’ at organisations. Deep structure is the set of major choices a system (in this case, an organisation) has made of basic parts into which its units will be organised and the basic patterns of activity that will maintain its existence. For example, a manager may have access to various sources of power, but could be unable to draw on and use those sources of power because deep structural factors prevent him or her from using the power. Deep structures are very stable because the trail of choices made by a system (an organisation) rules out many options at the same time as it rules in mutually contingent options. Deep structure includes factors such as economics, race and social class relations and determines the roles we occupy in organisations and thus the type of power we accrue. r 5IF QPXFS POF BMSFBEZ IBT 1FPQMF XJUI QPXFS VTF JU UP BDRVJSF more power, so the power one already has is a source of power. Social networks as a source of power Recently, a new source of power is emerging in organisations, stemming GSPN FNQMPZFFT TPDJBM OFUXPSLT 1FPQMF JO PSHBOJTBUJPOT XJUIPVU any formal or personal power, are accumulating power based on the TUSFOHUI PG UIFJS TPDJBM OFUXPSLT 5IF LFZ GBDUPST UIBU EFUFSNJOF UIF power an individual can obtain from his or her social network includes the following20: r 5IF TJ[F PG BO JOEJWJEVBMT OFUXPSL JO PUIFS XPSET UIF OVNCFS of people in the network influences the strength of a network. An individual with a substantial number of contacts in his or her social network within an organisation will be privy to much more information when compared to a person with a small or no social network. r 5IFQPTJUJPOJOBQFSTPOTOFUXPSLJTBTUSPOHJOEJDBUPSPG IJTPSIFS QPXFS5IFOVNCFSPG DPOUBDUTCFUXFFOBOJOEJWJEVBMBOEUIFQFPQMF in the organisation who make the significant decisions determines the power obtained by the person. Consider the example of the secretary of the CEO, who has no formal or personal power, but because she has access to information intended for top managers, she becomes a powerful person and (maybe unethically) her network of friends may benefit from the information she accesses. In the opening case study, we have seen how the director of human resources became a very powerful person due to her close working relationship with the CEO. r 5IF EJWFSTJUZ PG DPOUBDUT JO BO JOEJWJEVBMT OFUXPSL EFųOFT IPX much power an individual can gain from his or her social network. An individual whose network includes people in different departments and positions in the organisation, has more power than a person whose network only includes people who work in one’s own department. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 143 PART II: Management in a changing environment LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 7.2 INTERESTS Explain the relationship between power and interest. What people want and what is at stake for them is the essence of the political perspective of organisations. In organisations, individuals will try to protect their own and their group or teams’ interests, and if they have power, they will use it to defend their interests. Employees have individual JOUFSFTUT as well as collective interests. Their own selfinterest is the primary motivator of people’s behaviour (see Chapter 20 on workforce motivation). For example, individuals may look at a change intervention and consider how the change may affect their own position relative to, for example, better remuneration, advancement in the organisation or perhaps obtaining more power and influence. The opening case study articulated the manoeuvres Judith Jackson and Josh Brown had made to protect their own interests. Collective interests derive from organisational design, which defines the ‘boxes’ in the organisation to which organisational members belong such as demographic areas, functional areas and one’s profession. In other words, the organisational structure and the positions of power created by the structure create groups who share and will protect their collective interests. Organisational members typically belong to more than one collective interest group and will support or block decisions that affect their interests in their various groups. The bases for collective interests include the following21: r 'BDUPSTTVDIBTBHF HFOEFS FUIOJDJUZBOENBSJUBMTUBUVTEFųOF demographic groups. An example here may be a group of people at an organisation approaching the mandatory retirement age of 60. This group of people may have the same interest in extending the retirement age to 65 and may take political action, such as sending a petition and negotiating with decision-makers to further their interests. r 5IFEJWJTJPOPG MBCPVSJOBOPSHBOJTBUJPOTVDIBTGVMMUJNFPSQBSU time workers may create different interest groups who will protect their collective interests in the organisation. r 5IFHFPHSBQIJDBMBSFBXIFSFQFPQMFXPSLEFųOFTJOUFSFTU groups – workers at the South African plant of an automobile manufacturer will probably have different interests to protect when compared with their counterparts in Europe. r 1FPQMFXJUIUIFTBNFQSPGFTTJPOTJOPSHBOJTBUJPOT TVDIBT engineers, accountants, managers and executives share the same interests and will form interest groups to protect their interests in the organisation. (Refer to the executive management team in the opening case study.) interests people have individual and collective interests Having distinguished between individual and collective interests, the question arises of how an individual or a group can persuade other people or groups to act in a specific way. Interpersonal interaction involves attempts to influence others and lies at the core of the political perspective of organisations. 144 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation 7.3 INFLUENCE TACTICS AND TAKING POLITICAL ACTION LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 Influential people have power, but not all people with power have influence22. Influence involves gaining the agreement of others to work with you to achieve a specific goal. Many powerful people cannot do that, for a variety of reasons. The opening case study relates how John Paterson lost the loyalty and support of his executive leadership team and he had no more influence over them, despite being the CEO with substantial power at the company. Discuss how people use inƃuence tactics and political action to protect their interests. 5IFQPXFSPGJOŴVFODF23 A journalist from the Financial Times asked the Archbishop of Canterbury how, ‘particularly as such a young man, he was able to deal with the power of his position?’ “I have no power, I have influence,” he responded, with humility and insight. ‘Some powerful people have influence. Many religious leaders, like the Archbishop of Canterbury have extraordinary influence – far more than elected, powerful, world leaders.’ ‘Archbishop Desmond Tutu has influence – acquired and growing as it does with every act, giving further evidence that he is not partisan in the criticism of wrongdoing.’ ‘Influence trumps power. Influence usually takes time to manifest, based as it often is on example – but it can begin overnight (as it does for new-found rock stars).’ Influence cannot be taken away, ‘but it can certainly be lost in an instant.’ Ask Lance Armstrong, Bernard Madoff or Dominique Strauss-Kahn. ‘Influence is usually sustained, but power and leadership change hands.’ When does power convert to influence? Suppose person A is the person with power (the agent) and person B is the target. When B consents to behave according to the wishes of A, power has converted to influence. Power involves a reciprocal relationship between the agent and the target and the characteristics of the recipient may explain the strength of the agent’s influence over the recipient24. Characteristics of the recipient such as dependency on the agent; uncertainty regarding the proper way to behave in a specific situation; personality, including self-esteem and vulnerability; and intelligence, where highly intelligent people may be more willing to listen, but more resistant to influence, may determine to what extend the agent can influence the recipient. People with power in organisations use specific influence tactics to obtain compliance. Some of these tactics may seem to be manipulative or dishonest, but the purpose of this section is not to encourage you as a student of business management to use an influence tactic with which you are uncomfortable, but rather to inform you of the tactics that people in organisations use to influence others. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 145 PART II: Management in a changing environment 7.3.1 Influence tactics Suppose person A (the agent) wants to influence person B (the recipient). Person A may use the following tactics to influence person B25. Table 7.1 summarises the influence tactics. Table 7.1: +nƃuence tactics Tactic Actions of A (the agent) Pressure Threatening, intimidating B or demanding that he or she complies Upward appeals Persuading B that higher levels of management approved the request, or appealing to higher levels of management for assistance in B’s compliance Exchange Promising s explicitl[ or implicitl[ s that B will receive rewards or tangiDle DeneƂts if he or she complies, or reminding B of a prior favour that he or she should return Coalition Seeking the aid of others to persuade B to do something or using the support of others as an argument to convince B to agree Ingratiating Using friendliness, humour or ƃatter[ Defore making a request to B Rational persuasion Using logical arguments and factual evidence to persuade B that a proposal or request is viable and likely to result in the achievement of objectives Inspirational appeals Appealing to B’s values and ideals and arousing enthusiasm by making an emotional request or proposal or by boosting person B’s conƂdence that he or she can do it Consultation tactics Seeking B’s participation in making a decision or planning how to implement a proposed policy, strategy, or change Source: Adapted from: Yukl, G. & Falbe, C.M. 1990. Influence tactics and objectives in upward, downward, and lateral influence attempts. Journal of Applied Psychology, 75(2): 132–140. Contextual factors, especially the hierarchical level of B, should influence A’s selection of the most effective tactic to use26. r 3BUJPOBMQFSTVBTJPOJTUIFNPTUFŲFDUJWFUBDUJDUPVTFBDSPTT organisational levels (upward, downward and lateral). r 5BDUJDTTVDIBTJOTQJSBUJPOBMBQQFBM QSFTTVSF DPOTVMUBUJPO ingratiation and exchange is most effective when the intended influence is downward (to subordinates). r 8IFOUIFEJSFDUJPOPG UIFJOŴVFODFJTMBUFSBM DPOTVMUBUJPO ingratiation, exchange and coalition tactics are the most effective. 7.3.2 Taking political action Morgan27 argues that the idea of rational organisations where organisational members seek common goals, and where politics and politicking are considered to be dirty words, prevents us from recognising that the latter are essential aspects of organisational life. Indeed, he cites Aristotle in ancient Greece who advocated politics as a means of reconciling the need for unity in the Greek state. Politics for Aristotle entailed the process of creating order from diversity to avoid authoritarian rule. Political science originated from this idea, favouring 146 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation politics and the recognition and interaction of competing interests as a means of creating a non-intimidating form of social order28. Pfeffer29, an expert on the subject of the use of power and politics in organisations, argued in a recent Harvard Business Review article that effective managers know that in order to succeed, they need two competencies or skills: substantive business acumen (to know what to do) and organisational or political skills to get it done. When employees in organisations convert their power into influence and action, they are engaging in politics. Those with good political skills can use their bases of power effectively30. We have already described influence and influence tactics that individuals and groups in organisations use to get others to help them achieve their goals, which are political actions; in this section we elaborate further on the concept of politics and political actions. 1PMJUJDBM CFIBWJPVS in organisations are activities that are not required as part of an employee’s formal role, but are activities that are performed to influence or attempt to influence the distribution of advantages or disadvantages in the organisation31. Legitimate political behaviour refers to actions that occur on a daily basis in organisational life such as forming alliances or coalitions, using one’s networks and so on. Illegitimate political behaviour includes extreme and damaging behaviour that infringes the rights of the organisation and its members, for example sabotage. Table 7.2 summarises the different political actions that may take place in organisations. RQlitiEal beJaXiQWr includes activities that are not required as part of an employee’s formal role, but are performed to attempt to influence the distribution of advantages or disadvantages in the organisation Table 7.: .egitiOate and illegitiOate political behaviour in organisations Vertical .egitimate .ateral Vertical Illegitimate .ateral Internal r complain to supervisor r bypassing chain of command r creating obstructions External r lawsuits r r r r forming coalitions and alliances exchange of favours retaliations using networks r r r r r sabotage symbolic protests revolts riots threats r contact with counterpart from another organisation to gain access to information and other power sources r professional activity outside the organisation r whistleblowing media releases on internal organisational activities r organisational disloyalty membership to other organisations and disloyalty to the organisation r defections moving to a competitor organisation or starting own business and taking clients with them Source: Adapted from Farrell, D. & Petersen, J.C. 1982. Patterns of political behavior in organizations. Academy of Management Review, 7(3): 407. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 147 PART II: Management in a changing environment Any form of major change, such as strategic or structural change, will inspire various forms of political action from various actors across the organisation. Mobilising support requires an understanding of interests and power and using one’s knowledge of it to your advantage to achieve the desired outcomes. Consider a scenario where an individual manager is promoting a major change intervention in an organisation and needs to get buy-in from various other managers before proceeding with the intervention. The manager can attempt to secure the approval of the other managers by taking these political actions32. r 3FDPHOJTFUIFEJŲFSFODFTJOJOUFSFTUTBOEHPBMTPGUIFJOEJWJEVBMT and groups who oppose the idea and find ways to unite them to produce advantages to all. r *EFOUJGZUIFJOEJWJEVBMTBOEHSPVQTXIPNUIFDIBOHFXJMMBŲFDUBOE map their interest and their sources and bases of power. r *EFOUJGZQPTTJCMFTVQQPSUFSTBOECMPDLFSTPGUIFDIBOHF intervention. r *EFOUJGZUIFQPUFOUJBMTUBLFIPMEFSTBOEUIFFYJTUJOHDPBMJUJPOT r 5IFOPCUBJOACVZJOJOEFDJTJPONBLJOHBOETIBSFEPXOFSTIJQPG the decision by finding supporters who will act together to back the decisions, policies and activities and build coalitions to change the distribution of power. r "DUJWFMZDSFBUFBOEVTFOFUXPSLTVQXBSET EPXOXBSETBOE horizontally. r /FHPUJBUFTPMVUJPOTBOEPVUDPNFTUPDSFBUFXJOXJOPVUDPNFT (see the next section on conflict management). Although power and politics often have negative connotations, many effective actions in organisations have at the very least a political element. Critical organisational issues often require individuals (often managers) to mobilise the support from individuals or groups with the resources to achieve the desired outcomes. To obtain outcomes beneficial to all parties, it is essential for managers to have conflict management and negotiating skills. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 7.4 CONFLICT MANAGEMENT Explain the various sources of organisational conƃict and identify the conƃict management strategies. $POŴJDU is a process in which one party perceives that another party opposes or negatively influences its interests33. Note that in the definition of conflict, the word ‘perceives’ signifies that the sources of conflict may be real or imagined, although the subsequent conflict remains the same – people’s perceptions are their realities. EQnƃiEt Paradoxically, conflict can be beneficial for the attainment of a process in which one party organisational goals, although too much conflict can harm the perceives that another party organisation. When there is too little conflict, employees may become opposes or negatively influences complacent and lazy, and innovation and creativity may be absent its interests because employees do not express fresh ideas and opposing viewpoints for fear of conflict. On the other hand, too much conflict may lead to lack of teamwork, political infighting, aggression and even violence. Thus, 148 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation conflict can be ‘functional’, meaning it is constructive and through this conflict the organisation benefits. Dysfunctional conflict is the opposite and may become destructive. So, when is conflict optimal? High Performance Optimum level QH EQnƃiEt Low (Functional) High (Dysfunctional) .eXeN of conƃKcV Figure 7.1: The relationship between the intensity of conƃict and the level of organisational performance 7.4.1 The causes of conflict34 There are many causes of conflict in organisations and we categorise them as interpersonal sources of conflict or sources of conflict emanating from the interaction between various groups in the organisation. Interpersonal conflict r 1FSTPOBM EJŲFSFODFT 1FSTPOBM EJŲFSFODFT CFUXFFO JOEJWJEVBMT working in the same organisation stem from demographical factors such as background, race and culture, age, levels of education, XPSMEWJFXT BOEWBMVFTZTUFNT%JŲFSFODFTDBVTFECZUIFTFGBDUPST give rise to interpersonal conflict. r $PNNVOJDBUJPO CSFBLEPXO 1PPS DPNNVOJDBUJPO BOE NJT information result in individuals or groups having the wrong perceptions of other individuals and groups in the organisation. This source of conflict can be resolved quickly if it was caused by B OPOJOUFOUJPOBM NJTVOEFSTUBOEJOH )PXFWFS XIFO JOEJWJEVBMT withhold information intentionally as part of a political action, it can jeopardise trust between them and lead to continuing conflict. The opening case study relates how the human resources manager DSFBUFEBCBSSJFSJOUIFDPNNVOJDBUJPOCFUXFFOUIF$&0BOEPUIFS executives, which led to immense conflict and eventually cost him his job. r 3PMF JODPNQBUJCJMJUZ .BOBHFST IBWF EJŲFSFOU GVODUJPOT BOE SPMFT that are interdependent in contemporary organisations. This interdependency may lead to conflict, as the roles of the managers may be incompatible. The marketing manager at an organisation may promise a valued customer the delivery of a specified number of products, while, due to labour and other constraints, the production manager may not be able to supply the products. Their role incompatibility may thus lead to conflict between the two managers. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 149 PART II: Management in a changing environment r &OWJSPONFOUBM TUSFTTPST 5IF JOUFSOBM BOE FYUFSOBM FOWJSPONFOUT of an organisation can lead to interpersonal conflicts. In highly competitive industries, the raised stress levels of employees inside organisations may lead to conflict between individuals. The internal environment of an organisation can be stressful for many reasons, such as a looming downsizing intervention, shrinking resources resulting from demotions and many other factors that may create dysfunctional conflict between employees. Organisations such as management consulting firms and accounting firms may have high interpersonal conflict levels as tired employees do their best to meet non-negotiable deadlines. r $PNQFUJOH GPS UIF TBNF QPTJUJPOT "OPUIFS TPVSDF PG QFSTPOBM conflict is the organisational reality that individuals compete for the same scarce positions in the organisation. For example, most organisations have one CEO and one manager for each of their divisions, departments and sections. Individuals compete with one another to secure the positions they desire, but organisations are becoming flatter (fewer levels of management) and fewer opportunities exist to ‘climb the corporate ladder’ leading to intense competition for the positions that become available, sometimes resulting in bitter conflict. Intergroup behaviour and conflict r $PNQFUJUJPO GPS TDBSDF SFTPVSDFT $PNQFUJUJPO GPS TDBSDF resources is at the centre of a political perspective on organisations. Divisions, departments, sections and teams compete for the same resources (financial, human, information and physical) and they and their managers have to succeed in the ensuing political battles and conflicts to secure their rightful portion of resources. r 5BTL JOUFSEFQFOEFODF 5BTL JOUFSEFQFOEFODF CFUXFFO HSPVQT where the output of one group becomes the input of another group, may lead to intergroup conflict, especially where substantial differences exist between them in terms of goals, priorities and staff. For example, the goal of the R&D team at an organisation is to develop an innovative new product using their diverse and complementary skills to complete the project. The R&D team has to cope with many setbacks during the development phase of the product and may not be able to deliver the blueprint on time. But the members of the production department face their own problems: they have to keep to time and budget limits in order to deliver a profitable product. Obviously, this scenario has the potential to become a major source of conflict between the two groups. r +VSJTEJDUJPOBM BNCJHVJUZ $POŴJDU FNFSHFT XIFO HSPVQ CPVOEBSJFT and responsibilities are not well defined. When group tasks and responsibilities are unclear, groups may disagree about which group has responsibility for specific tasks and a claim on resources. On the other hand, when there is a clear delimitation of boundaries the potential for serious conflict diminishes. 150 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation r 1PXFS BOE TUBUVT EJŲFSFODFT 1PXFS BOE TUBUVT EJŲFSFODFT PDDVS XIFOHSPVQTIBWFBMPXTUBUVTJOUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO BOEXIFSFHSPVQ NFNCFSTNJHIUSFTFOUUIFJSMPXTUBUVTBOESFTJTUPUIFSHSPVQTXJUI IJHIFSTUBUVTXIPBUUFNQUUPJOŴVFODFUIFN5IVT HSPVQNFNCFST NJHIU DBVTF DPOŴJDU UP JODSFBTF UIF QPXFS BOE JOŴVFODF PG UIFJS HSPVQTJOPSHBOJTBUJPOT r (PBMEJŲFSFODFT(SPVQTNBZQVSTVFDPOŴJDUJOHHPBMT XIJDINBZ MFBEUPJOUSBHSPVQDPOŴJDU(PBMEJŲFSFODFTCFUXFFOHSPVQTPGUFO PDDVSJOPSHBOJTBUJPOT 7.4.2 Managing organisational conflict 5IF PGUFODJUFE OPSNBUJWF BOE EFTDSJQUJWF NPEFM PG 5IPNBT35 GPS NBOBHJOH DPOŴJDU JT CBTFE PO UXP EJNFOTJPOT 5IF UXP EJNFOTJPOT SFŴFDUEJŲFSFOUDPOŴJDUNBOBHFNFOUTUZMFTJOUFSNTPG UIFEFHSFFPG BTTFSUJWFOFTTXIFOGPMMPXJOHPOFTJOUFSFTU BOEUIFMFWFMPG XJMMJOHOFTT UP BDDPNNPEBUF UIF DPODFSOT PG PUIFST 'JHVSF JMMVTUSBUFT UIF DPOTFRVFOU DPOųHVSBUJPOT PG DPOŴJDU NBOBHFNFOU TUSBUFHJFT UIBU NBOBHFSTDBOVTFUPSFTPMWFDPOŴJDU Assertive Competition Focus on self Unassertive Collaboration Compromise Avoidance Uncooperative Accommodation Cooperative Focus on others Figure 7.2: /anaging conƃict Source: Adapted from Thomas, K.W. 1976. Conflict and conflict management. In Organisational behaviour Brooks, I. (ed.) 2009. 4th edition. London: Pearson Education Limited, p 252. 5IF ųWF DPOŴJDU NBOBHFNFOU TUSBUFHJFT SFTVMUJOH GSPN UIF UXP NBOBHFNFOUTUZMFEJNFOTJPOTBSFUIFGPMMPXJOH "WPJEBODFPOFPSCPUIQBSUJFTDIPPTFUPBWPJEPSTVQQSFTTUIF DPOŴJDU "DDPNNPEBUJPOPOFQBSUZDIPPTFTUPGPDVTPOUIFPUIFSQBSUZT OFFETUPTVQQSFTTPSSFTPMWFUIFDPOŴJDUPSUPTFFLTPNFGPSNPG NBJOUBJOJOHUIFTUBUVTRVP $PNQSPNJTFCPUIQBSUJFTHJWFVQTPNFUIJOHBOEUIFQBSUJFTSFBDI BDPOTFOTVTEFDJTJPO $PNQFUJUJPOUIFGPDVTPG POFPSCPUIQBSUJFTJTPOUIFJSPXO JOUFSFTUT SFTVMUJOHJOEZTGVODUJPOBMDPOŴJDUBOEBXJOMPTFSFTVMU CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 151 PART II: Management in a changing environment 5. Collaboration: differences are met and addressed, resulting in a win-win solution for the parties. Various contingency variables influence the selection and use of a conflict management strategy such as the time available, how critical the issue is, the preferred style of the various parties involved in the conflict, the circumstances under which the conflict takes place and the presence or lack of commitment, motivation and information36. In reaching an agreement, two or more parties need to negotiate with each other. Negotiating skills are essential for managers to have when they engage in political action or try to resolve conflict. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 7.5 NEGOTIATION Provide guidelines on how to apply the two phases of the negotiation process: planning and the actual process. /FHPUJBUJOH is a process in which two or more parties are in conflict and attempt to reach an agreement37. During the negotiating process, conflicting parties frequently use power and influence tactics and resort to political action. Negotiating takes place if there is no fixed outcome to a problem. Thus, negotiation involves a process of communication between parties to reach a lasting agreement that supports shared interests, despite vast differences, by establishing common ground and creating alternatives. Collective bargaining between the management of an organisation and the labour union representing its employees is a familiar scenario that calls for two parties to negotiate a mutually acceptable outcome. The survival of the organisation is important to both parties but management may argue that wage increases will negatively affect the financial results of the organisation and thus the shareholders, whereas the labour union may assert that the welfare of the employees should be the first priority of the organisation and not the shareholders. As the survival of the organisation depends on the input of both parties, they need to negotiate an acceptable outcome. negQtiating a process in which two or more parties are in conflict and attempt to reach agreement 7.5.1 The negotiating process Negotiation need not be a process in which one party’s loss is the other party’s gain, but rather a process of helping each other get what they want. Learning how to negotiate is an essential skill for managers to obtain in order to protect their individual and collective interests. A typical negotiation process comprises two phases: the planning phase and the actual negotiation process38. 7.5.2 The planning phase In the following sections, we provide guidelines to a potential negotiator who enters into a negotiation process with another party on how to reach a negotiated agreement. r 3FTFBSDIUIFPUIFSQBSUZ5IJTTUFQJOWPMWFTHBUIFSJOHJOGPSNBUJPO about the other party. It may involve getting more information about the personality or personalities that will participate in the process 152 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation and the goals they want to achieve by negotiating. This step may include fostering a working relationship with the other party prior to the beginning of the negotiation process. r 4FU PCKFDUJWFT 6TF UIF JOGPSNBUJPO PCUBJOFE JO UIF ųSTU TUFQ UP formulate the goals you aim to achieve through the negotiation process. Formulate three objectives during this planning phase. The objectives should relate to: r BOPQFOJOHUBSHFU XIJDIXJMMCFIJHIFSUIBOXIBUZPVFYQFDU to get r BGBJSBOEBDIJFWBCMFUBSHFU XIJDIJTUIFSFBMPCKFDUJWFZPV want to achieve r BOFYJUUBSHFU XIJDITFUTUIFMJNJUGPSUIFXPSTUPVUDPNFUIBU you are prepared to entertain before walking away from the negotiations. Bear in mind that the other party will also set the same kinds of objectives, so you should try to anticipate what your opponents’ three targets are. r %FWFMPQ PQUJPOT BOE USBEFPŲT /FHPUJBUJPO JT B QSPDFTT PG HJWF and take, so it is necessary for you to plan what you are prepared to give up and what the other party will be prepared to accept as a trade-off. r "OUJDJQBUFUIFJTTVFTUIBUUIFPUIFSQBSUZNJHIUSBJTFBOEQSFQBSF answers. Before entering into negotiation, a negotiator must be fully prepared to answer any questions the other party or parties may ask. It is necessary to anticipate all possible questions that may come up and it is essential to have a good understanding of all the issues at hand. In addition, one needs to prepare the questions you want to ask the other party. 7.5.3 The negotiation phase 4UFQFocus on the issues, not on the individual or individuals. During the actual negotiation process, a negotiator should try to create a good impression. The other party should perceive their opponent as being honest and trustworthy. If a negotiator creates the impression of being a bully, being dishonest, or patronising, the chances of reaching an agreement are likely to diminish. The golden rule in any conflict situation also applies in the negotiation process: concentrate on the issue, not on the person. Effective negotiators avoid personal comments and name-calling at all costs. A negotiator’s aim should be to establish a congenial atmosphere to conclude the negotiations successfully. 4UFQAllow the other party to make the first offer. By allowing the other party to make the first offer, a negotiator can gain an advantage or even close the agreement if the opening offer is equal to or more than the target objective. However, if the opening offer is lower than your target objective, one has to negotiate for a better agreement. If the other party insists on you making the first offer, fend them off by, for example, encouraging them to make their best offer and assuring CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 153 PART II: Management in a changing environment them that you will consider their offer. If the parties cannot agree during this step, the process proceeds to the next step. 4UFQMake sense of the other party’s needs. During the planning process prior to the negotiation, you anticipated and prepared answers to the crucial issues on the table. Now you have to listen to the other party, ask questions and be prepared to make concessions to meet their needs or maybe come to the realisation that it will be impossible to come to an agreement. The other party may also want to ask questions during this stage of the negotiations, offering you the opportunity to stake your claims. 4UFQDo not rush into agreement and ask for something in return. One should not give up easily; try to get the best possible deal from the negotiations by asking for something in return for everything you have to give up, by referring back to the trade-offs that you have planned. Sometimes it may be better to walk away without an agreement than to get a poor agreement. It is essential not to appear as being desperate, but rather as a bargaining party who has other options available. Beware of intimidation and stick to your three objectives if it is at all possible. The negotiation process may conclude with an agreement that satisfies the objectives of all the parties around the negotiating table, which is the best outcome possible. However, sometimes the outcome is less favourable, ending in a stalemate or one or both parties agree to postpone the negotiations. Sometimes it may be wise to postpone an agreement and to take the pressure off the party that wants to delay the outcome and to review what transpired during the negotiating process before re-entering or abandoning the negotiations. Yet another outcome is that the parties do not reach an agreement. How a manager responds to such failure is important because those who will do better the next time learn from their mistakes and continue to work on their political, influence, conflict management and negotiation skills. 154 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Define and discuss power and organisational sources of power. Power is the potential to influence behaviour, to change the course of events, to overcome resistance, and to get people to do things they would not otherwise do. The different definitions of power capture the key terms associated with power: interest, influence and ‘to get people to do what they would not otherwise do’. The sources of power can be categorised into formal power and personal power. Formal power includes: • legitimate power because of an individual’s formal position in an organisation • reward power rests with an individual, such as a manager in an organisation who has the ability to give rewards to reward or reinforce desirable behaviour • coercive power is when an individual can offer or restrict benefits or inflict punishment or control the behaviour of another person. Personal power includes: • referent power • expert power. Other sources of power include: • formal authority • control of scarce resources • organisational structure • control of decision processes • control of knowledge and information • control of boundaries • the ability to cope with uncertainty • control of technology • interpersonal alliances, networks, and control in informal organisations • control of counter organisations • symbolism and the management of meaning • gender and the management of gender relations • the deep structure of power • the power one already has. 2. Explain the relationship between power and interest. People have individual and collective interests and they will use their power to protect their interests. 3. Discuss how people use influence tactics and political action to protect their interests. Power is a prerequisite for influence. Influential people have power, but not all people with power have influence. Influence involves gaining the agreement of others to work with you to achieve a specific goal. Many powerful people cannot do that, for a variety of reasons. Power converts to influence when person B (the target) consents to behave according to the Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:45 PM via UNISA 155 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part II: Management in a changing environment wishes of person A (the agent). Power involves a reciprocal relationship between the agent and the target and the characteristics of the recipient may explain the strength of the agent’s influence over the recipient. Influence tactics include: • pressure • upward appeals • exchange • coalition • ingratiating behaviour • rational persuasion • inspirational appeals • consultation tactics. 4. Explain the various sources of organisational conflict and identify the conflict management strategies. Interpersonal conflict: • Personal differences between individuals working in the same organisation stem from their backgrounds and cultures, levels of education, worldviews, and value systems and give rise to interpersonal conflict. • Poor communication and misinformation result in an individual having the wrong perceptions of another individual in the organisation. • Managers have different functions and roles that are interdependent in contemporary organisations, which may lead to conflict, as their roles may be incompatible. • The internal and external environments of an organisation can lead to interpersonal conflicts. • Individuals compete for the same scare positions in the organisation leading to intense competition and conflict. Intergroup behaviour and conflict: • Competition for scarce resources (financial, human, information and physical) is a major source of conflict. • Task interdependence between groups, where the output of one group becomes the input of another group, may lead to intergroup conflict. • Conflict emerges when group boundaries and responsibilities are not well defined. • Power and status differences occur when one group has a disputable influence over the other. • People may pursue conflicting goals, which may lead to conflict. Goal differences are natural in organisations. The five conflict management strategies resulting from the two management style dimensions entail: • avoidance • accommodation • compromise • competition • collaboration. 156 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:45 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 7 Power, politics, conflict resolution and negotiation 5. Provide guidelines on how to apply the two phases of the negotiation process: planning and the actual negotiating process. The planning phase: • research the other party • develop options and trade-offs • anticipate the issues that the other party might raise and prepare answers. The negotiation phase: Step 1: Focus on the issues, not on the individual or individuals. Step 2: Allow the other party to make the first offer. Step 3: Make sense of the other party’s needs. Step 4: Do not rush into agreement and ask for something in return. KEY TERMS charisma coalitions coercive power collective interest conflict conflict resolution consultation tactics exchange expert power formal power individual interest influence ingratiating inspirational appeals interests legitimate power machiavellian negotiation organisational politics personal power political action power pressure rational persuasion referent power reward power upward appeals REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. the following questions pertain to the opening case study: 1.1 identify the sources of power of the three ‘cast members’. 1.2 Use evidence from the case study to discuss the concept of influence. 1.3 Describe how people used influence tactics to protect their interests. 1.4 identify and discuss the political actions that the executive leadership team used to protect their collective interest. 2. What political actions could you take before a meeting, where your innovative idea is on the agenda, to ensure the highest level of buy-in for the idea at the meeting? Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:45 PM via UNISA 157 PART II: Management in a changing environment END NOTES 1 37 38 Adapted from: Elkind, P., Reingold, J. & Burks, D. Inside a palace coup. Fortune, 15 August 2011. Available [Online] from: http://features.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2011/07/28/. Accessed on 12 April 2013. Pfeffer, J. 2010. Power play, Harvard Business Review, July–August, p 87. Morgan, G. 1997. Images of organization. Thousand Oakes: Sage, p 170. Pfeffer, J. 1992. Managing with power: politics and influence in organizations. Boston: Harvard Business Press, p 30. Johnson, G., Whittington, R. & Scholes, K. 2011. Exploring strategy: text and cases. 9th edition. Financial Times. Prentice Hall, p 160. French, W.L. & Bell, C.H. 199. Organization development; behavioural science interventions for organization improvement. 5th edition. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, p . Luthans, F. 2011. Organizational behaviour. 12th edition. New York: McGraw-Hill International Edition, p 322. French & Bell, op. cit., p 280. Luthans, op. cit., p 322. Senior, B. & Swailes, S. 2010. Organizational change. 4th edition. Essex: Prentice Hall, p 208. Machiavelli, N. 2009. The prince. Richmond, Surrey: Oneworld Classics Limited, translated by J.C. Nichols. 2009. Fagan, G. & Bolger, K. 2013. Cunning colleagues and dirty tactics. Pretoria News, 17 April: 14. (i) French, J.R.P. & Raven, B.H. 1959. The bases of social power. In Senior and Swailes, 2010, p 181. (ii) Luthans, 2010, pp 314–318. Robbins, S.P. & Judge, T.A. 2009. Organizational behavior. 13th edition. NJ: Upper Saddle River: Pearson Education, p 486. Luthans, op. cit., p 317. Ibid. Morgan, op. cit., pp 170–199. Pugh, D.S., Hickson, D.J. & Hinings, C.R. 1996. Great writers on organizations. Cornwall: Ashgate. Gersick, C.J.G. 1991. Revolutionary change theories: a multilevel exploration of the punctuated equilibrium paradigm. Academy of Management Review: 19(1). Ancona, D., Kochen, T.A., Scully, M., Van Maanen, J. & Lewisney, D.E. 2005. Managing for the future: organizational behavior & processes. 3rd edition. Cincinnati: South-Western College, pp M2-38–40. Ibid., pp M2-34–M2-36. Whetton, D.A. & Cameron, K.S. Developing management skills. 7th edition. NJ: Upper Saddle River: Prentice-Hall, p 302. Excerps from: Barnes, M. 2013. On staying one jump ahead of the competition. Business Day, 27 May. [Online] Available from: http://www.bdlive.co.za/opinion/columnists/2013/05/27/on-staying-one-jump-ahead-of-thecompetition. Accessed on 31 May 2013. Luthans, op. cit., p 319. Yukl, G. & Falbe, C.M. 1990. Tactics and objectives in upward, downward, and lateral influence attempts. Journal of Applied Psychology, 75( 2): 132–140. Available [Online] from: Albanyhttp://www.communicationcache.com/ uploads/1/0/8/8/10887248/influence_tactics_and_objectives_in_upward_downward_and_lateral_influence_attempts. pdfInfluence. Accessed on 24 April 2013. Adapted from: Yukl, G. & Falbe, C.M. 1990. Influence tactics and objectives in upward, downward, and lateral influence attempts. Journal of Applied Psychology, 75(2): 132–140. Morgan, op. cit., p 154. Ibid., p 155. Ibid., p 92. Robbins & Judge, op. cit., p 495. Ibid. Ancona et al, op. cit., pp. M2-41–M2-45. Buelens, M., Sinding, K., Waldstrøm, C., Kreitner, R. & Kinicki, A. 2011. Organisational behaviour. 4th edition. Berkshire: McGraw-Hill Higher Education, p 374. Luthans, op. cit., pp 292–293. Brooks, I. 2009. Organisational behaviour. 4th edition. Essex: Pearson Education Ltd, p 252. Thomas, K. W. 1976. Conflict and conflict management. In Organisational behaviour. Edited by Brooks, I. 2009. 4th edition. London: Pearson Education Limited, p 252. Lussier, op. cit., p 164. Ibid., pp 166–169. 158 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Chapter 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance Minka Woermann OPENING CASE Enron The Enron case signifies a historical marker: whereas business ethics received little attention in the period prior to the Enron debacle, this case (along with other similar cases, including WorldCom) ushered in a new era of business ethics management and regulation. The Enron case remains instructive, and as such continues to receive attention in the business ethics literature. In a 2012 media roundup on Enron, Edward Freeman, academic director of the Business Ethics Roundtable Institute for Corporate Ethics, described Enron’s enduring significance as follows: ‘Enron remains an iconic scandal. It defines what is wrong with our current narrative about business. When business focuses only on shareholder value, executive compensation and narrow views of selfinterest, value creation just cannot be sustained. Every viable business creates value for customers, employees, suppliers, communities, as well as investors. Enron is a symbol for companies that have not paid attention to this fact, and still stands as a warning’1. This chapter therefore opens with a short overview of the problems that plagued Enron, and the ethical lessons that we can draw from this case2. Overview Enron was founded in 1985 as an energy delivery company, but by 1988 the deregulation of the energy markets in the United States had taken place and the company had redefined itself as an energy broker. Enron rapidly expanded its market and operations and Fortune magazine named Enron America’s most innovative company for six years running between 1996 and 2001. Enron was also on Fortune’s ‘100 best companies to work for’ list in 2000. By October 2001, however, the cracks started showing and credit agencies downgraded Enron’s credit rating because it had drawn the bulk of its available credit. The Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) started a formal investigation of Enron and Arthur Anderson (Enron’s auditing firm). Enron was subpoenaed and filed for bankruptcy in December 2001. Enron shares, which were priced at $81.39 in January 2001, were worthless by the end of the year. In 2002, Arthur Anderson voluntarily surrendered its licence to practise as certified public accountants. Key figures3 The former chairman and CEO of Enron was Kenneth Lay. He was briefly replaced by his deputy, Jeffery Skilling, who served as CEO of Enron for six months before mysteriously resigning in August 2001. Lay then returned to the helm until the court-appointed creditors committee requested his resignation in January 2002. Lay was initially credited with Enron’s success, but both he and PART II: Management in a changing environment Skilling played a big role in the company’s downfall. Another key figure was Andrew Fastow, Enron’s Chief Financial Officer and the mastermind behind Enron’s fraudulent accounting schemes, which were used to disguise Enron’s debt and liabilities. The aftermath4 Skilling, Lay and Fastow were brought to trial in 2006, and all three men were found guilty on charges of conspiracy and fraud. Lay died of a heart attack in July 2006 before his sentencing. Fastow took a plea bargain, and cooperated with the state to build a criminal case against Enron in exchange for a lighter prison sentence (six years). Skilling, who was found guilty of 19 of the 28 counts against him, was sentenced to 24 years and four months in prison. He appealed the conviction, but the appeal court affirmed the conviction in 2008. What went wrong? The company, which fared exceptionally well during the mid to late 1990s, was faced with a growth crisis by the end of the decade. Enron executives wished to continue the company’s explosive growth, even though they knew that it was not possible. In order to avoid a negative earnings outlook and retain investor confidence and their credit rating, Enron executives employed increasingly questionable accounting practices and crafted a deceiving web of partnerships. These partnerships were referred to as special purpose entities (SPEs). Profits generated by these entities were moved to the official Enron balance statement; whereas the debts on the official balance statement were transferred to the SPEs, in order to artificially inflate the bottom line. These SPEs were presented as partnerships, but in practice, they were subsidiaries. The reason for this misrepresentation is that partnerships are not audited, making it possible for Enron to hide its financial situation from investors. Moreover, many of the recorded profits had not yet been generated. Booking anticipated earnings and shuffling around debts were seen as timing issues rather than ethical issues. Enron employees were overly-confident and believed that over the long term they would 160 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES be able to set things right. In a company in which one was encouraged to show profits at all costs, such behaviour also represented the path of least resistance. Ethical analysis: culture matters more than codes One of the most perplexing aspects of the Enron case is that Enron looked like an excellent company, and was awarded both for its business success and its ethicality. Enron had all the necessary business ethics tools in place and presented itself as a socially responsible corporate citizen. Yet, despite the presence of cultural artefacts such as a code of conduct and a corporate social responsibility (CSR) policy, unethical and illegal activities were condoned and even encouraged. Enron therefore had a ‘deep’ culture that systematically gave precedence to profit over ethics. Enron’s leadership – in part – shaped this culture. According to Edgar Schein5, leadership is essential in creating, maintaining, or changing a company’s culture, and some dimensions of leadership that impact significantly on a company’s culture include attention, role modelling, allocation of rewards, the criteria for selection and dismissal, and the handling of crisis situations. Leaders act as role models for their employees and employees tend to also focus attention on those aspects that are seen as important by leaders. Enron’s leaders were poor moral role models for employees, because their attention was focused solely on profit, power, greed and influence. In fact, Fastow twice suspended the company’s code of conduct so that he could personally benefit from the partnerships, which prompted business journalist Michael Miller6 to say that ‘Enron’s ethics code reads like fiction’. In the absence of moral leadership, Enron’s code and CSR policy became a form of window dressing ethics (in other words, Enron used ethical artefacts to disguise their rotten corporate culture). Not only did leadership set a bad example, but their philosophy of ‘profit at all costs’ was strengthened by the rewards or incentives structure CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance and their labour policies. As regards incentives, top performing employees were rewarded with extravagant bonuses such as luxury sports cars, and executives routinely played favourites. Those who did not perform adequately were retrenched or redeployed. Employee reviews took place in a public forum, and the bottom performers were publicly humiliated by being sent to the retrenchment/redeployment office, which was dubbed ‘the office of shame’. Lay and Skilling had a reputation for hiring only the best and the brightest employees, who showed a willingness to transgress rules, and who were focused on greed and instantaneous gratification. The reward, selection and dismissal processes at Enron promoted greed, selfishness and jealousy within the company. When the crisis finally came to light, the leaders’ values were clearly revealed. Instead of admitting to the imminent downfall of the company, executives denied problems, shifted blame to others and fired scapegoats, and sold off their Enron shares whilst encouraging employees to continue investing in the company. Arthur Anderson responded to the crisis by shredding a significant number of Enron-related documents that could implicate them. Enron and Arthur Anderson therefore did not react to the crisis in an ethically accountable manner, which further contributed to the harm done to shareholders and stakeholders. Conclusion The Enron case proves that, in the first instance, business ethics is about being guided by a set of values. At the media round-up on the significance of Enron today, Andrew Wick7, academic advisor for the Business Roundtable Institute for Corporate Ethics, argued that although money and success are important, corporate goals and norms should be embedded in a larger values framework, because without these values, it will only be a matter of time before the company steers off course. Business ethics artefacts such as codes and CSR policies can support and reinforce a company’s values, but at the end of the day, good ethics is about good people making the decisions, and not about well-written codes or CSR policies. LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of ethics, corporate social responsibility and governance. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Describe the interplay between business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance. . DeƂne Oorality, ethics and business ethics at the hand of eZaOples. . 'Zplain the three diOensions of ethical analysis relevant to business ethics. . DeƂne the three Oost coOOon approaches to norOative ethics. . DeƂne and Ootivate the case for the narrow and broad view of corporate social responsibility. . Discuss conteOporary approaches to corporate social responsibility. . %oOpare the statutory with the voluntary approach to corporate governance. . DeƂne and discuss the three value diOensions that forO the basis for the -ing +++ 4eport. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 161 PART II: Management in a changing environment LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 8.1 THE COMPONENTS OF ETHICAL BUSINESS Describe the interplay between business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance. Brian Moriarty, another director of the Business Roundtable Institute for Corporate Ethics argues that: ‘Enron continues to be part of the conversation because it demonstrated the broader impact of corporate malfeasance on stakeholders beyond just investors… Fortunately, the opposite is also true – corporate exemplary behaviour also has impacts beyond just a strong stock price. Robust, strong and ethical corporations – the majority of companies today – are the leading engines of employment and economic support in the communities in which they operate’8. governance of ethics concerns the management of stakeholder relations and of a corporation’s social responsibilities ethics of governance concerns the development, promotion and direction of an organisation’s ethical culture 162 As is clear from the above citation, ethical business is currently viewed as integral to achieving business success and fostering sustainable business practices. A large part of ethical business practices concern the management of stakeholder relations, where stakeholders are defined as those groups who affect or are affected by the corporation’s activities. Indeed, South Africa’s new Companies Act (Act 71 of 2008) requires that state-owned and public businesses institute social and ethics committees, in order to ensure that stakeholder and societal interests are addressed. Deon Rossouw, executive director of the Ethics Institute of South Africa (Ethics SA), stated in a media release that this new legislation ‘is a welcome recognition of the fact that social and ethical responsibility is integral to good governance – and ultimately a lever of business success’9. However, Rossouw also argued that the legislation falls short of the ideal, since the emphasis is solely on business responsibility towards society, social transformation, and the promotion of employees’ rights in the workplace. What is lacking is a focus on the importance of ‘a strong, ingrained ethical foundation’, which forms the basis of good corporate governance, defined as ‘the system by which companies are directed and controlled’10. The King Report on Governance for South Africa (King III) supplements this lack in the Companies Act, and advocates a more comprehensive approach to addressing business responsibilities, as is clear from principle 1.3, which states that: ‘The board should ensure that the company’s ethics are managed effectively’11. Rossouw advises ‘companies to look beyond the letter of the law and to integrate the ethics management component into the committee’s mandate, as proposed in King III’12. In other words, Ethics SA advocates a holistic approach to business ethics management, in which attention is given to managing both the company’s impact on stakeholders and society (the governance of ethics13) and to the development and promotion of an ethical organisational culture (the ethics of governance14). An important lesson gleaned from the Enron case is that a valuesdriven culture is essential for effective business ethics management. Without such a culture, policies, programmes and ethics committees are unlikely to be effective, especially since socially responsible decisions often require moral judgements that fall beyond the scope of prescribed laws and procedures. Indeed, in the worst case scenario, these business CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance ethics tools may even be employed as a form of window-dressing ethics, as was the case in Enron. However, when employed in a valuesdriven culture, legislation and ethical artefacts can help to strengthen a company’s ethical culture, and can constitute an important source of ethical guidance for employees. Therefore, effective corporate governance is about using business ethics tools to support company values, and to direct and control companies in a manner that promotes an ethical culture, as well as compliance to legislation and best practices in the responsible management of stakeholder and societal interests. Sound governance practices also hold business benefits, and McKinsey research cited in King II indicates: ‘that 84 per cent of global institutional investors would pay a premium for the shares in a well governed company over one considered poorly governed but with a comparable financial record. This premium is highest in emerging markets or markets perceived to have poor governance practices’15. Good governance practices are therefore also good for business, and in order to develop a grasp of what constitutes successful and ethical business practices, it is important to explore the related themes of business ethics and CSR in more detail, as well as to develop our understanding of corporate governance systems. corporate governance entails directing and controlling a company’s operations and relationships in an effective and ethical manner 8.2 BUSINESS ETHICS LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 8.2.1 Morality, ethics and business ethics DeƂne Oorality, ethics and business ethics at the hand of eZaOples. Morality refers to a person or group’s standards for determining right and wrong, good and bad, and what deserves respect and what does not, whereas ethics refers to the evaluation of these moral standards16. In other words, ethics constitutes a type of meta-activity, in which we try to analyse our moral beliefs objectively and critically, in order to determine whether they are based on sound or unsound principles. From birth onwards, we internalise moral principles through a process of socialisation and enculturalisation. Legal, educational, religious and familial institutions are thus important sources of morality. However, since humans govern these institutions, they are vulnerable to human failure and prejudice, and may reflect ethically unsound principles. For example, during apartheid, the social institutions of the day reflected unsound beliefs regarding the inferiority of certain races. Ethical scrutiny is therefore vital, since beliefs that reflect unsound principles may cause a lot of harm to others. As with the definition of ethics, business ethics also concerns the evaluation of the standards that we employ to distinguish between right and wrong, good and bad, and what deserves respect and what does not, but within the specific context of business operations17. Most, if not all, business decisions have a moral dimension, and business ethics – as a field of study – investigates this moral dimension of business operations. Examples of typical themes in business ethics include the ethical issues related to the manufacturing and marketing of products, financial disclosure, employer-employee relations, stakeholder management, business ethics evaluation of the standards that we employ to distinguish between right and wrong, good and bad, and what deserves respect and what does not, within the specific context of business operations CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 163 PART II: Management in a changing environment LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 'Zplain the three diOensions of ethical analysis relevant to business ethics. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 DeƂne the three Oost coOOon approaches to norOative ethics. externalities, loyalty and whistle-blowing. Although it is beyond our scope to examine all these themes in detail, it is important to note that the ethical issues arising from these themes are often quite complex. Issues such as competing obligations to stakeholders, uncertain consequences arising from business operations, and changing legal and governance requirements can present a challenge to the ethical management of companies. Moreover, managers are often not even aware of the ethical dimensions of business decisions; since, as Trevino and Brown18 note: ‘Rarely do decisions come with waving red flags that say, “Hey, I am an ethical issue. Think about me in moral terms!”’ In this regard, the study of business ethics can help us to better identify, analyse and propose solutions for the ethical challenges that we face in the everyday practice of business, in order to ensure that companies are managed ethically. There are three dimensions of ethical analysis that are especially important areas of study in business ethics. These dimensions are the normative dimension, which is focused on the normative foundations and justifications for individual and group behaviour; the organisational dimension, which is defined by the tacit and explicit norms and rules that characterise a company’s culture, and that direct individual behaviour; and the macro ethical dimension in which institutions that constrain and shape our business practices are investigated. These three dimensions are investigated in more detail below. 8.2.2 Normative ethical theories and moral decisionmaking An important dimension of business ethics concerns the normative foundation of, and justification for, our individual and group decisions. In this regard, knowledge of influential normative ethical theories can normative ethical theory help us in our decision-making. These theories, which are introduced defines and systematises the in moral philosophy, define the principles that we should employ principles that we employ when when making moral judgements. Different normative ethical theories making moral decisions and prescribe different principles for morally correct action, but the three judgements most common approaches to normative ethics are consequentialism (where the morality of an action is judged according to the positive homo economicus model long-term consequences that the action holds); deontology (where the humans are rational beings who morality of an action is judged according to the action’s adherence to a seek to maximise both monetary rule or set of rules); and virtue ethics (where the morality of an action is and non-monetary utility the outcome of the moral agent’s virtuous nature). Enron’s executives and employees were guided by egoism in their decisions and actions. Egoism is a consequentialist approach, in which an action is deemed morally right if it promotes the long-term interests of an individual or organisational agent. Enron’s philosophy of ‘profit at all costs’ shows that they were only interested in enriching themselves, even if it was at the expense of others. The irony, however, is that in focusing solely on their own 164 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES interests, they eventually caused their own downfall. Although egoism informs the homo economicus model of human nature, as employed by Adam Smith19 in his theory on the ‘invisible hand of the market’ it is not, however, viewed as a theoretically sound position. The reasons for this are that egoism is not a reliable basis for distinguishing between right and wrong because it does not limit self-interest, it does not promote cooperation (since everyone only CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance acts in self-interest), and it ignores blatantly wrong actions20. Although at times we are guided by selfinterest, human nature is complex, and altruism (ie concern for the well-being of others) often informs our judgements and decisions. Normative ethical approaches Consequentialism Deontology Virtue ethics Morality = consequences of an action Morality = action’s adherence to a set of rules Morality = character of a good person Consequences for whom? Egoism Utilitarianism Altruism Morality = self-interest Morality = interests of everyone involved Morality = interests of others Figure 8.1: Normative ethical approaches Although it is beyond the scope of this chapter to treat these three approaches in any detail, it is important to note that that which is deemed as ethically acceptable, is contingent on the specific normative theory that one adheres to. In order to illustrate this point, consider the example of a manager who has to decide whether to continue with a multinational company’s operations in a corrupt context. She may decide to base her decision on utilitarianism, which is also a consequentialist approach. However, unlike egoism, the morally appropriate action under utilitarianism is the one that holds the most positive long-term consequences for the majority of people affected by a specific action. Using utilitarianism, the manager may reason that the benefits arising from the company’s passive compliance with a corrupt regime are greater than the benefits that will result from ceasing operations, since a number of primary stakeholders such as employees, suppliers and CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 165 PART II: Management in a changing environment consumers are directly dependent on the company for their livelihoods, and will suffer greatly if the company closes office. Therefore, according to utilitarianism, the moral course of action in this specific instance may well be to continue with operations, even though the rights of a number of people may be indirectly harmed by this decision. In contrast, if the manager were to argue according to a deontological approach – which informs human rights-based approaches to ethics – continuing with operations would be deemed immoral. Passive compliance with a corrupt regime contributes to the infringement of citizens’ fundamental rights and freedoms (which, in the case of human rights-based approaches, constitute the set of rules that should inform moral action). Therefore, no matter how many good consequences result from the company’s enduring operations, these operations can never be morally justified from a deontological human rights-based approach. If the manager acted according to virtue ethics, she would have to ask herself: ‘What would a good person do in this situation?’ There is no one answer to this question, but a virtuous person would try to determine the right grounds for a moral course of action. Such a person could, for example, argue that one should try to reduce or prevent harm to stakeholders, whilst campaigning for the fundamental rights and freedoms of the country’s citizens. According to this argument, a virtuous manager may recommend that the company continue with its operations for the time being, but that the company should also use its economic clout to pressurise government to act democratically. The fact that competing normative ethical theories lead to conflicting outcomes proves that, although useful in guiding our moral decisionmaking, these theories cannot dictate right action. In other words, normative ethical theories should not be applied as moral recipes. Rather, individual interpretation, judgement and evaluation should always inform the decision-making process. 8.2.3 Contextual and systemic influences organisational culture the tacit and explicit organisational norms and rules that direct individual behaviour 166 Moral standards (and the ethical evaluation of these standards) pertain to the beliefs held by individuals or groups of individuals; however, the contexts in which decisions are enacted also affect our perceptions of appropriate or inappropriate behaviour. We tend to reserve ethical judgement for individual or group decisions, and although this is an important task, both the internal and external operating environments should also be subjected to ethical scrutiny. With regard to the internal operating environment, organisational goals, incentive structures and the behavioural example of leaders contribute to the tacit and explicit norms and rules that define organisational culture, which in turn directs individual behaviour. As is clear from the Enron case, these contextual factors are critical in determining what is viewed as appropriate behaviour within a particular organisational setting. Corporate goals (such as profitability) are often not moral in nature and may even be immoral (as was the case with Enron’s ‘profit-at-all-costs’ orientation). Moreover, organisational CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance members are encouraged to conform to these goals and norms, and many organisations do not promote critical thought, or may even punish those who speak out against morally dubious organisational practices. (For example, Enron’s whistle-blower, Sherron Watkins, stated that she was not comfortable confronting Skilling or Lay with her concerns, as she believed that ‘[t]o do so… would have been a job-terminating move’21.) In such contexts specifically, ethical scrutiny is essential, since without a critical attitude we risk being complicit in unethical, and even illegal, corporate actions. With regard to the external operating environment, macroinstitutions determine the appropriate ‘rules of the game’ that direct business activities. These rules change over time, and are themselves subject to ethical scrutiny. This task falls under the domain of macroethics which is defined as the study and evaluation of the social, economic, political, environmental and cultural systems (and the interrelations between these systems), which enable and constrain business activities, and which shape our practices. In order to illustrate the importance of macro-ethical analyses, consider the example of the 2008 financial crisis. Although greedy individuals certainly carry some blame, the crisis is largely attributed to unsound economic policies and loose regulations. When asked about the similarities between Enron and the financial crisis, Andrew Wick22 responds that in both instances we see ‘systemic failures [and] lots of stakeholders and firms that participated or turned a blind eye’. He however argues that one of the big differences between Enron and the market participants who contributed to the financial crisis is that ‘these [Enron] folk knew what they were doing’. In contrast, ‘some firms that contributed to the financial crisis had no idea what they were doing or the risks they were taking – whether from ignorance, hubris, or failure to understand a highly complex system (or all three)’. The complexities that business managers face today are greater than ever before, and often it is difficult to know what the responsible course of action is. However, at the very least, business (especially big business), should recognise that, because they wield immense economic influence, they have to take responsibility for the influence that they exert on the external operating environment. Turning a blind eye and pleading ignorance cannot serve as an excuse. In this regard, one could argue that market players are also responsible for the financial crisis to the degree that they defined systemic risk outside of their sphere of influence and responsibility, and uncritically enforced unsound policies and regulations. From the above, it should be clear that business ethics involves three levels or dimensions of ethical evaluation, namely an analysis of individual or group decisions and actions, an analysis of the tacit and explicit rules and norms that constitutes a company’s culture, and an analysis of the institutions that define the rules of the game in which business operates. All three dimensions are crucial for understanding the nature of business decisions and actions, since these decisions and actions are the outcome of individual, group, cultural and systemic considerations. macro-ethics the study and evaluation of the social, economic, political, environmental and cultural systems (and the interrelations between these systems), which enable and constrain business activities, and which shape our practices CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 167 PART II: Management in a changing environment LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 8.3 CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY DeƂne and motivate the case for the narrow and broad view of corporate social responsibility. Ethical business is constituted by a solid values-based foundation (which, as gleaned from the above, is influenced by individual, contextual and systemic factors), and by the effective and ethical management of corporate responsibilities to stakeholders and society. In this section, we shall investigate the scope of business responsibilities, as well as explore contemporary approaches to managing CSR. 8.3.1 The narrow view of CSR In the narrowest sense, a corporation’s responsibilities are limited to making profits for its shareholders. The conservative economist, Milton Friedman, is the main advocate of this view of CSR, and he gives a detailed defence of his position in his book entitled, Capitalism and Freedom (1962). Herein, Friedman argues that: ‘There is one and only one social responsibility of business – to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits as long as it stays with the rules of the game, which is to say, engage in open and free competition, without deception or fraud’23. Friedman gives an economic, rather than a moral, justification for the ‘rules of the game’. Without adherence to elementary moral rules to rule out deception, force or fraud, the market cannot function properly, which, in turn, diminishes the efficiency of the economic system. Anything that interferes with the market mechanism should therefore be prohibited, and for Friedman this includes the acceptance of more social responsibilities by business. In this regard, Friedman explicitly argues that: ‘Few trends could so thoroughly undermine the very foundations of our free society as the acceptance by corporate officials of a social responsibility other than to make as much money for their stockholders as possible’24. promissory relation the agreement that executives will act in the economic interest of shareholders 168 Apart from hampering the market mechanism, Friedman also argues that if corporate executives were to accept more social responsibilities, they would, in effect, violate the promissory relation. According to Friedman, this promissory relation exists between executives (or managers) and shareholders (or owners) and amounts to the agreement that executives will act in the economic interests of shareholders. Extending CSR obligations diverts business from its proper goal (i.e. making profits for shareholders) and, in effect, turns business into an arm of the state (because business is now fulfilling government’s duties). Not only does CSR undermine business, but Friedman also argues that it is unethical. This is because, in accepting social responsibilities and using shareholder money to achieve these social objectives, executives effectively impose a ‘tax’ on shareholders. However, unlike government officials, executives are not democratically elected, and therefore do not have the right to make decisions regarding the allocation of funds for social objectives. Although Friedman’s argument is still considered significant, many shareholders today believe that sound ethical practices and the responsible management of stakeholders is good for business, and thus CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance view an extended notion of CSR as consistent with their long-term interests. Furthermore, the diversification of corporate equity holding patterns resulted in a shift in the meaning of shareholder interests, and today it is widely believed to be in the interest of shareholders to spread social expenditure across companies25. Apart from the potential gains that may arise from good CSR practices and the changing nature of shareholding patterns, many would argue that business also has a moral duty to accept a broader view of CSR. 8.3.2 The broad view of CSR The proponents of the broad view of CSR argue that, at the very least, business has a negative duty to refrain from harming society. Business transactions often result in externalities, which are the unintended positive or negative consequences that an economic transaction between two parties can have on a third party26. An example of a negative externality is industrial pollution, since often communities have to bear the costs of pollution, but are not a recognised party in the transaction between consumers and the polluting company. In such a situation, fairness demands that the responsible business or industry either absorbs the costs (by, for example, installing filters to lessen the pollution) or compensates the community for damages. The problem of negative externalities therefore constitutes the first good reason for extending the scope of CSR beyond profit making. However, many feel that CSR should be even further extended to also include positive duties, understood as business’ responsibilities to actively and directly contribute to the welfare of society, either through core business or through philanthropic activities. A second argument for extending our view of CSR can be made with reference to the social contract. The social contract expresses the implicit relation between business and society, whereby society grants business the ‘licence to operate’ through public consent, in the expectation that business will address certain societal needs. Thomas Donaldson27 explains the motivation behind the social contract as follows: ‘Corporations considered as productive organizations exist to enhance the welfare of society through the satisfaction of consumer and worker interests, in a way which relies on exploiting corporations’ special advantages and minimizing disadvantages.’ social contract the implicit agreement whereby society grants business the ‘licence to operate’ through public consent, in the expectation that business will address certain societal needs The exact content of the social contract is contingent on the specific context in which businesses operate. Whereas in Friedman’s day, economic returns and sound business practices might have constituted the main terms of the social contract, Melvin Anschen28 already noted in 1970 that soon ‘it will no longer be acceptable for corporations to manage their affairs solely in terms of the traditional internal cost of doing business, while thrusting external costs on the public.’ A third justification for the broader view of CSR concerns businesses’ economic influence. Keith Davis29, a contemporary of Anschen, argued in 1975 that businesses’ social responsibility arises from social power. Today, business (especially big multinational companies) CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 169 PART II: Management in a changing environment stakeholder theory a theory of the moral management of organisational stakeholders wields enormous socio-economic power, and the influence that these companies have in the world should not be underestimated. Indeed, in many cases, the annual revenue of multinational corporations exceeds the gross domestic product (GDP) of a number of countries. For example, for the fiscal year 2010, Wal-Mart30 reported revenue of $421 849 billion, Exxon Mobil’s31 revenue was $370 125 billion, and Royal Dutch Shell’s32 revenue was $368 056 billion. In contrast, South Africa’s GDP for the year 2010 was $525 806 billion, and according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF)33, South Africa ranks as the world’s 25th largest economy. From the IMF’s list of the 183 economies, 155 reported a lower 2010 GDP than Wal-Mart’s 2010 revenue. This fact alone serves as a strong justification for the broader view of CSR, since corporations cannot ignore the effects that they have on society, nor the responsibilities that they have towards society. A fourth justification for extending CSR concerns businesses’ responsibility towards stakeholders. Stakeholder theory is viewed as an important way in which to flesh out and materialise the broad notion of CSR. Narrowly defined, stakeholders constitute those groups that are vital to the success and the survival of the organisation and include employees, managers, suppliers, consumers and shareholders; whereas in broad terms, stakeholders are defined as any group who affects or is affected by the organisation and can include the government, society and competitors. The father of stakeholder theory, Edward Freeman, argues that the goal of business is to create value for its stakeholders, and that, in order to do so, one should integrate ‘business and ethics within a complex set of stakeholder relationships rather than treating ethics as a side constraint on making profits’34. The challenge in stakeholder theory is to manage conflicting claims and minimise trade-offs between stakeholders. This will only be possible if companies recognise that they have a responsibility towards stakeholders, and not only towards shareholders. Indeed, Freeman argues that strengthening business relations with stakeholders is essential for restoring the public’s trust in business, and in this regard, he states that: ‘We need to focus on the value that businesses create for its customers, suppliers, employees, communities, and its financiers. Government needs to lift up examples of companies like Whole Foods, Google, and others who have put value creation for stakeholders ahead of a narrow view of profits. Great companies have great purposes, and we need to realize that and demand it of our business’35. The harm inflicted on both shareholders and other stakeholders by unethical practices, and the collapse of big companies such as Enron, is proof of the importance of good CSR practices. Companies must realise that they not only have a fiduciary duty towards their shareholders, but that their operations often have a profound impact on society. Business should not be viewed in isolation from the environments in which they are embedded. We are all interconnected in numerous and complex ways and responsible business demands that we look beyond our own interests and try to account for the nature, and degree, to which our business practices affect others. 170 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance NARROW VIEW BROADER VIEW Advocate: Keith Davis; Melvin Anschen; Thomas Donaldson; Edward Freeman ,ustiƂcation: Social contract (Anschen; Donaldson) Social power (Davis) Stakeholder value creation (Freeman) Stakeholders: Owners, managers, employees, customers, suppliers, communities, environment CSR paradigm: Stakeholder model Advocate: Milton Friedman CSR POSITIVE RESPONSIBILITIES NEGATIVE RESPONSIBILITIES ,ustiƂcation: Promissory relation Shareholder value creation Stakeholders: Owners, managers CSR paradigm: Shareholder model PROFIT nFirst do no harmo eZternalities Actively contributing to the common good Figure 8.2: Corporate social responsibility – two views 8.3.3 Approaches to CSR36 Not only are there different views regarding the scope of, and justification for, CSR, but differences also prevail with regard to how CSR should be operationalised, especially when CSR obligations are extended beyond the profit motive. Since first being coined in 1953, the concept of CSR has gradually converged with corporate performance, and, as MingDong Paul Lee notes, this trend has worked in both directions: ‘On the one hand, the concept of CSR has expanded to envelop both economic and social interests on macro-political as well as organizational levels. On the other hand, the concept of corporate performance also broadened to cover economic as well as social interests on institutional as well as organizational levels’37. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 Discuss contemporary approaches to corporate social responsibility. The effects of this trend are particularly evident in terms of the content of CSR practices. Whereas in the past, corporate philanthropy was most often associated with good CSR practices, today core business or competencies are increasingly being harnessed for developmental impact. This shift signifies a greater integration of CSR with business practices. In the voluntarism-model, core business continues to deliver shareholder value, whereas philanthropy or isolated CSR-practices deliver stakeholder value. In the core-business model, companies seek to deliver both shareholder and stakeholder value through corporate activities. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 171 PART II: Management in a changing environment Caroline Ashley38 notes that initiatives to adapt core business for developmental impact have only started developing in the last ten years, and include concepts such as ‘Bottom of the Pyramid’ (BOP) (where companies market and develop products for billions of poor consumers, in order to make profits whilst reducing poverty); ‘Creative Capitalism’ (which was coined by Bill Gates, and which refers to capitalism that works by generating profits whilst solving social inequalities); ‘Social Business’ (in which profitable business reinvests in companies that seek to help the poor); ‘Ethical Trade’ (which is concerned with decent labour standards); and, ‘Inclusive Business’ (which has fewer ethical connotations than CSR and embraces wider concepts, such as marketing for the poor). In Kenya, UK tour operator involvement helped secure government backing for an initiative to secure fair returns for Masai villagers Standard Chartered Bank’s professional staff contribute their time to community programmes Staff and expertise A Sri Lanka beer company used its plant to produce clean water for Oxfam to distribute after the tsunami Physical resources Core competencies Google Earth uses its cutting edge technology to help Amazonian Indians monitor and convey forest destruction Convening power Virgin supports entrepreneurial incubation in South Africa, Entrepreneurial aiming to talent share its own expertise Technology Distribution networks Access to consumers British Airways has raised £25 million for UNICEF since 1994 by providing customers with opportunities to donate currency Mexico’s largest banking company delivers its products to retailers accompanied by microcredit loan advisors who make a presentation to retailers while the driver unloads the products Figure 8.3: Harnessing core competencies Source: Ashley, C. 2009. Harnessing core business for development impact, background note, Overseas Development Institute (ODI), February 2009. Ashley39 argues that the core business approach extends traditional CSR practices, but also excludes certain traditional CSR elements, and therefore overlaps, but is not synonymous with, what is generally considered as CSR. The main argument for the core business approach is that, unlike certain CSR practices, it is not an add-on but integral to business. In addition, although traditional CSR practices are often only associated with the fulfilment of negative duties, the core business approach moves beyond problem mitigation to embrace and develop opportunities for the previously excluded. In practice, however, Ashley 172 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance argues that the clear distinction between CSR and the core business approach is problematised, in that this approach often incorporates standards of responsible business practices, which are key to CSR; the core business approach is viewed as one type of CSR practice; and, to initiate projects related to core business often requires the expertise of staff in the CSR department, who have experience with developmental projects beyond mere operational deliverables. In the future, we are likely to see an increasing emphasis on the core business approach as a means for companies to meet their CSR obligations. 8.4 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE Combining sound business ethics practices (the ethics of governance) with the effective management of CSR obligations (the governance of ethics) is, as stated in Section 8.1, indicative of good corporate governance practices. It is argued that ‘[c]orporate governance provides the basis to protect shareholders, to treat stakeholders fairly, and ensure transparency and accountability for managers’40. According to the World Bank41, corporate governance should be based on four pillars, namely responsibility, accountability, fairness and transparency (the ‘RAFT’ values). How these values are promoted in practice is contingent on the specific governance framework that is adhered to. Broadly-speaking, there are two approaches for formalising good governance, namely the statutory and voluntary approaches to corporate governance. ‘Good corporate governance increases the integrity and effectiveness of the private sector and helps markets to operate more effectively. This matters for many reasons, including: r BWPJEBODFPGCVTJOFTTTDBOEBMT XIJDIEBNBHF USVTUJOCVTJOFTT r WBMVFQMBDFEPOHPPEDPSQPSBUFHPWFSOBODFCZ institutional investors r HSPXJOHJOWPMWFNFOUPGUIFQSJWBUFTFDUPSJO r r r r service delivery OFFEGPSTZTUFNTUPQSFWFOUBOEEFUFS corruption in developing countries UIFEFSFHVMBUJPOBOEJOUFHSBUJPOPGDBQJUBM markets SFDPHOJUJPOPGUIFJNQPSUBODFPGIBSOFTTJOH EPNFTUJDTBWJOHTGPSFDPOPNJDHSPXUI UIFSJTLPGųOBODJBMDSJTJTBOEDPOUBHJPO’42. 8.4.1 The statutory approach to corporate governance LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7 One of the most significant developments following from the Enron case and other similar cases of corporate accounting fraud at the time was the passing of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX), which is the United States’ corporate governance report. Ira Millstein, a prominent figure in the corporate governance debate, argues that SOX constitutes an attempt to institutionalise best practice through legislation. In Millstein’s43 words: ‘Sarbanes-Oxley simply turned what you should do into what you must do’. Millstein further argues Compare the statutory with the voluntary approach to corporate governance. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 173 PART II: Management in a changing environment comply or else model the legislative approach to corporate governance, in which compliance with requirements is a prerequisite that SOX reversed the paradigm of lax governance by placing ‘total responsibility for good corporate behaviour and good fiscal reporting back with the board of directors’. This is because SOX requires that chief executives and chief financial officers personally sign off on their companies’ financial statements. The statutory approach, which is sometimes referred to as the comply or else model, is a quantitative box-ticking approach to corporate governance, and complying with the requirements is a prerequisite. This model has been criticised for being too draconian, and has been likened to ‘using a sledgehammer to kill an ant’44. Furthermore, complying with Sarbanes-Oxley can be a very time-consuming and costly exercise, and many companies have shifted their listings to more relaxed jurisdictions. It is stated in the King III Report that ‘[t]he total cost to the American economy of complying with SOX is considered to amount to more than the total write-off of Enron, WorldCom and Tyco combined’45. Nonetheless, many are of the opinion that strict regulations are essential for restoring public trust and promoting responsible business. Journalist Jesse Eisinger46 argues that SOX has led to a decrease in the size and number of accounting scandals, and to an improvement in the oversight of the accounting industry. In the United States, the trend to legislate governance is on the increase and in July 2010 the Dodd-Frank Wallstreet Reform and Consumer Protection Act was enacted. This law – which aims to regulate the financial industry, break up companies that are ‘too big to fail’, and strengthen whistle-blower protection47 – is described by Eisinger as ‘more sweeping, more pilloried and more complicated’ than SOX. Whereas many feel that such an act is necessary to prevent a crisis similar to that of 2008, others say that the act is far too draconian. 8.4.2 The voluntary approach to corporate governance In contrast to the statutory approach, the voluntary approach is followed in both the United Kingdom and South Africa. The voluntary approach is a qualitative, principle-based approach, which means that good governance practices are recommended, but companies can choose whether to comply with the principles or not. Judge Mervin King, chairman of the committee responsible for South Africa’s King Report on Governance for South Africa (King III), argues that a principle-based approach to corporate governance is superior to a rule-based approach because it promotes intellectual honesty. In this regard, he states that: ‘[y]ou can have all the bloody rules in the world, but you cannot legislate honesty. And, I’ll tell you, as a corporate lawyer, I’ve found it’s much easier to get around a rule than a principle’48. According to the voluntary model, a company has a choice to comply with the governance recommendation or principles. If the company chooses not to comply, the board must motivate their decision to shareholders. As stated in the UK Corporate Governance Code of 201049, companies must explain why ‘they believe that their existing 174 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance arrangements ensure proper accountability and underpin board effectiveness.’ For this reason, the voluntary approach is often referred to as the comply or explain approach. The King I and King II Reports were based on the ‘comply or explain’ approach, but the ‘apply or explain’ approach is followed in the King III Report. This approach, which was also adopted in the Netherlands Code, is motivated in the King III Report as follows: ‘The ‘comply or explain’ approach could denote a mindless response to the King Code and its recommendations whereas the ‘apply or explain’ regime shows an appreciation for the fact that it is often not a case of whether to comply or not, but rather to consider how the principles and recommendations can be applied’50. comply or explain approach a voluntary approach to corporate governance, in which directors can choose whether to comply with the principles and guidelines that are advocated, as long as their explanation for non-compliance meets with shareholder approval The apply or explain approach thus better encapsulates the principlebased approach (which, as stated above, is based on intellectual honesty) and signifies a shift from mindless compliance to mindful application. This approach to corporate governance is similar to the ‘comply or explain’ model, but it demands a more serious engagement with, and application of, the recommended principles and guidelines. The voluntary approach, however, has also been criticised, because – although it aims to promote intellectual honesty – it cannot guarantee ethical behaviour. Furthermore, because corporate governance is not legislated, the prosecution rate under this model is also low. In South Africa, the Companies Act legislates many of the recommendations made in the King III Report (especially as concerns the duties and responsibilities of directors). Although critics argue that the Companies Act makes the King III Report redundant, a more fruitful approach is to view the King III Report as ‘a valuable guide to directors and other office bearers to ensure compliance with the provisions of the Companies Act’51. Regardless of whether one supports a statutory or voluntary approach to corporate governance, it is important to remember that good governance is about sound business practices. Charles Elson, another expert in the field of corporate governance, summarises this point as follows: ‘Good governance isn’t really innovative – it’s just going back to basics. It’s going back to the fact that the key to business is that operations drive accounting, not the other way round’52. apply or explain approach 8.5 THE KING REPORT ON GOVERNANCE FOR SOUTH AFRICA LEARNING OBJECTIVE 8 The King III Report (henceforth referred to as the Report), became effective on 1 March 2010. The Report (which is accompanied by a comprehensive Code) applies to ‘entities incorporated in and resident in South Africa’53, and spells out the framework for governance compliance. In the introduction to the Report, it is stated that ‘[t]he philosophy of the Report revolves around leadership, sustainability and corporate citizenship’54, and in this final section, these value dimensions of the Report will be briefly investigated. a voluntary approach to corporate governance, which is similar to the ‘comply or explain’ model, but which demands a more serious engagement with, and application of, the recommended principles and guidelines DeƂne and discuss the three value dimensions that form the basis for the King III 4eport. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 175 PART II: Management in a changing environment 8.5.1 Corporate citizenship According to Malcolm McIntosh55, an international figure working in the field of corporate citizenship, the term ‘corporate citizenship’ implies a concern for the social, environmental and economic performance of companies; and a concern for the role, scope and purpose of companies. In the Report, it is explicitly stated that responsible corporate citizenship corporate citizenship involves ‘social, environmental and economic issues’56 (the so-called ‘people, planet and profit’ issues). Companies a concern for the social, are accordingly encouraged to report on all three these dimensions, environmental and economic performance of companies; and and not only on their financial bottom-line. Corporate citizenship also necessitates that companies acknowledge, and take responsibility for, a concern for the role, scope their status and role in society. In the Report it is stated that the concept and purpose of companies of corporate citizenship ‘flows from the fact that the company is a person and should operate in a sustainable manner’57. Companies are defined as ‘social entities with both rights and responsibilities, and as such, the Bill of Rights applies to them in a manner that goes beyond mere financial considerations’58. The Report therefore endorses a view of companies as both legal and moral entities; and, in this regard, it is argued that companies have ‘social and moral standing in societies, with all the responsibilities attached to that status’59; and, that ‘[r]esponsible corporate citizenship implies an ethical relationship between the company and the society in which it operates’60. The argument put forward in the Report in support of treating companies as responsible corporate citizens seems to be that, because companies are powerful public actors, they have a responsibility to respect the rights of natural citizens in society61. In practice, corporate citizenship therefore operates as a synonym for CSR. How these responsibilities are enacted is dependent on the unique operating context; which, as stated in the Report, means that ‘[t]here is no uniform or universally applicable approach to responsible citizenship programmes… each company should develop its own policies to define and guide its activities’62. The Report places responsibility for the ethical and effective governance of the company on the board of directors, and it is explicitly stated that ‘[t]he board should ensure that the company is and is seen to be a responsible corporate citizen’63. In order to achieve this end, the board has two over-arching responsibilities: ‘first it is responsible for determining the company’s strategic direction (and, consequently, its ultimate performance); and second, it is responsible for the control of the company’64. 8.5.2 Ethical leadership ethical leadership directing and controlling a company in a way that promotes good corporate governance 176 In order for the board to exercise its responsibilities successfully and ensure that the company is a good corporate citizen, strong ethical leadership is needed. Ethical leadership is where a company is directed and controlled in a way that promotes good corporate governance. As stated in the Report: ‘Good corporate governance is essentially about effective, responsible leadership’65. According to the Report66, this involves building sustainable business; reflecting on the role of business in society; doing business ethically (which also implies valuing personal CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance and institutional ethical fitness, and practising corporate statesmanship); not compromising the natural environment or intergenerational welfare; and, embracing a shared future with all the company’s stakeholders. As advocated in the Report, the board should accept the following additional responsibilities, in order to achieve the above-mentioned goals67: r %JSFDUBOEDPOUSPMUIFDPNQBOZJOBNBOOFSUIBUQSPNPUFTHPPE corporate governance practices. r &OTVSFUIBUNBOBHFNFOUDVMUJWBUFTBDVMUVSFPGFUIJDBMDPOEVDUBOE sets the values to which the company will adhere. r &OTVSFUIBUJOUFHSJUZQFSNFBUFTBMMBTQFDUTPGUIFDPNQBOZBOEJUT operations. r "MJHOUIFCPBSETBOENBOBHFNFOUTDPOEVDUXJUIUIFDPNQBOZT values. r $POTJEFSUIFMFHJUJNBUFJOUFSFTUTBOEFYQFDUBUJPOTPGUIF company’s stakeholders in the board’s deliberations, decisions and actions. Board members should set the example for ethical conduct in an organisation, but are also responsible for promoting an ethical organisational culture and looking after stakeholder interests. As such, boards play an important leadership role. 8.5.3 Sustainability In the Report, it is stated that ‘[a] key challenge for leadership is to make sustainability issues mainstream. Strategy, risk, performance and sustainability have become inseparable’68. Sustainability issues are presently at the forefront of the global agenda, and the significance of sustainable action is described in the Report as follows: ‘Sustainability is the primary moral and economic imperative of the 21st century. It is one of the most important sources of both opportunities and risks for business. Nature, society, and business are interconnected in complex ways that should be understood by decision-makers. Most importantly, current incremental changes towards sustainability are not sufficient – we need a fundamental shift in the way companies and directors act and organise themselves’69. sustainability the long-term maintenance of systems according to environmental, economic and social considerations At a very basic level, sustainability is concerned with systems maintenance, which means that our actions should not impact on a system in ways that threaten its long-term viability. In other words, sustainability shows a concern for intergenerational equity, in that present actions should not hamper the ability of future generations to satisfy their needs. Although the term has its roots in environmental management and analysis, the sustainability concept has been extended to include social and economic aspects. The reason for this is that it is impossible to consider environmental sustainability ‘without also considering the relevant communities and their activities’70. Another reason for the extension of the term is that, if sustainability implies a concern for the equity of future generations, then, logically, it should also imply a concern for current generations. In taking the above into consideration, Andrew CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 177 PART II: Management in a changing environment Crane and Dirk Matten71 offer the following definition of sustainability: ‘Sustainability refers to the long-term maintenance of systems according to environmental, economic and social considerations.’ Environmental sustainability concerns ‘the effective management of physical resources so that they are conserved for the future’72. Biosystems and natural resources are finite, and are negatively impacted by a number of human activities, including industrialisation, the continued use of nonrenewable resources, and the use of damaging environmental pollutants. Not only do these activities threaten the sustainability of biosystems, but they also pose a threat for economic sustainability. In South Africa specifically, environmentally-sustainable operations have become imperative. In this regard, the former Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism in South Africa, Martinus van Schalkwyk, is referenced in the Report as stating that ‘if South Africa continued with business as usual, greenhouse gas emissions would quadruple by 2050 and, in the process, South Africa would become an international pariah’73. As explained by Crane and Matten74, economic sustainability ‘initially emerged from economic growth models that assessed the limits imposed by the carrying capacity of the earth’. This led to a focus on the impact that our activities have on future generations, and an attempt to mitigate this impact. In terms of business ethics, economic sustainability can be narrowly interpreted as a concern for the long-term economic performance of a company, or more broadly interpreted as a ‘company’s attitude towards and impact upon the economic framework in which it is embedded’75. This broader view of economic sustainability is supported in the Report, and is underscored by the focus on both corporate citizenship and integrated reporting (in which market capitalisation is defined in terms of a company’s economic, as opposed to book, value)76. The youngest, but arguably most influential, sustainability development is social sustainability. The debate on social sustainability – which gained prominence in the 1990s – ‘marked a significant shift in the way that notions of sustainability were conceptualized’77. According to Crane and Matten78, the key issue in this debate is social justice, particularly the implications for justice resulting from income disparities, the gap between richer and poorer countries, and the under-provision and deterioration of basic services in many countries across the world. In South Africa particularly, social transformation remains imperative to achieving social sustainability, and in the Report it is specifically argued that ‘[s]ocial transformation and redress from apartheid… should be integrated within the broader transition to sustainability… in a strategic and coherent manner [which] will give rise to greater opportunities, efficiencies, and benefits, for both the company and society’79. It is also argued in the Report that the ‘[i]nclusivity of stakeholders is essential to achieving sustainability and the legitimate interests and expectations of stakeholders must be taken into account in decisionmaking and strategy’80. In this regard, it is interesting to note that mention is made in the Report of the unique African philosophy of Ubuntu, as a way of respecting the fundamental dignity and rights of stakeholders. Ubuntu, which is captured in the expression ‘uMuntu ngumuntu 178 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Chapter 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance ngabantu’, ‘I am because you are; you are because we are’, promotes ‘mutual support and respect, interdependence, unity, collective work and responsibility’81, and can become an important framework for promoting corporate citizenship and sustainability in South Africa. Apart from focusing on corporate citizenship, ethical leadership, sustainability, stakeholder governance and integrated reporting, the King III Report also describes the board’s responsibilities in terms of internal audits and audit committees, risk governance, information technology governance, and compliance. As previously mentioned, the Report is an important supplement to the Companies Act, and a useful guide for Directors to ensure compliance with the Companies Act. CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Describe the interplay between business ethics, CSR and corporate governance. • CSR pertains to the responsible management of stakeholder and societal interests, whereas business ethics concerns the institutionalisation of a values-driven corporate culture. • Corporate governance combines CSR management (the governance of ethics) and business ethics management (the ethics of governance), in order to promote the ethical and effective direction and control of a company’s operations and relationships. 2. Define morality, ethics and business ethics at the hand of examples. • Morality refers to a person’s or group’s standards pertaining to right and wrong, good and bad, and what deserves respect and what does not (for example, it is commonly believed that it is morally wrong to lie). • Ethics refers to an evaluation of moral standards (for example, apartheid beliefs pertaining to the superiority of one race over another are unsound and therefore ethically wrong). • Business ethics refers to the evaluation of moral standards in the context of business operations (for example, a business ethical issue concerns the degree of loyalty that one should have towards your company). 3. Explain the three dimensions of ethical analysis relevant to business ethics. • The first dimension concerns the normative foundation of, and justification for, individual and group decisions. • The second dimension concerns the tacit and explicit norms and rules that define a company’s culture, and that direct individual behaviour. • The third dimension concerns the social, economic, political, environmental and cultural systems, which enable and constrain business activities, and which shape our practices. 4. Define the three most common approaches to normative ethics. • According to consequentialism, the morality of an action is either judged according to the positive long-term consequences that an action holds for oneself (egoism) or for everyone affected by the situation (utilitarianism). • According to deontology, the morality of an action is judged according to the action’s adherence to a set of rules, for example a list of commonly accepted human rights. Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:46 PM via UNISA 179 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part II: Management in a changing environment • According to virtue ethics, the morality of an action is the outcome of the moral agent’s virtuous nature. 5. Define and motivate the case for the narrow and broad view of corporate social responsibility. • The narrow view of CSR states that the only responsibility of business is to make profit, as long as it stays within the rules of the game. • The narrow view is justified on the basis of the superiority of an unrestricted market, the nature of the promissory relation, and the proper separation and legitimisation of government and business responsibilities. • The broad view of CSR states that business has both a negative duty to refrain from harming society, and a positive duty to contribute actively to the welfare of society. • The broad view is justified on the basis of the costs of negative externalities, the social contract (which exists between business and society), the size and power of business, and the importance of managing stakeholder relationships. 6. Discuss contemporary approaches to corporate social responsibility. Whereas philanthropic activities characterise traditional CSR, the core business approach (which links corporate performance and social interests) is gaining traction. Examples of this approach include bottom of the pyramid, creative capitalism, social business, ethical trade and inclusive business. 7. Compare the statutory with the voluntary approach to corporate governance. • The statutory approach to corporate governance is quantitative and rule-based, and complying with requirements is a prerequisite. An example of this approach, which is also referred to as the ‘comply or else’ model, is the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. • The voluntary approach to corporate governance is qualitative and principle-based. Directors can choose whether to implement the principles or not, and if they decide not to, they must motivate their reasons to the shareholders. This approach characterises both the ‘comply or explain’ model (adopted in the UK Corporate Governance Code of 2010) and the ‘apply or explain’ model (adopted in the King III Report and the Netherlands Code). 8. Define and discuss the three value dimensions that form the basis for the King III Report. • The three dimensions are corporate citizenship, ethical leadership and sustainability. • Corporate citizenship is a concept that draws attention to the social, economic and environmental performance of companies; as well as to the role, scope and purpose of companies. The term is often used synonymously with CSR. • The King III Report advocates triple-bottom line reporting, and argues that companies have responsibilities beyond financial considerations. According to the King III Report, companies have moral and social standing in societies, and the board is responsible for ensuring that the company acts as a responsible corporate citizen. • Ethical leadership has to do with directing and controlling a company in a way that promotes good corporate governance. • The King III Report lists the board’s additional responsibilities as cultivating an ethical culture, ensuring that the company operates with integrity, ensuring that leaders’ and managers’ conduct are aligned with company values, and considering stakeholders in decisions and actions. 180 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:46 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Chapter 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance • Sustainability refers to the long-term maintenance of systems according to environmental, economic and social considerations. • In the King III Report, sustainability is defined as the moral and economic imperative of the twenty-first century. The Report emphasises the importance of environmental sustainability (which, in South Africa, is threatened by high levels of greenhouse gas emissions); economic sustainability (which, according to the King III Report, means that market capitalisation should be defined in terms of a company’s economic, as opposed to book, value); and, social sustainability (which, according to the King III Report, means addressing stakeholder issues and issues pertaining to social transformation). KEY TERMS apply or explain model business ethics Companies Act comply or else model comply or explain model consequentialism core business for developmental impact corporate citizenship corporate governance corporate social responsibility (CSR) deontology Dodd-Frank Act Enron ethical leadership ethics the ethics of governance the governance of ethics homo economicus model King III Report (2010) macro-ethics Milton Friedman morality negative duty normative ethical theory organisational culture positive duty promissory relation Sarbanes-Oxley Act (2002) social contract stakeholder theory sustainability virtue ethics REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Using the Enron case, explain why good governance cannot only be a matter of ethical artefacts. 2. Why is it necessary to subject our moral standards and beliefs to ethical scrutiny? 3. Why should ethical analyses be extended beyond the examination and justification of individual and group decisions? 4. Would prosecuting the only doctor at a rural hospital for stealing supplies be morally justifiable? Motivate your answer from a utilitarian, deontological human rights-based and virtue ethics perspective. 5. Critically compare the narrow and broad view of corporate social responsibility, and form an opinion as to which approach is more suited to our current business context. 6. Discuss contemporary approaches to corporate social responsibility. 7. What are the differences between the statutory and voluntary approaches to corporate governance? 8. Discuss the concept of sustainability and motivate why sustainability is a moral and economic imperative of the twenty-first century. Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:46 PM via UNISA 181 PART II: Management in a changing environment END NOTES %XVLQHVV5RXQGWDEOH,QVWLWXWHIRU&RUSRUDWH(WKLFV>2QOLQH@Ł(QURQ\HDUVODWHUŋPHGLDURXQGXSŋEXVLQHVVHWKLFV H[SHUWTXRWHVł-DQXDU\$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZGDUGHQYLUJLQLDHGXFRUSRUDWHHWKLFV(QURQBPHGLDBURXQGXSB KWP$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK 8QOHVVRWKHUZLVHLQGLFDWHGWKLVFDVHVWXG\LVDGDSWHGIURP6LPV5 %ULQNPDQQ-(QURQHWKLFV RUFXOWXUH PDWWHUVPRUHWKDQFRGHV Journal of Business Ethics, ŋ %%&1HZV:RUOG(GLWLRQ>2QOLQH@(QURQ.H\ğJXUHV$YDLODEOHKWWSQHZVEEFFRXNKLEXVLQHVVVWP $FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK 1HZ<RUN7LPHV>2QOLQH@,QWHUDFWLYHWLPHOLQHWKHULVHDQGIDOORI(QURQ$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZQ\WLPHVFRPUHI EXVLQHVVB(1521B*5$3+,&KWPO$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK 6FKHLQ(Organizational Culture and Leadership. 6DQ)UDQFLVFR-RVVH\%DVV 0LOOHU0(QURQłVHWKLFVFRGHUHDGVOLNHğFWLRQColumbus Business First, $SULO>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWS ZZZEL]MRXUQDOVFRPFROXPEXVVWRULHVHGLWRULDOKWPO"SDJH DOO$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK %XVLQHVV5RXQGWDEOH,QVWLWXWHIRU&RUSRUDWH(WKLFVRSFLW ,ELG (WKLFV,QVWLWXWHRI6RXWK$IULFDSocial and ethics committees: look beyond the letter of the law to maximize business benefits0HGLDUHOHDVHYLDHPDLO)HEUXDU\RSFLW &DGEXU\$The Code of Best Practice. Report of the Committee on the Financial Aspects of Corporate Governance*HHDQG&R/WG ,QVWLWXWHRI'LUHFWRUV ,R' King Report on Governance for South Africa (King III) Institute of Directors. 0DUFK3ULQFLSOH (WKLFV,QVWLWXWHRI6RXWK$IULFDRSFLW 5RVVRXZ*-7KHHWKLFVRIFRUSRUDWHJRYHUQDQFH&UXFLDOGLVWLQFWLRQVIRUJOREDOFRPSDULVRQVInternational Journal of Law and Management, ŋ (WKLFV,QVWLWXWHRI6RXWK$IULFDRSFLW ,ELG 6KDZ: %DUU\9 Moral Issues in Business. WKHGLWLRQ. %HOPRQW&$:DGVZRUWK7KRPVRQ/HDUQLQJ ,ELG 7UHYLQR/. %URZQ0(0DQDJLQJWREHHWKLFDOGHEXQNLQJğYHEXVLQHVVHWKLFVP\WKVAcademy of Management Executive, ŋ 6PLWK$ The Wealth of Nations. 1HZ<RUN0RGHUQ/LEUDU\ 6KDZ %DUU\RSFLW 6LPV %ULQNPDQQRSFLW Business Roundtable Institute for Corporate EthicsRSFLW )ULHGPDQ0 Capitalism and Freedom. &KLFDJR8QLYHUVLW\RI&KLFDJR3UHVVS ,ELG /HH0'3$UHYLHZRIWKHWKHRULHVRIFRUSRUDWHVRFLDOUHVSRQVLELOLW\bLWVHYROXWLRQDU\SDWKDQGWKHURDGDKHDG International Journal of Management Reviews ŋ 6KDZ %DUU\ 'RQDOGVRQ7&RQVWUXFWLQJDVRFLDOFRQWUDFWIRUEXVLQHVV,QBusiness Ethics: A Philosophical Reader HG 7,:KLWHŋ1HZ<RUN0DF0LOODQ3XEOLVKLQJ&RPSDQ\SSŋ $QVFKHQ0&KDQJLQJWKHVRFLDOFRQWUDFWDUROHIRUEXVLQHVVColumbia Journal of World Business ŋ 'DYLV.)LYHSURSRVLWLRQVIRUVRFLDOUHVSRQVLELOLW\Business Horizons -XQHŋ 182 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 8 Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance :DOPDUW$QQXDO5HSRUW>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWSZDOPDUWVWRUHVFRPVLWHVDQQXDOUHSRUWğQDQFLDOV :DOPDUWBB$QQXDOB5HSRUWSGI$FFHVVHGRQ)HEUXDU\ ([[RQ0RELO6XPPDU\$QQXDO5HSRUW>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZH[[RQPRELOFRP&RUSRUDWH)LOHVQHZVBSXEVB VDUBSGI$FFHVVHGRQ)HEUXDU\ 5R\DO'XWFK6KHOO$QQXDO5HSRUW>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZVWDWLFVKHOOFRPVWDWLFLQYHVWRUGRZQORDGV ğQDQFLDOBLQIRUPDWLRQUHSRUWVVKHOOBBDQQXDOBUHSRUWBIBSGI$FFHVVHGRQ)HEUXDU\ ,QWHUQDWLRQDO0RQHWDU\)XQG ,0) :RUOG(FRQRPLF2XWORRN'DWDEDVH>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHIURPKWWSZZZLPIRUJ H[WHUQDOSXEVIWZHRZHRGDWDLQGH[DVS[$FFHVVHGRQ)HEUXDU\ )UHHPDQ5(0DQDJLQJIRUVWDNHKROGHUV,QEthical Issues in Business: a Philosophical ApproachHGV 7'RQDOGVRQDQG3+:HUKDQHŋ1HZ-HUVH\3HDUVRQ3UHQWLFH+DOOS %XVLQHVV5RXQGWDEOH,QVWLWXWHIRU&RUSRUDWH(WKLFVRSFLW 7KLVVHFWLRQLVWDNHQIURP:RHUPDQQ0On the (Im)Possibility of Business Ethics: Critical Complexity, Deconstruction, and Implications for Understanding the Ethics of Business.'RUGUHFKW6SULQJHUSSŋ /HHS $VKOH\&%DFNJURXQGQRWHKDUQHVVLQJFRUHEXVLQHVVIRUGHYHORSPHQWLPSDFW2YHUVHDV'HYHORSPHQW,QVWLWXWH )HEUXDU\$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZRGLRUJXNUHVRXUFHVGRFVSGI$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK ,ELG 7KHEnterprise Development Impact Assessment Information Service (',$6 >2QOLQH@Ł+RZWRSURPRWHJRRGJRYHUQ DQFHł$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZVHGPDQFKHVWHUDFXNUHVHDUFKLDUFHGLDLVSGI+RZWR3URPRWH*RRG&RUSRUDWH*RYHUQDQFH SGI$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK Global Corporate Governance Forum >2QOLQH@Ł$FRUSRUDWHJRYHUQDQFHPRGHOEXLOGLQJUHVSRQVLEOHERDUGVDQGVXVWDLQ DEOHEXVLQHVVHVłPrivate Sector Opinion,QWHUQDWLRQDO)LQDQFH&RUSRUDWLRQ:RUOG%DQN*URXS$YDLODEOHKWWS ZZZZGVZRUOGEDQNRUJH[WHUQDOGHIDXOW:'6&RQWHQW6HUYHU:'63,%B 5HQGHUHG3')%5,*&*)%R[%38%/,&SGI$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK The Enterprise Development Impact Assessment Information Service (',$6 %LVRX[7:KDWLVJRRGJRYHUQDQFH" BizEd,0DUFK$SULOŋRSFLW :LOPRW-7KHZRUOGRIFRUSRUDWHJRYHUQDQFHLVIRUFHQHFHVVDU\"Financial Mail,-XO\S ,R'LQWURSDUD (LVLQJHU-7KH62;ZLQKRZğQDQFLDOUHJXODWLRQFDQZRUN Propublica)HEUXDU\$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZ SURSXEOLFDRUJWKHWUDGHLWHPWKHVR[ZLQKRZğQDQFLDOUHJXODWLRQFDQZRUN$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK TechTarget>2QOLQH@Ł'RGG)UDQN$FWł$YDLODEOHKWWSVHDUFKğQDQFLDOVHFXULW\WHFKWDUJHWFRPGHğQLWLRQ'RGG)UDQN $FW"YJQH[WIPW SULQW$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK %LVRX[RSFLWS Financial Reporting Council>2QOLQH@Ł7KH8.&RUSRUDWH*RYHUQDQFH&RGHł-XQH$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZIUFRUJ XNGRFXPHQWVSDJHPDQDJHUFRUSRUDWHBJRYHUQDQFHXNFRUSJRYFRGHMXQHSGI$FFHVVHGRQ 0DUFK3UHIDFHSDUD ,R'LQWURSDUD Deloitte >2QOLQH@Ł&RPSOLDQFHZLWK.LQJ,,,DQGWKH&RPSDQLHV$FWł$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZGHORLWWHFRPYLHZHQB=$]D VHUYLFHVDXGLWGHORLWWHDXGLWNLQJLLLGGHHD9JQ9&0EEID5&5'KWP$FFHVVHGRQ 0DUFK %LVRX[RSFLW ,R'LQWURSDUD ,R'LQWURSDUD 0F,QWRVK07KHHFRORJ\RIFRUSRUDWHFLWL]HQVKLSUDLVLQJWKHODGGHUWRWKHPRRQ"The Journal of Corporate Citizinshipŋ ,R'LQWURSDUD ,R'LQWURSDUD ,R'FKDSSDUD CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 183 PART II: Management in a changing environment ,R'FKDSSDUD ,R'FKDSSDUD 0DWWHQ'&UDQH$ &KDSSOH:%HKLQGWKHPDVNUHYHDOLQJWKHWUXHIDFHRIFRUSRUDWHFLWL]HQVKLSJournal of Business Ethics, ŋŋ ,R'FKDSSDUD ,R'SULQFLSOH ,R'FKDSSDUD ,R'FKDSSDUD ,R'FKDSSDUDŋ ,R'FKDSSDUDŋ ,R'FKDSSDUD ,R'LQWURSDUD &UDQH$ 0DWWHQ'Business Ethics: A European Perspective. Managing Corporate Citizenship and Sustainability in the Age of Globalisation2[IRUG2[IRUG8QLYHUVLW\3UHVVS &UDQH 0DWWHQS ,ELG ,R'LQWURSDUDRSFLW &UDQH 0DWWHQS ,ELG ,R'LQWURSDUD &UDQH 0DWWHQS &UDQH 0DWWHQ ,R'LQWURSDUD ,R'LQWURSDUD ,R'FKDSSDUD 184 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Chapter 9 Workforce diversity OPENING CASE Hellicy Ngambi OPENING CASE Nike Inc. Imagine working in an environment where everyone thinks the same, acts the same, maybe even looks the same. Nobody and nothing gets challenged and the status quo is maintained in absolute peace and tranquillity. Appointments at such an organisation can be seen as cloning. Thankfully we have Nike Inc. as an example to use as an opening case to this chapter where none of this holds true. History Nike Inc. was founded in 1954 by Bill Bowerman and Phil Knight. Initially, it was named Blue Ribbon Sports. Their business inspiration was to provide sportsmen with high quality shoes, which started from selling shoes from the trunk of a car after sporting events. In 1978, Blue Ribbon ended its relationships with its prime supplier Onitsuka Tiger and officially became Nike Inc. In 1980, Nike gained 50 per cent of the market share. Today, the company is the world’s largest athletic footwear and apparel supplier. Nike has a huge global presence, employing 30 000 employees representing many parts of the globe with the mission ‘To bring inspiration and innovation to every athlete in the world’. The company harnesses diversity and inclusion to inspire ideas and ignite innovation. Strategic values According to Nike’s human resources management policy, diversity and inclusion is what drives creativity and innovation in the company. It takes every one of over 30 000 employees working at the top of their ability, for Nike to reach its highest potential. The company realises that outstanding teams are composed of diverse people, with diverse opinions, diverse backgrounds, diversity of perspective and diverse skills sets. In order to achieve their mission, Nike has put various strategies into action: r $VMUJWBUFEJWFSTJUZBOEJODMVTJPOUPEFWFMPQ world-class, high performing teams. r *HOJUFDIBOHFBOEJOTQJSFDSJUJDBM conversations around diversity, inclusion and innovation. r $SFBUFWFOVFTBOEFOWJSPONFOUTGPSPQFO dialogue, diverse opinions and a multitude of perspectives. Defining diversity at Nike Inc. The central idea of managing diversity is that organisational improvement is achieved through recognising, valuing, promoting and utilising diversity where diversity refers to all sorts of differences between individuals. PART II: Management in a changing environment At Nike, diversity is categorised into two types: r PCTFSWBCMFEJŲFSFODFTMJLFOBUJPOBMJUZPSBHF r VOEFSMZJOHEJŲFSFODFTMJLFWBMVFTBOETFYVBM orientation. Nike Inc. benefits from diversity Nike has enjoyed great benefits from having a strategy and policies governing the management of diversity, such as: r 4USBUFHJDCFOFųU5IFEFWFMPQNFOUBOE implementation of the Nike diversity principles not only affected the company’s turnover and market share, but also the overall reputation of the organisation. r $SFBUFDPNQFUJUJWFBEWBOUBHF/JLFIBTB strong belief that diversity creates competitive advantage, both in attracting, developing and leveraging diverse talent inside the company as well as building strong brand relationships with diverse consumers world-wide. This has led to the appointment of the company’s first Vice President of Diversity in 2006. The global diversity and inclusion team that was formed shortly afterwards focused on engaging employees, providing business consultation and developing innovative tools, models and designs. r (SFBUFSBEBQUBCJMJUZBOEŴFYJCJMJUZ3FTJTUBODF to change is reduced, and the company’s workforce readily embrace broader believes and ideas. r (BJOJOHBOELFFQJOHHSFBUFSNBSLFUTIBSF" diversified company receives the benefits of a diverse market and thus also a greater than normal market share. 186 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES r 4VQQMJFSEJWFSTJUZ/JLFTDPNNJUNFOUUP diversity extends beyond its employee base to the work that they undertake with their suppliers. Their supplier diversity programme supports purchases from women and minority business owners. For three consecutive years, the company has been rated by diversitybusiness.com as America’s top organisation for multicultural business opportunities. Nike’s success in developing and maintaining a diverse workforce under a single platform can be ascribed to the fact that it was driven from the top of the organisation, embraced as a strategic value and intent, deployment of mature and well-structured diversity training at management and workforce level, and finally the establishment and employment of a Vice President of Diversity, focusing on engaging employees, providing business consultation, and developing innovative tools, models and designs. The opening case illustrates the management of diversity at Nike Inc., as a mechanism to improve the company’s effectiveness. This is also the focus of this chapter, which aims at equipping the learner with knowledge to create an environment that allows all workers to contribute optimally to organisational goals and experience personal growth. This includes allowing all employees to have access to jobs as well as facilitating fair and positive treatment in the workplace. Skills and competencies are introduced to develop employees so that they are comfortable working with others from a wide variety of ethnic, racial, religious, and various other backgrounds. CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of diversity in the workplace. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: . &eƂne and eZplain the various dimensions of diversity. 2. Provide reasons for the increased focus on managing workforce diversity. . 'Zplain the need for diversity management in 5outh #frica. 4. Recommend strategies for managing diversity. . 5uggest ways to perform diversity training in an organisation. 9. 1 DIMENSIONS OF DIVERSITY LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 9.1.1 The realities of diversity &GƂPGCPFGZRNCKPVJGXCTKQWU dimensions of diversity. We South Africans refer to ourselves as the ‘rainbow nation’ because our nation includes people of many different races, languages and religions. While we all share the important dimensions of the human species, biological and environmental differences separate and distinguish us as individuals and groups. This vast array of differences constitutes a spectrum of human diversity and causes us to perceive and interpret similar situations differently. One of the most fundamental aspects of managing people with different life experiences is the fact that they may interpret reality very differently. By the time people enter organisations, the way they perceive and respond to the world around them will largely have been determined by the environment in which they were brought up. One’s family, friends, type of school attended, as well as the culture in which one was brought up, shape one’s cognition and influence one’s perceptual bias. One of the major challenges facing South African organisations is workforce diversity. Working with people whose values, attitudes, beliefs, perceptions, languages, and customs are very different from one’s own can make for costly misunderstanding, miscommunication, misperception, misinterpretation, and misevaluation. Many countries in the world can be described as radically pluralist societies. Such societies comprise practically every conceivable kind of human plurality; their populations are extremely heterogeneous in terms of race, ethnicity, culture, language, sexual orientation, religion, conceptions of good or bad, etc. Safeguarding such a society from the potentially destructive conflicts that arise so easily in radically pluralist or diverse societies is a complex task2. South African society can at best be described as a radically pluralist society, therefore the potential for destructive conflicts exists if the design of its social institutions does not ensure fairness to all its members3. Table 9.1 on the next page illustrates ethnic, gender, employment and linguistic diversity in South Africa. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 187 PART II: Management in a changing environment Table 9.1: South African demographics Estimates for South Africa by population group and gender, 2010 Male Population group African Female Per cent of total population Number Total Per cent of total population Number Per cent of total population Number 19 314 500 79.4 20 368 100 79.4 39 682 600 79.4 2 124 900 8.7 2 299 200 9.0 4 424 100 8.8 646 600 2.7 653 300 2.5 1 299 900 2.6 White 2 243 000 9.2 2 341 700 9.3 4 584 700 9.2 Total 24 329 000 100 25 662 300 100 49 991 300 100 Coloured Indian/Asian Source: www.statssa.gov.za South Africa is a nation in the midst of a profound transformation. Diversity in South Africa is all the more dynamic and complicated as the result of a history of legislated race separation. South Africa is experiencing demands by black people and women for inclusivity in decision-making and in the sharing of wealth in the workplace. Under the former apartheid system, South African organisations operated in an environment of protectionism propped up by government support. The best jobs were reserved for white employees. There was, therefore, limited workforce diversity to be managed. In 1994, apartheid ended with the adoption of a new constitution and South Africa redefined itself as a democratic, non-racial society. More recently, Parliament passed the Employment Equity Act, which seems to have spurred greater debate on the issue of transforming the country’s business organisations towards true diversity. Table 9.2: Employment representation by occupational level, race and gender (percentages) Operational level Male A Female C I Top management 12.9 2.9 Senior management 12.6 4.3 Professionall[ SualiƂed eZperienced specialists middle management W Other nationals A C I W M 5.0 58.4 5.9 1.0 1.1 9.8 2.8 5.8 50.0 5.5 1.8 2.4 15.2 1.9 0.4 15.5 5.3 5.6 38.7 8.6 3.2 3.1 18.5 1.0 0.4 Skilled, technical, junior management 30.5 7.2 4.0 20.3 13.6 5.6 2.7 15.3 0.8 0.1 Semi-skilled 44.3 6.7 2.1 3.7 22.6 8.1 2.3 6.2 4.2 0.1 Unskilled 55.5 6.0 0.8 0.8 25.4 5.8 0.5 0.3 4.8 0.1 Non-permanent employees 39.6 6.0 4.0 4.7 31.8 5.6 1.8 5.7 0.6 0.1 Source: Department of Labour. Commission for Employment Equity Report 2007/2008, pp 7–10. 188 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES F 0.03 CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity Despite the new constitution and government legislation mandating employment equity, most South African organisations remain white male-dominated, as indicated in Table 9.2. White men still occupy the bulk of empowered and well-paid management positions. The above might provide an explanation for the pressure that organisations are receiving from the South African government to address the imbalances. In certain cases, this pressure has created resentment and dysfunctional conflict, which pose unique diversity challenges for South Africa. The implication of this is that managing diversity in South Africa is not only the right or profitable thing to do, as for example in the USA, but is also a necessity for survival. 9.2 MISCONCEPTIONS OF DIVERSITY Because of all the early misconceptions about diversity, it would probably be easier to understand what diversity is by first ascertaining what it is not. 9.2.1 Diversity is not culture A crucial mistake many people make in defining diversity is to equate it with culture. They think diversity training means teaching people about ‘what Asians are like’, ‘characteristics of blacks’, or ‘what women want’. While this approach may appear sound on the surface, it is inherently flawed because all it does is reinforce stereotypes. That is what we are trying to overcome by valuing diversity in our organisations. This approach reinforces an ‘us versus them’ mentality. It focuses only on the ways we are different, without including the ways in which we are alike. It is exclusive, not inclusive. Valuing diversity extends far beyond culture to include all the primary and secondary dimensions illustrated in Figure 9.1. SECONDARY DIMENSIONS education religious beliefs marital status PRIMARY DIMENSIONS age gender parental status ethnicity Person physical ability sexual orientation military experience race work background geographic location income Figure 9.1: Dimensions of diversity Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishing. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 189 PART II: Management in a changing environment Figure 9.1 explains how we are all similar and different in a wide variety of dimensions. The primary dimensions include variables such as race, age, ethnicity, physical qualities, gender, and sexual orientation. These are variables that people cannot change. The secondary dimensions of diversity are not as fixed, and they include variables such as education, religious beliefs, and work background, to name but a few. Thus culture is only one of the dimensions of diversity. By recognising that diversity is a phenomenon that applies to everyone, we can realise that it is a quality that we can all value and support. 9.2.2 Diversity is neither equal employment opportunities nor affirmative action People tend to assume that diversity is just a repackaging of equal employment opportunities (EEO) and affirmative action (AA), which are mainly about ‘quota filling’. This is a detrimental and divisive view. While EEO and AA are necessary steps and have their place in correcting past imbalances, they are distinctly different from valuing diversity as shown in Table 9.3. Both EEO and AA are laws that are imposed on people and create an adversarial environment. Also, there is the belief that these two concepts mean that less qualified people should be given jobs, instead of more qualified, ‘traditional’ employees. The insinuation is that we have to help the designated classes of people because they are not really qualified enough to succeed on their own merits. This only adds to the conflict, reinforces stereotypes, and destroys the very same people it is meant to serve by having them promoted to levels of incompetence if not accompanied with appropriate training and development to empower them to do their jobs. Table 9.3: The major differences between EEO/AA and diversity EEO/AA Diversity government initiated voluntary (organisation driven) legally driven productivity driven quantitative qualitative problem focused opportunity focused assumes assimilation assumes integration internally focused internally and externally focused reactive proactive Source: Cascio, W.F. 2003. Managing human resources. Boston: Irwin, p 121. As shown in Figure 9.2 on the next page, unless management responds effectively to these reactions, the organisations will continue to experience a decline in productivity, increased retrenchments, and unemployment, which would result in a poor economy. 190 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity AfƂrmative action in a slump economy Reaction of previously disadvantaged workers Reaction of previously privileged workers Organisational/management response If not managed properly If managed properly $itterness, antagonistic fear, anger, guilt and aggression. Shared will to survive, valuing of differentness. .eads to decline in productivity, increase in retrenchment and unemployment. *ence, poor economy. .eads to productive, supportive, transparent and effective organisations. *ence, prosperous economy. Figure 9.2: AfƂrmative action in a slump economy Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishing. Valuing diversity, on the other hand, affirms that people’s differences are seen as an asset rather than a burden to be tolerated. In valuing diversity, we acknowledge that we may have preconceived ideas that can blind us from seeing the value that non-traditional employees bring. Only the most qualified candidate is given the job; but we have to transcend our biases about what is ‘most qualified’. An organisation that emphasises quota filling as part of its diversity effort will undermine the true intent of valuing diversity; instead emphasis should be put on accelerated training and development of the previously disadvantaged groups to equip them with competences, which will enable them to do the job effectively. 9.2.3 Diversity is not an absence of standards People sometimes believe that valuing diversity means, ‘anything goes’ – that we give up our standards for hiring and promoting people. In fact, diversity is the very opposite. Because we are removing our preconceived ideas about who is qualified for a job, we must create better definitions of actual job requirements. For true equality to happen, there needs to be less emphasis on race, gender, and other differences, and an increased focus on a person’s capabilities, and system adjustments that support diversity. Only this approach will create a process that is naturally equal for everyone. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 191 PART II: Management in a changing environment 9.2.4 Diversity is not a vendetta against white males To some, diversity symbolises a more enlightened society, a reflection of our future as global citizens. To others, it breeds resentment. These two extreme views are at the heart of the issue of diversity – and are the reasons why efforts to promote diversity so often fail. Although well intentioned, a focus on only culture, race, and gender, which ignores ability and competence – and which blames the white male for past injustices – only intensifies the division between groups, instead of bringing them together to create a more productive workplace. Understandably, the historical, homogeneous group of white male workers created the South African workplace on the bases of their own similar backgrounds, styles, perspectives, values, and beliefs. But the changes in the international and national management environment regarding diversity have forced organisations to change, and now even the needs of the original homogeneous group have changed. Unfortunately, the people who created the system are often labelled ‘the bad guys’ when the system needs updating. In effect, positioning diversity so that one group must take continuous blame for the past makes the ultimate goal – greater unity – impossible. While it is important to acknowledge the past wrongs, it is critical to look to the future by addressing the past imbalances without blaming one group. 9.3 WHAT IS DIVERSITY? Now that we’ve explored the misconceptions about diversity and what it is not, let us look at what it is. 9.3.1 Diversity is about demographics Major demographic changes have occurred in South Africa during the past decade. We have moved from a situation in which the law regulated where people could live, what kind of work they could do, and with whom they could socialise, to a situation where the human rights of people are protected by a modern constitution. These changes have had a major impact on the way organisations function, on whom they employ, and with whom they do business. In the opening case we saw Nike Inc.’s success in developing and maintaining a diverse workforce as a diverse group of suppliers – all playing a major role in the success of the company. 9.3.2 Diversity is about profitability While affirmative action focuses on eliminating discrimination or righting past wrongs, valuing diversity is a bottom-line issue about increasing productivity and profitability. In fact, valuing diversity is one of the few social issues in which the business community is actually leading the way. Why? Because it is profitable, it fosters teamwork, and it helps organisations identify and meet the needs of their customers and consumers. The organisations that have understood and used their understanding of diversity innovatively have found that they have a competitive advantage in the marketplace. Nike Inc. has a strong 192 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity belief that diversity creates competitive advantage, both in attracting, developing and leveraging diverse talent inside the company as well as building strong brand relationships with diverse consumers worldwide. 9.3.3 Diversity is about values Having said that diversity is a business issue, we must also affirm that it relates to people’s values. Although people are sometimes more comfortable in keeping this an impersonal issue, diversity has to do with human rights, civil rights, and deeply-held beliefs. It forces people to question years of social conditioning to which they have been subjected since birth. For some people, diversity is even related to their religious beliefs. How do we balance people’s rights to their personal values with the organisation’s right to create a productive workplace? We do so delicately, tactfully, respectfully, and also firmly, openly, and persistently. We admit that valuing diversity is a personal decision; we focus on diversity as a business decision. Diversity and inclusion are cornerstones of Nike Inc.’s strategic values, and it is what drives creativity and innovation in the company. 9.3.4 Diversity is about behaviour Regardless of our personal beliefs, our organisations expect us to work in the most productive manner possible, and valuing diversity is much more productive than not valuing it. At Nike Inc., observable differences like nationality and age, as well as underlying differences like values and sexual orientation, are recognised, valued, promoted and utilised. 9.3.5 Diversity is a long-term process Diversity is a large-scale change effort that extends far beyond training, and must therefore be viewed as a long-term process. Organisations that make a long-term commitment to a comprehensive strategy, which includes training, will not be disappointed and will be able to see lasting benefits. It should not be seen as a problem but rather a mixture of people with different group identities within the same social system. It is an opportunity.5 Diversity is everyone’s responsibility and not just that of the human resource department. It is not just about race and gender, nor the previously disadvantaged groups in the workplace. It is about internal customers (employees) and external customers (prospective clients). Diversity is not exclusive but inclusive – it is about all of us. It is about creating a culture where each individual can thrive and contribute to the organisation. Diversity is not another fad. If you look at your workforce today and compare it to five or ten years ago and then try to imagine it five or ten years into the future, you will see that diversity is not a fad. Do the same analyses for your customer base. The changes we see happening now will continue for the foreseeable future. At Nike Inc., diversity is a strategic value, focusing on the long-term vision and mission of the company. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 193 PART II: Management in a changing environment 9.4 WHAT IS WORKFORCE DIVERSITY? Many people in South African organisations are experiencing difficulty in meeting the challenge of adapting to people who are different from themselves. The term used to describe this challenge is ‘workforce diversity’ which means that organisations are becoming more heterogeneous in terms of gender, race, ethnicity, ability, age, and other aspects of differentness, as shown in Tables 9.1 and 9.2 on page 188 and Figure 9.1 on page 189. 9.4.1 Diversity defined %JWFSTJUZ is defined as the mosaic of people who bring a variety of backgrounds, styles, perspectives, values, and beliefs as assets to the the mosaic of people who bring groups and organisations with whom they interact. This definition has a variety of backgrounds, styles, three notable points. First, it describes diversity as a mosaic, which perspectives, values, and beliefs is different from the traditional idea that diversity is a melting pot. A as assets to the groups and mosaic enables people to retain their individuality while contributing to organisations with whom they a collectively larger picture. Second, this definition of diversity applies to interact and includes everyone; it is not exclusionary. According to this definition, we are all diverse. Finally, this definition describes diversity as an asset, as something desirable and beneficial. We may be different, but being different is not wrong. FiXerUiV[ 9.4.2 The platinum rule RlaViPuO rule treat others as they want to be treated gQlFeP rule treat people as you want to be treated A key component of ‘what diversity is’ revolves around the use of the QMBUJOVNSVMF, which is an extension of the well-known HPMEFOSVMF. While the golden rule is to treat people as you want to be treated, the platinum rule goes further and says: ‘Treat others as they want to be treated’. The platinum rule is the cornerstone of diversity behaviour, as presented in this chapter because it demonstrates respecting and honouring our differences by assuming others may want to be treated differently from us. It also implies that we need to ask others what they want, and tell others what we want. Using the platinum rule takes diversity beyond culture, and ensures that everyone is included and everyone wins. 9.4.3 General dimensions of diversity The world-wide shift in demographics, changing immigration patterns, and social change are all factors that affect the work environment. In the USA, for example, the population, and therefore the workforce, is growing more slowly than at any time since the 1930s, the average age of the population is rising, more women are entering the workforce, and immigrants will represent the largest share of the increase in the workforce5. South Africa is exposed to similar variables that impact on the productivity of the workforce, transforming it into a diverse workforce that necessitates the management of diversity. A brief overview of the following general dimensions of diversity will help explain the need for its management: 194 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity r r r r r HFOEFSJTTVFT BHF NBSJUBMTUBUVT QIZTJDBMBCJMJUZ MBOHVBHF Gender issues Women are entering the labour market in increasing numbers every year. This means that organisations must deal with issues such as workfamily conflicts, childcare, dual-career couples, and sexual harassment. Seven out of ten women in the labour force have children. This means that organisations should take some responsibility for childcare. One issue surrounding gender as a dimension of diversity is the ‘glass ceiling’ syndrome, which refers to the difficulty women have in advancing themselves. Only a handful of women reach top management positions in organisations. In the USA it is estimated that men hold 97 per cent of the top positions. In South Africa, as shown in Table 9.2 on page 188, men hold 87 per cent of the top positions. Age In the USA, the supply of younger workers is dwindling, with the result that older workers represent a significant component of the labour force. This is the same in South Africa in respect of whites, but in the case of young black workers the number of entrants is at an all-time high. Both older and younger workers present management with challenges. Older workers are more cautious, less likely to take risks, and less open to change, though their experience makes them high performers. Young entrants into the South African labour force often present challenges in the fields of communication and management training. Marital status Marital status is a variable that adds to the complexity of diversity in organisations, with the increase, for instance, of single-parent families. The challenge for management is to recognise these differences and use them as strengths. Physical ability People with disabilities are also subject to stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination. These people prefer managers to focus on abilities, rather than on disabilities. Language Having eleven official languages in South Africa poses a great challenge to organisations. Sensitivity needs to be shown in the choice and the use of language policy within organisations. Managers should have the knowledge and skills to deal with the general dimensions of diversity as discussed above. However, especially in the South African context, they CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 195 PART II: Management in a changing environment need to know in particular, how to manage the cultural dimension of diversity. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Provide reasons for the increased focus on managing workforce diversity. 9.5 REASONS FOR THE INCREASED FOCUS ON MANAGING WORKFORCE DIVERSITY Why do South African organisations such as Microsoft South Africa currently spend vast amounts of money on programmes to sensitise their workforce to diversity issues? While many of the issues surrounding diversity have been around for some time, many organisations have adopted a renewed concern as new trends in the workforce are surfacing. As we have also seen in the opening case, organisations worldwide are becoming increasingly diverse along many different dimensions, including cultural diversity. Several different factors account for these trends and changes. A brief overview of each factor will put the renewed focus on diversity in perspective. The single biggest challenge surrounding the issue of diversity and multicultural management is the changing composition of the labour force. Changing demographics in the labour force, together with legislation on affirmative action in some countries, are major forces contributing to increased diversity. In South Africa the female component of the workforce is increasing. Women currently make up nearly half of the labour force in South Africa, and the trend is likely to continue. It is particularly among black women that this trend is occurring.6 .JDSPTPGU4PVUI"GSJDB Microsoft South Africa7 has been nominated and voted numerous times by the National Research Foundation as one of South Africa’s top companies to work for. Microsoft is a subsidiary of the world’s largest software company which was started by Bill Gates and Paul Allen back in the 1970s. The South African office was opened in 1992. Microsoft produces software that is suitable for large and small businesses, project managers, schools, gamers, cellular devices, media, and more. It has an enormous range of applications and tools which businesses can build into custom-made solutions. It competes in industries from mining and manufacturing to retail and banks. Microsoft has huge resources for research, development, expansion, and internal staff programmes. The company culture in the South African office is one that has a strong sense of community spirit and embraces diversity. Another factor contributing to increased diversity in organisations is the globalisation of business and the use of ICTs which can bring a diverse group of people together in a virtual environment. More and more organisations are entering the international marketplace, including South African organisations which are moving into Africa and the rest of the world. Many multinational corporations today have more employees outside of their home base country than within it. Apple, for example, though based in the USA, has most of its hardware manufactured elsewhere by the workforce in those countries. This improves the awareness of diversity and ability to value differences. Ford, for example, today employs less than half its total workforce on US soil. 196 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity This brief overview of the issues of diversity in international management confirms the importance of examining the influence of culture on management. South African business can now freely do business with the rest of the world, including the rest of Africa. This means that managers must develop new skills and awareness to handle the unique challenges of global diversity: cross-cultural understanding, the ability to build networks, and the understanding of geopolitical forces. Most, if not all, South African organisations operating in a period of sweeping transformation should implement strategies to deal with diversity issues, since valuing workforce diversity has a positive impact on productivity. IBM IBM8 had a long history of progressive management when it came to civil rights and equal opportunity employment. IBM wasn’t taking full advantage of a diverse market for talent, nor was it maximising the potential of its diverse customer and employee base. So in 1995, Louis V Gerstner launched a diversity task force initiative to uncover and understand differences among people within the organisation and find ways to appeal to an even broader set of employees and customers. Gerstner established a task force for each of eight constituencies: Asians; blacks; the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered community; Hispanics; white men; Native Americans; people with disabilities; and women. He asked the task forces to research four questions: What does your constituency need to feel welcome and valued at IBM? What can the corporation do, in partnership with your group, to maximise your constituency’s productivity? What can the corporation do to influence your constituency’s buying decisions so that IBM is seen as a preferred solution provider? And with which external organisations should IBM form relationships to better understand the needs of your constituency? The answers to these questions became the basis for IBM’s diversity strategy. 9.6 THE NEED FOR DIVERSITY MANAGEMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA In addition to the reasons for the present world-wide interest in diversity and multicultural management, are the complexities of the South African situation. South Africa has already been described as a radically pluralist society where race and ethnicity are the most visible dimensions of its diversity. Many cultural differences exist between ethnic groups such as Euro-Africans, coloureds, Asian-Africans, and black Africans. There are also differences within each group. Each of these groups share a common history, while at the same time maintaining a uniqueness. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 Explain the need for diversity management in South Africa. 9.6.1 Imbalances in the South African business world The imbalances between the different ethnic groups in South Africa result in managerial and economic imbalances. We can identify three categories of management problems relating to the South African workplace that create an urgent need for research and education in this regard. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 197 PART II: Management in a changing environment 1. The first issue that relates to the imbalances in South African organisations, and which forms an integral part of any policy or strategy on diversity management, is the question of affirmative action. This is an employment policy that aims to ensure that South African institutions reflect the character of the country as a whole. Many business organisations are developing policies to correct this imbalance. 2. The second management issue is the question of economic empowerment. Pressure for the transfer of economic power is evident. The government is being blamed for not doing enough to make black economic empowerment possible. Organisations such as the African Federated Chamber of Commerce (NAFCOC), the Black Management Forum (BMF), and some labour unions proposed the 3-4-5-6 policy whereby 30 per cent of directors, 40 per cent of senior management, 50 per cent of middle management, and 60 per cent of the workers of all businesses should have been black by the year 20009. The capital base of black organisations could provide only a fraction of what would be needed for substantial economic empowerment. The stokvel movement could provide only about R1 billion for this purpose. More and more black consumers are, however, buying insurance policies not only from the black-controlled insurance corporations such as African Life and Metropolitan Life, but also from the mutual insurance giants Sanlam and Old Mutual. Change in the control of these giants could change the ownership of the economy overnight10. The other question surrounding the transformation of economic power has been whether black people have the entrepreneurial and managerial expertise to make such an urgent transformation feasible. 3. The third management issue in the debate on managerial and economic transformation in South Africa is the quest for a new management philosophy. Activated by the affirmative and empowerment movements, and supported by a rich diversity of articles, books, and conference papers, this issue is challenging the theoretical foundations of South Africa’s Euro-American-Asian management theories, approaches, and practices. Based on the premise that the environment of organisations in developing countries is different from that of Western and Asian industrialised countries, management theories and practices from the developedcountry context may have only limited applicability in the context of a developing country such as South Africa and a developing continent such as Africa. The above discussion on the reasons for the present focus on the management of diversity – including a brief overview of the complex South African situation – shows how imperative it is for South African managers to implement diversity management. 198 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity 9.6.2 The benefits of diversity management Organisations in South Africa have generally not been highly successful in managing women and cultural diversity in the workplace. Proof of this is the fact that women and black people in South Africa are clustered at the lower management levels. This indicates that they are not progressing and that their full potential is not being utilised. Managing the issues of diversity and multiculturalism is crucial to organisational success. When organisations such as Microsoft decided to invest in diversity management training programmes for their managers and employees, top management expected certain benefits from this investment. Table 9.4 on the next page lists six arguments that support the belief that managing diversity can improve organisational performance. Organisations which manage diversity and multiculturalism will have a competitive edge in the market, because they create higher morale and better relationships in the workplace. Research has shown that diverse groups tend to be more creative than homogeneous groups. The presence of cultural and gender diversity in a group leads to freer discussion and reduces the risk of ‘groupthink’. Moreover, the simple act of learning about other cultural practices enables organisations to expand their thinking in other fields as well. South African organisations can certainly expand their thinking on the advantages of diversity management. 9.7 MANAGING DIVERSITY LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 Managing diversity is different from valuing diversity because it addresses the organisational processes that can reinforce – or hinder – the ability to create an environment that values diversity. These organisational processes include hiring, promotion, communication, and power allocation in organisations. In the past, most organisations used what is called the ‘melting pot’ approach to managing diversity in the workplace. This assumes that people who are different would somehow automatically want to assimilate. Now organisations have realised that employees do not set aside their cultural values and lifestyle preferences when they come to work. The challenge for a manager is to create a work environment in which different lifestyles, family needs, and work styles are accommodated. The melting pot assumption is being replaced by the mosaic approach, which recognises and values differences. In the next sections we shall look briefly at some of the approaches to managing diversity in organisations. Managing diversity can yield enormous results in innovation, new ideas and improved productivity11. All of the arguments for the management of diversity, have been illustrated in the Nike Inc. opening case. Recommend strategies for managing diversity. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 199 PART II: Management in a changing environment Table 9.4: The beneƂts of managing diversity Six arguments for managing diversity Cost argument As organisations become more diverse, the cost of a poor job in integrating workers will increase. Those who handle this well will create cost advantages over those who don’t. Resource acquisition argument Organisations develop favourable reputations as prospective employers for women and previously disadvantaged groups. Those with the best reputations for managing diversity will win the competition for the best personnel. As the labour pool shrinks and changes composition, this edge will become increasingly important. Marketing argument For multinational organisations, the insight and cultural sensitivity that members with roots in other countries bring to the marketing effort should improve these efforts in important ways. The same rationale applies to marketing to sub-populations with domestic operations. Creativity argument Diversity of perspectives and less emphasis on conformity to norms of the past (characterising the modern approach to management of diversity) should improve the level of creativity. Problem-solving argument Heterogeneity in decision-making and problem-solving groups potentially produces better decisions through a wider range of perspectives and more thorough critical analysis of issues. System ƃexibility argument An implication of the multicultural model for managing diversity is that the system will become less determinant, less standardised, and therefore more ƃuid. The increased ƃuidity should create greater ƃexibility to react to environmental changes (reactions should be faster and at lower cost). Source: Noe, R.A., Hollenbeck, J.R., Gerhart, B. & Wright, P.M. 2000. Human resource management. New York: McGraw-Hill, p 23. 9.7.1 Approaches to managing diversity The idea that diversity should be managed originated in the 1960s, and since then the following three approaches have been identified: The golden rule approach According to this approach, it is best to treat everyone in the same way: ‘Treat others as you want to be treated’. Good intentions of not treating other people badly inspired this theory. However, people from the dominant culture – who have the good intentions – assume that they should treat people according to their own standards and consequently individual differences are ignored. The ‘right the wrongs’ approach This approach takes the form of affirmative action. ‘We don’t have enough of the previously disadvantaged people, such as black people and women – we’d better hire some, to make up for all these years of negligence’. This approach creates a backlash, because ‘traditional’ employees feel that they will be overlooked so that ‘a quota can be filled’. It creates an ‘us versus them’ mentality, which is unproductive. 200 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity The ‘value of differences’ approach This approach recognises differences and acknowledges that they exist, but does not require people to be assimilated into the dominant culture. It allows for the individual mosaic of people to create the aggregate picture of an organisation. When you join an organisation and become an employee, you carry your ‘differentness’ with you. When you are faced with a situation that involves managing others different from yourself, your reaction or solutions will depend on how much you know, understand, and value the ‘differentness’ of others. Managing diversity is a management orientation that is not limited to one department or to a specific management level of the organisation. It is an overall approach, which seeks the commitment of the whole organisation if any success is to be achieved. There is also no one particular policy which necessarily guarantees the required results. Organisations differ in the ways in which they implement a policy of diversity management, as Table 9.5 illustrates. This table shows the range of diversity management policies which organisations implement. Research in South Africa indicates that alternative work schedules like flexitime, job sharing, and the compressed work week could be used to respond to diverse needs of the workforce. Flexitime increases employee autonomy and responsibility, in choosing the schedule that meets individual needs. Job sharing meets the needs of those employees who cannot work on a full-time basis, but require a permanent career job. The compressed work week is a week of four ten-hour days, which allows employees more leisure and private time12. 6OEFSTUBOEUIFAEJŲFSFOUOFTT Vusi, one of your employees, comes to you with a request to take off three days’ work to attend his father’s funeral. You recall that he had exactly the same request the previous year and took two days off to attend his father’s funeral. 1. What is your initial reaction? 2. What do you say to Vusi? When managing a diverse workforce you encounter challenges with regard to all the different dimensions of diversity. In Vusi’s case your assumptions, and hence your decision on the matter, will depend on your cultural background and that of the employee. Vusi is a black African, therefore it could well be that one of the dead fathers was his biological father, while the other one was his father’s brother. All the brothers of a father are regarded as fathers to his offspring, and all the sisters of a mother are called ‘mother’ by her children. If you are not aware of this custom, you could immediately assume that Vusi is a liar and therefore untrustworthy. Such an assumption could destroy your working relationship and therefore have an adverse effect on an employee’s performance. This example indicates that we need to understand each other’s ‘differentness’ to be able to manage diversity effectively. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 201 PART II: Management in a changing environment Table 9.: The organisational diversity continuum No diversity efforts: r non-compliance with afƂrmative action policies r belief in a monoculture organisation r no policies on managerial and economic empowerment Diversity efforts based on: r compliance with afƂrmative action r inconsistent enforcement of diversity policies r very little is done in the area of managerial and economic empowerment r no organisational support with respect to education and diversity training r inconsistent or poor managerial commitment Broad-based diversity efforts based on: r effective implementation of afƂrmative action policies r managerial commitment to managerial and economic empowerment s r culture of enabling employees r ongoing education and diversity training programmes r managerial commitment tied to organisational rewards r organisational assessment of diversity policies to create an organisational r culture that supports diversity Source: Adapted from Certo, S.C. 1992. Modern management. Boston: Allyn & Bacon, p 586. 9.7.2 Diversity paradigms: strategies for diversity management In the last few years in America, managing diversity has become an increasingly significant research and organisational issue. Yet, the meaning of managing diversity has remained elusive13. However, Thomas and Ely have recently developed a theoretical paradigm of three different perspectives on how organisations perceive the task of managing diversity14. They classify the perspectives as discrimination and fairness, access and legitimacy, and learning and effectiveness. They found that, while most organisations in the USA have applied the first two perspectives, very few organisations were using the third perspective. Ely and Thomas suggest that it is only the third perspective that will enable organisations to benefit adequately from managing diversity15. Table 9.6 on the next page shows the focus of diversity efforts, human resources practices, effectiveness measures, and strengths and weaknesses of each of the three paradigms. In South Africa, with the legacy of apartheid still entrenched in the minds of leadership, management, and workers, most organisations are ‘trapped’ in the first paradigm of managing diversity. The emphasis is on the discrimination-and-fairness perspective or what can be termed as 202 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity ‘righting the wrongs’. The legal mandate, as expressed in the Employment Equity Act, has led to conflict and dissension since virtually every organisation in South Africa is under pressure to transform its worker and leadership profiles rapidly. Diversity initiatives implemented in South Africa and other countries indicate that organisations have a long way to go before they can apply the learning-effectiveness paradigm. In these countries diversity efforts are still centred on the first two paradigms where diversity initiatives are not linked to productivity. Table 9.: Diversity paradigms Discrimination – fairness Access – legitimacy Learning – effectiveness Focus Creating equal opportunity, assuring fair treatment, and compliance with equal opportunity laws. Match internal employee demographics to customer and marketplace served. Incorporate diversity into the heart and fabric of the mission, work, and culture of the organisation. Human resource practices Recruitment of women and previously disadvantaged groups (PD)s). Mentoring and career development for women and PDGs. Recruitment of employees from diverse groups to match external demands. Redesigned and transformed to enhance performance of all employees. Effectiveness Recruitment numbers. Retention rates of women and PDGs. Niche markets captured. Degree of diversity among employees. All employees feel respected, valued, and included. Weaknesses – Strengths Does not capitalise on diversity of all employees. 'mphasis on assimilation. Does not affect mainstream of company business diversity conƂned to speciƂc market segments. All employees respected, valued, and included. Source: Adapted from: Thomas, D.A. & Ely, R.J. 1996. Marketing differences matter: A new paradigm for managing diversity. Harvard Business Review. (September–October), pp 79–90. 9.7.3 The most and least frequently implemented initiatives Research conducted in the UK, Ireland, the USA, and South Africa in a management of diversity study reveals that emphasis is put on selection, induction, and communication initiatives in all countries except the USA, which emphasises flexibility and the individual. These three countries are also similar in terms of least frequently implemented initiatives. In particular, training staff and managers in diversity, and adopting a strategy approach to managing diversity, are low priorities for their organisations. Mentoring schemes for staff are low on the list of priorities for all four of the countries. Literature on diversity frequently presents mentoring in relation to diversity, yet the results of this survey suggest that it is not being implemented16. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 203 PART II: Management in a changing environment 9.7.4 The most and least successful initiatives For the UK and Ireland, the most successful initiatives relate to objective and fair processes (as in terms of selection, induction, and open criteria), and to creating a culture that empowers. For North America, the most successful initiatives relate to flexibility and an individual focus. However, for South Africa the most successful initiatives relate to fair process (as in terms of selection), but they then focus on flexibility (as in benefits or uniforms)17. There is considerable overlap across all four countries with regard to those initiatives that are viewed as least successful. There is a common difficulty regarding decision-making within organisations from all four countries. In addition, for South Africa, the UK, and North America, there is concern regarding the success of ‘open criteria’. This is interesting, as the survey suggests that open criteria are frequently being implemented, but not succeeding. This leads us to question the commitment of organisations to the success of appraisal training. South African organisations are also struggling with defining diversity as a business goal and with strategies for managing diversity. It is interesting that, in South Africa, developing a diversity policy and publicising the organisation as a diversity-oriented organisation is very low on the list. In addition, the main focus of South African organisations is compliance with new legislation18. What managers need to keep in mind while conducting the first diversity initiative: r &YQFDUSFTJTUBODFmTPNFFNQMPZFFT TVDIBTXIJUFNBMFT NBZ initially become offended. r #FXJMMJOHUPUBLFTPNFIFBU r 6OEFSTUBOEUIBUUIFDVMUVSFXJMMOPUDIBOHFPWFSOJHIU r #FDBVUJPVTXIFOGPSNJOHQBSUOFSTIJQTXJUIBEWPDBDZHSPVQT r #FSFBEZGPSTVSQSJTFTXIFOZPVTUBSUQSPCJOHSFBMJTTVFT r #FBDDPVOUBCMFGPSXIBUZPVTBZZPVBSFHPJOHUPEPmNBOZ people are watching to see what happens. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 Suggest ways to perform diversity training in an organisation. 204 9.8 DIVERSITY TRAINING The above discussion on the complex dimensions of diversity, explains why organisations worldwide focus on the management of diversity. The following reasons can be singled out as to why organisations are designing and implementing diversity training and development initiatives: r 5IFSFJTBOJODSFBTJOHMZEJWFSTFDVTUPNFSQPQVMBUJPO r 5IFSFJTBOJODSFBTJOHMZEJWFSTFFNQMPZFFQPQVMBUJPO r *UJTJNQPSUBOUUPSFUBJOUPQUBMFOU r *UJTOFDFTTBSZUPNJOJNJTFUIFSJTLPGMJUJHBUJPO r *UJTUIFSJHIUUIJOHUPEPBOEJTBOBTQFDUPGDPSQPSBUFTPDJBM responsibility. r *UGPTUFSTMFBSOJOHBOEFŲFDUJWFOFTTJOPSHBOJTBUJPOT CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity Many South African organisations are grappling with transformation. Although the challenges posed by the diversity of the workforce have been the focus of researchers and writers on the subject, they have met with mixed reactions from South African practitioners. Some organisations simply ignore the situation and treat their diverse workforce as if it were homogeneous. The results are usually reflected in poor performance of individuals as well as the organisation. They urgently need to implement policies and strategies to deal with both the cultural and the non-cultural dimensions of diversity. We shall now briefly consider how management should approach these two categories of diversity. 9.8.1 Approaches to diversity training Diversity training is specifically designed to better enable members of an organisation to function in a diverse and multi-cultural workforce. In order for managers to respond to the challenges of working with diverse populations, they must recognise the difficulties that employees may have in coping with diversity. These difficulties include resistance to change, racism, and a lack of knowledge about other groups, as well as prejudices, biases, and stereotypes. Some employees lack the motivation to understand cultural differences, often because of the lack of reward for doing so. Diversity training should therefore focus on: r QSPHSBNNFTEFTJHOFEUPSBJTFQBSUJDJQBOUTDPOTDJPVTOFTTBOE awareness about differences in values, attitudes, patterns of behaviour, and communication that may exist across cultures r QSPHSBNNFTEFTJHOFEUPEFWFMPQOFXTLJMMTBOEDPNQFUFODJFT including communication competence19. &YQPTVSFUPPUIFSQFPQMFTDVMUVSFGPSNTBTJHOJųDBOUTUFQJOBOZDVMUVSBM awareness training. 9.8.2 Management support Training employees in the issues and attitudes involved in valuing diversity must be complemented from the top by managerial example and support through: r BEFDMBSBUJPOPGDPNNJUNFOUUPEJWFSTJUZJOUIFNJTTJPOTUBUFNFOU r BOPSHBOJTBUJPOBMDMJNBUFUIBUTVQQPSUTEJWFSTJUZ r NBOBHFSTXIPIBWFEJWFSTJUZTLJMMTBOEDPNQFUFODF r BXBSFOFTTSBJTJOH r QFFSTVQQPSUJOUIFXPSLQMBDF r PQFODPNNVOJDBUJPOCFUXFFOTVCPSEJOBUFTBOENBOBHFSTBCPVU diversity issues r SFDPHOJUJPOGPSFNQMPZFFEFWFMPQNFOUPGEJWFSTJUZTLJMMTBOE competencies r SFDPHOJUJPOGPSFNQMPZFFDPOUSJCVUJPOTUPFOIBODJOHEJWFSTJUZHPBMT r PSHBOJTBUJPOBMSFXBSETGPSNBOBHFSTJNQMFNFOUBUJPOPG organisational diversity goals. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 205 PART II: Management in a changing environment Diversity training and managerial support from the top can do much to create cultural synergy and to contribute to higher productivity. To this end, diversity training needs to have a new focus that facilitates positive and productive working relationships. 9.8.3 Summary of spheres of activity for diversity management Successful diversity management depends on the commitment of the whole organisation. Many spheres of management activity are involved in preparing an organisation to accommodate diversity. Once a vision for a diverse workplace has been formulated, management can analyse and assess the current culture (prevailing value system, cultural inclusion, differences, and systems such as recruitment, training, and promotion) within the organisation, as indicated by the various spheres of management activity in Figure 9.3. Mindsets about diversity r problem or opportunity! r challenge met or barely addressed! r level of majority culture buyin (resistance or support)! Organisation culture r valuing differences r prevailing value system r cultural inclusion Cultural differences HR management systems (bias-free?) r recruitment r training and development r performance appraisal r compensation and beneƂts r promotion Greater career involvement of women r promoting knowledge and acceptance r dualcareer families MANAGEMENT OF DIVERSITY r taking advantage of the opportunities that diversity provides r sexual harassment r worksfamily conƃict Heterogeneity in race/ethnicity/nationality r effects on cohesiveness, communication, morale r effects of group identity on interaction (eg stereotyping) r prejudice (racism, ethnocentrism) Education problems r improve state schools r educate management on valuing differences Figure 9.3: The spheres of activity for managing diversity Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. 206 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 9 Workforce diversity This assessment is followed by a willingness (by the leadership cadre of management) to change whatever systems and ways of thinking need to be modified. Throughout this process people need top management’s support in dealing with the many challenges and conflicts they will face. Training and support (in the form of delegated power and rewards) are important for the people in pioneering roles. Once management accepts the need for a strategy to develop a truly diverse workplace, three major steps are involved in implementing such a major change: 1. Building a corporate culture that values diversity. 2. Changing structures, policies, and systems to support diversity. 3. Providing diversity awareness and cultural competency training. For each of these efforts to succeed, top management’s support is critical, as is holding all managerial ranks accountable for increasing diversity. The implementation of these steps to bring about the necessary change that will ensure inclusive diversity in the organisation is anchored in the four basic management functions of planning, organising, leading, and controlling. Planning applies to management’s role in developing strategies to promote diversity, while organising, leading, and controlling apply to the implementation phases as we have discussed them in previous chapters. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 207 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part II: Management in a changing environment CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Define and distinguish diversity from what it is not. Many misconceptions about diversity exist. First, we explain what it is not: • diversity is not culture • diversity is neither equal employment opportunities nor affirmative action • diversity is not an absence of standards • diversity is not a vendetta against white males. Then we explain what diversity is: • Diversity is about demographics • diversity is about values • diversity is about behaviour • diversity is a long-term process. Workforce diversity is then defined as the mosaic of people who bring a variety of backgrounds, styles, perspectives, values and beliefs as assets to the groups and organisations with whom they interact. A key component of what diversity is revolves around the use of the platinum rule, an extension of the golden rule. While the golden rule is ‘to treat people as you want to be treated’, the platinum rule goes further and says ‘treat others as they want to be treated’. 2. Provide reasons for the increased focus on managing workforce diversity • changing composition of the labour force • legislation on affirmative action • globalisation of business • cultural diversity improves the quality of the workforce. 3. Explain the need for diversity management in South Africa The following contributes to the need for diversity management in South Africa: • imbalances in the South African business world • diversity management has major benefits. 4. Recommend strategies for managing diversity Various approaches to managing diversity exist, namely: • the golden rule approach • the ‘right the wrongs’ approach • the ‘value the differences’ approach. Four strategies for managing diversity are: • focus strategy • human resource practice strategy • effectiveness strategy • weaknesses/strengths strategy. 208 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 1:14 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 9 Workforce diversity 5. Suggest ways to perform diversity training in an organisation. An organisation can implement various approaches to diversity training, for instance: • programmes designed to raise participants’ consciousness and awareness about differences in values, attitudes, patterns of behaviour, and communication that may exist across cultures • programmes designed to develop new skills and competencies, including communication competence. Training in diversity should always be complemented by top management support. KEY TERMS dimensions of diversity diversity diversity continuum diversity paradigms diversity training golden rule management support platinum rule ‘right the wrongs’ rule value the differences rule workforce diversity REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. explain the misconceptions about diversity. 2. explain what diversity is. 3. explain the general dimensions of diversity. 4. provide reasons for the increased focus on the management of workforce diversity. 5. explain the benefits of diversity management. 6. Distinguish between the various approaches to managing diversity. 7. propose various strategies for diversity management in organisations. 8. explain the concept of ‘diversity training’ and propose approaches to diversity training. END NOTES 1 Anon. No date. [Online] Available at: http://nikeinc.com/pages/diversity-inclusion. Accessed on 30 June 2013. 2 Lötter, H. 1993. Pluralism, liberal values, and consensus: Like dancing with wolves? Acta Academia, 25(4): 13–29. 3 Lotter, op. cit., p 14. 4 Nkomo, S.M. & Cox, T. 1996. Diverse identities in organisations In Handbook of organisation studies. Clegg, S., Hardy, C. & Nord, W. (eds). London: Sage Publications, pp 338–356. 5 Certo, S.C. 1994. Modern management: Diversity, quality, ethics and the global environment. Boston: Allyn & Bacon, p 578. 6 Bureau of Market Research. 1993. Report no 199. Pretoria: Unisa. 7 Anon. No date. [Online] Available at: http://www.topemployers.co.za/BESTEmployers20122013.aspx. Accessed on 1 July 2013. Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 1:14 PM via UNISA 209 PART II: Management in a changing environment 8 Anon. No date. [Online] Available at: http://harvardbusinessonline.hbsp. harvard.edu/b01/en/common/item_detail. jhtml?id=R0409G. 9 Finansies en Tegniek, 19 May 1995, p 11. 10 Ibid. 11 Gentile, M. 2003. Managing across difference. Harvard Business CD. 12 Ngambi, H.C. 2001. Job-sharing: An alternative to lay-offs and unemployment in South Africa. South African Journal of Labour Relations. 25(1): 2. 13 Nkomo & Cox, op. cit., pp 338–356. 14 Thomas, D.A. & Ely, R.J. 1996. Making differences matter: A new paradigm for managing diversity. Harvard Business Review, (September–October), pp 79–90. 15 Ely, R.J. & Thomas, D.A. 2001. Cultural diversity at work: The effects of diversity perspectives on work group processes and outcomes. Administrative Science Quarterly, 46: 229–273. 16 Martins, N. 1999. Managing Diversity in South Africa: How do we compare? People Dynamics, (August): 30–33. 17 Ibid. 18 Ibid. 19 Certo, op. cit., p 591. 210 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES PART III Planning Chapter 10 Principles of planning Tersia Brevis PART III: Planning OPENING CASE The Global Positioning System (GPS)1 One of the world’s most innovative advancements in navigation technology is the Global Positioning Systems (or GPS). The GPS is a space-based global navigation satellite system (GNSS). The GNSS provides location and time information which can be accessed in all weather, anywhere on earth (or even near the earth). The only requirement for access to location and time information is that there should be an unobstructed line of sight to four or more GPS satellites. The design of the GPS originated in the early 1940s with similar ground-based navigation systems that were used in World War II. The GPS project was developed in 1973 to overcome the limitations of previous navigation systems. The GPS was created and realised by the United States Department of Defence. It is maintained by the United States government. The GPS became fully operational in 1994 and is freely accessible by anyone with a GPS receiver. The GPS has three basic components: absolute location, relative movement, and time transfer. A GPS receiver calculates its absolute location or position by precisely timing the signals sent by GPS satellites high above the Earth. Each satellite transmits messages, on a continuous basis, that includes the following: r UIFUJNFUIFNFTTBHFXBTUSBOTNJUUFE r UIFQSFDJTFPSCJUBMJOGPSNBUJPO r UIFHFOFSBMTZTUFNIFBMUIBOESPVHIPSCJUTPG all GPS satellites. The receiver uses the messages it receives in order to determine the transit time of each message. It then computes the distance to each satellite. These distances, together with the satellites’ locations are used to determine the absolute position or location of the receiver. This position is then displayed on the GPS, for example by a moving map display. 212 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Many GPS receivers also show derived information, for example direction and speed, calculated from position changes; time transfer, traffic signal timing and synchronisation of cellular phone base stations. Although the GPS was originally a military project, it is considered a dual-use technology, meaning that the GPS has significant military and civilian applications. Examples of civilian applications of the GPS are the following: r $MPDLTZODISPOJTBUJPO5IFBDDVSBDZPGUIF GPS time signals is second only to the atomic clock upon which they are based. r $FMMVMBSUFMFQIPOZ5IF(14DBOCFVTFEUP facilitate inter-cellular handoff and support IZCSJE(14DFMMVMBSQPTJUJPOEFUFDUJPOGPS mobile emergency calls. r &NFSHFODZTFSWJDFT7BSJPVTFNFSHFODZ services depend on the GPS for timing and location capabilities. r (FPGFODJOH5IF(14DBOCFVTFEJOQFSTPO pet and vehicle tracking systems to locate a person, pet or vehicle. Devices are attached to the person, pet or vehicle and the application then provides continuous tracking. Mobile or internet updates are given should the person, pet or vehicle leave a designated area. r (14UPVST5IF(14MPDBUJPOEFUFSNJOFTXIBU content to display, for example, information about an approaching community service, school or medical facility. r .BQNBLJOH$BSUPHSBQIFSTVTFUIF(14 extensively in map-making. r 4VSWFZJOH4VSWFZPSTVTFBCTPMVUFMPDBUJPOT provided by the GPS to draw maps and determine property boundaries. r 'MFFUUSBDLJOH(14UFDIOPMPHZJTVTFE extensively to identify, locate and maintain contact reports with fleet vehicles in real-time. CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of planning as a management function. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Explain the nature and importance of planning. . &emonstrate an understanding of the beneƂts and costs associated with planning. 3. Differentiate between the various types of plan. 4. Explain the barriers to effective planning. 5. Explain ways to overcome barriers to effective planning. 10.1 THE NATURE AND IMPORTANCE OF PLANNING LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 All managers, regardless of their skills, the levels at which they are involved or their field of specialisation, engage in certain interrelated activities or functions to achieve the goals and objectives of the organisation. These interrelated functions were identified in Chapter 2 as planning, organising, leading and controlling. The GPS allows a motor car driver to specify a planned destination, determine a road map to follow in order to arrive at the planned destination and to determine the time it will take to reach the destination. Having this information, the motor car driver can then determine how much petrol will be needed for the trip, whether he or she needs to sleep over, and to calculate the costs involved in undertaking the trip. In the same fashion, the management of an organisation needs to determine the destination or future for their organisation, determine the best possible way to reach its destination, and determine the resources that the organisation will need to reach their destination. This is called planning. Planning essentially has three components which require closer examination: r EFUFSNJOFUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOBMWJTJPO NJTTJPOBOEHPBMT r JEFOUJGZXBZTPGSFBDIJOHUIFHPBMT r ųOEUIFSFTPVSDFTOFFEFEGPSUIFUBTLXJUIJOBDPNQMFY environment. Explain the nature and importance of planning. 10.1.1 Determine the organisational vision, mission and goals The organisational vision For an organisation to be lead to success in the future, an inspiring vision is needed. This is a statement of what the organisation wants to become and where it wants to be in the future. It needs to be one that every individual in the organisation, as well as all stakeholders, shares and is excited about. The vision should be an anchor for decision-making in the organisation. The vision statement is the end, not the means to the end. For example, a university providing tertiary education (the means) vision a statement of what the organisation wants to become and where it wants to be in future CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 213 PART III: Planning should see their business as cultivating mindful and soulful graduates (the end). When formulating a vision statement, the means should not be confused with the end. The success of a vision statement depends largely on how well it is shared. Inputs from all stakeholders should be gathered to ensure buy-in from all individuals and sections in the organisation. mission statement aligns the organisation with its vision in terms of its products and/or services, market and technology The mission statement The vision statement of an organisation reflects the perfect future, the dream that the organisation has for itself. Similar to a real dream, a vision statement does not necessarily need to be realistic in terms of what the organisation can or cannot become. The vision statement translated into reality is a mission statement and aligns the organisation with its vision in terms of its products and/or services, market and technology. A well-written mission statement does the following things for an organisation2: 1. A mission statement defines the organisation for key stakeholders in terms of its product and/or services, market and technology. 2. It outlines how the vision is to be accomplished. 3. A mission statement establishes key priorities for the organisation. In other words, the mission statement enables an organisation to identify key performance areas – those areas critical to the attainment of organisational goals and objectives. 4. A mission statement states a common goal and fosters a sense of togetherness. 5. It creates a philosophical anchor for all organisational activities. 6. It generates enthusiasm, buy-in and a ‘can do’ attitude amongst all stakeholders. 7. A mission statement empowers present and future members of the organisation to believe that every individual is the key to success. In addition to the key components of a mission statement mentioned above (product and/or service, market and technology), a mission can also set out the philosophy of the organisation in terms of its values, ethics and beliefs. goals/objectives commitment to achieve a measurable result within a given timeframe Goal setting Just as a car driver enters a planned destination in his or her GPS, an organisation also needs to specify its destination (or goals). Goals are the targets that an organisation drives toward. Although some theorists distinguish between goals and objectives, managers typically use the terms interchangeably. Goals/objectives are a commitment to achieve a measurable result within a given timeframe. It is important for managers to be able to formulate good objectives, to be aware of their importance and to understand how objectives combine to form a means-ends chain. What makes a good objective? When using a GPS, a car driver should be specific in terms of the planned destination. GPS coordinates, or the exact country, town, street and street number can be used for this purpose. 214 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning A GPS receiver calculates its position by precisely timing the signals sent by GPS satellites high above the Earth. Three satellites might seem enough to determine position, since space has three dimensions and a position close to the Earth’s position can be assumed. However, even a very small clock error multiplied by the speed of light (this is also the speed at which satellite signals move) results in a large positional error. For this reason, GPS receivers use four or more satellites to determine the receiver’s location and time. A GPS therefore computes time very accurately. In terms of an organisation, many experts agree that a good objective should, as far as possible, be expressed in quantitative, measurable, concrete or specific terms, in the form of a written statement of desired results to be achieved within a given period of time. A good objective should state what is to be accomplished and when it is to be accomplished. A good objective will meet the following criteria: 1. Objectives should be expressed in quantitative terms. This means that objectives should be measurable so that it can be evaluated or quantified objectively. 2. Objectives should be expressed in specific terms. Objectives should indicate what they are related to. 3. Objectives should state desired results. This means that objectives should focus on the key performance areas of the organisation – those areas that are crucial in the accomplishment of organisational goals. 4. Objectives should be attainable. Objectives should be realistic, but also provide a challenge for management and all employees. 5. Objectives should be acceptable. People tend to pursue goals that are consistent with their preferences and perceptions. The collaboration of managers at all levels of an organisation is therefore important in goal formulation. 6. Objectives should state results to be achieved within a given time period. The timeframe for accomplishing objectives should be clearly stated. 7. Objectives should be congruent with one another. Congruency means that the attainment of one goal should not preclude the attainment of another goal. Incongruent objectives often lead to friction, uncertainty and conflict. 8. Objectives should be flexible. Business organisations function in a turbulent and dynamic environment, which makes it necessary to allow for objectives to be modified. Flexibility means that organisations should adapt their objectives when the conditions on which the objectives were based, change. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 215 PART III: Planning #$% RTioTit[ s[stem A-B-C priority system groups objectives in three categories according to its priority 2aTeto RTinciRle a minority of causes, inputs or effort tend to produce the majority of results, outputs or rewards Prioritising goals and objectives An important principle to consider when determining organisational goals, is the ranking of goals, objectives or activities in order of importance. Priorities play a special role in the planning process. By listing long-term organisational objectives in order of their priority, top management prepares to make later decisions regarding the allocation of resources. Resources need to be channeled into more important endeavors and away from other areas in proportion to the relative priority of the areas. The establishment of priorities is a key factor in managerial and organisational effectiveness. Strategic priorities give external and internal stakeholders answers to the questions such as ‘Why does the organisation exist?’ and ‘How should it act and react during a crisis?’. Various techniques can be used to prioritise organisational goals and objectives. Two of the most widely-used techniques are the A-B-C QSJPSJUZTZTUFNBOEUIFQSJODJQMF According to the "#$ QSJPSJUZ TZTUFN, objectives can be grouped into three categories, namely the A-group, B-group and C-group. The A-group objectives, called the ‘must-do’ objectives are those objectives that are critical to the successful performance of the organisation. The B-group, called the ‘should-do’ objectives, is necessary for improved performance. Lastly, the C-group objectives are called the ‘nice-to-do’ objectives, which are desirable for improved performance, but not critical to survival or improved performance. "OPUIFSQSPWFOQSJPSJUZTFUUJOHUFDIOJRVFJTUIFQSJODJQMF BMTP known as the 1BSFUPQSJODJQMF or analysis which states that a minority of causes tends to produce the majority of rewards. Care needs to be UBLFO OPU UP JOUFSQSFU UIF GPSNVMB UPP MJUFSBMMZ m JU JT POMZ BO approximation. Managers can leverage their time by focusing on the few people, resources, opportunities and strengths with the greatest impact. 5IF'PSE.PUPS$PNQBOZ3 Ford Motor Company was founded in 1903 by Henry Ford in Detroit, Michigan. Not only did Ford revolutionise the development of the automobile as a product, he was also the visionary behind the idea of mass production. Ford’s ability to make automobiles affordable for the masses is cited as a driving force behind both the automobile industry and the creation of a middle class in America. 7JTJPO ‘To become the world’s leading consumer company for automotive products and services.’ .JTTJPO4UBUFNFOU ‘We are a global family with a proud heritage, passionately committed to providing personal mobility for people around the world. We anticipate consumer needs and deliver outstanding products and services that improve people’s lives.’ 7BMVFT ‘People working together as a lean, global enterprise for automotive leadership, as measured by customer, employee, dealer, investor, supplier, union/ council, and community satisfaction.’ Identify ways of reaching goals A GPS enables a car driver to determine the shortest or fastest possible route to a planned destination. Management also needs to identify ways of reaching an organisation’s goals. This is often referred to as ‘the ends216 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning Top-level management Middle-level management Lower-level management Ends-means chain of objectives Means-ends chain of objectives means chain of objectives’. The setting of objectives is a top-to-bottom process – top management sets broader organisational objectives with longer time horizons than lower levels of management. This downward flow of objectives creates a means-ends chain. The accomplishment of organisational goals, as formulated by top management, is a bottom-up approach. Working from bottom to top, lower management objectives provide the means for achieving middle-level objectives (ends) that, in turn, provide the means for achieving top-level objectives (ends). The ends-means chain of objectives is illustrated in Figure 10.1. Figure 10.1: The ends-means chain of objectives The organisational hierarchy in Figure 10.1 has been simplified and narrowed down to three managerial levels for illustrative purposes. There may be more managerial layers involved between top and middle levels of management as well as between middle and lower levels of management. The determination of the best possible route to a planned destination, allows a car driver to determine what resources are needed for the trip. For example, what type of vehicle is needed (in some instances an offroad vehicle will be needed to access dirt roads or unpaved paths), how much petrol will be needed, and the total costs involved in the journey. In terms of an organisation, planning is not complete without finding the resources needed to attain organisational goals and objectives. Time; talent; financial, information and physical resources are needed to attain goals. Because of the scarcity of all resources, managers should realise the importance of finding all needed resources. The prioritisation of goals and objectives that we have discussed earlier can assist management in finding the most crucial resources for the realisation of the most important goals and objectives. Planning takes place in a complex environment Managerial planning takes place in a complex, turbulent environment. Virtually all organisations face a rapidly changing environment and should adapt to these changes. The management environment is CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 217 PART III: Planning contingenc[ Rlanning develop multiple plans based on different environmental conditions LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Demonstrate an understanding of the beneƂts and costs associated with planning. discussed in detail in Chapter 4 (The composition of the management environment). In a rapidly changing environment, managers can benefit from a DPOUJOHFODZQMBOOJOHapproach which is where multiple plans are developed based on different environmental conditions. Contingency planning requires flexibility. There are at least two variations of how this can be achieved4. One variation is the development of two or more plans (the idea of ‘plan B’) each of which is based on a different set of strategic or operating conditions that could occur. Which plan is implemented is determined by the specific circumstances that come to pass. For example, an organisation may plan to begin production at a new plant facility in June 2020, but managers should develop a contingency plan that ensures uninterrupted production in the event that the plant opening is being delayed for some reason (for example a labour strike). A second variation of contingency planning rests on the skill and ability of people in the organisation to think strategically and flexibly. This means that people must be informed continuously and understand the important trends, causes and effects, and interactions of the conditions in both the external and internal environments of the organisation. This skill is called having ‘prepared minds’ by some. This does not rule out having ‘plan B’, rather it probably includes having a second plan. Because planning affects all downstream management functions, it has been called the primary management function. Planning enables humans to achieve great things by envisioning a pathway from concept to reality. 1MBOOJOHFOBCMFTPSHBOJTBUJPOTUPEFMJWFSOFFETBUJTGZJOHQSPEVDUTBOE or services to its customers, create jobs, and contribute to the wealth of the community. Planning done properly also enables organisations to be sustainable over the long term. Planning is a never-ending process because of constant change, uncertainty, new competition, unexpected problems and emerging opportunities. In the next section, we will focus on the benefits and costs of planning in an organisation. 10.2 THE BENEFITS AND COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH PLANNING It has often been said that ‘organisations that fail to plan are planning to fail’. However, most experienced managers recognise that there are benefits as well as costs associated with planning. 10.2.1 The benefits of planning Ideally, planning leads to superior performance for the organisation. Planning done properly will lead to a sustainable organisation. From a general perspective, planning offers the following benefits to the organisation: r 1MBOOJOHQSPWJEFTEJSFDUJPOBOEIFMQTNBOBHFSTBTXFMMBTOPO managers to focus on forward thinking. When all organisational members know where the organisation is going and what they must contribute to attain the objectives, they can begin to 218 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning r r r r coordinate their activities and cooperation and teamwork are fostered. Managers are also compelled to think ahead and to consider resource needs and potential opportunities or threats that the organisation may face in the future. 1MBOOJOHMFBETUPBQBSUJDJQBUPSZXPSLFOWJSPONFOU0SHBOJTBUJPOBM plans should be developed and implemented by a wide range of organisational members. This will lead to a more participative working environment, where organisational members are more likely to ‘buy in’ to a plan that they have helped develop. 1MBOOJOHSFEVDFTUIFJNQBDUPG DIBOHF*OBDIBPUJDFOWJSPONFOU planning enables managers to anticipate change and to develop appropriate responses. Planning also clarifies the consequences of the actions managers might take in response to change. 1MBOOJOHSFEVDFTUIFPWFSMBQQJOHBOEEVQMJDBUJPOPGBDUJWJUJFT When means and ends are clear, the overlapping and duplication of activities and wasteful activities become obvious. 1MBOOJOHTFUTUIFTUBOEBSETCZXIJDIUPGBDJMJUBUFDPOUSPM In planning, objectives are set and plans are formulated to achieve objectives. In the controlling function of management, performance is compared against the established objectives. If significant deviations occur, corrective steps can be taken. Without planning, control cannot take place – thus, a cyclical relationship between planning and control exists. This is illustrated in Figure 10.2. Planning Planning &etermine objectives Formulate Rlans %arr[ Rlans out #cJieve results %omRare results YitJ objectives Control 6aMe corrective action Control Figure 10.: The cyclical relationship between planning and control 5IF JOJUJBM QMBOOJOHDPOUSPM DZDMF CFHJOT XJUI UIF EFUFSNJOBUJPO PG objectives, after which plans are formulated to achieve objectives. Plans are then carried out and results are achieved. The control process then CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 219 PART III: Planning begins when results are compared with objectives. Corrective action is necessary whenever final results deviate from objectives. Corrective BDUJPO UIFO TFSWFT BT BO JOQVU UP UIF OFYU QMBOOJOHDPOUSPM DZDMF BOE contributes to improved future plans. The control process will be discussed in more detail in Chapter 21 (Principles of control). 10.2.2 The costs associated with planning Despite the benefits of planning, it also involves some costs: r 1MBOOJOHNBZDSFBUFSJHJEJUZ3BUIFSUIBOSFNBJOJOHŴFYJCMFJOB changing environment, managers and their subordinates may continue to do what is required in order to achieve the original objectives. r .BOBHFNFOUUJNF*G EPOFQSPQFSMZ UIFQMBOOJOHQSPDFTTSFRVJSFT a substantial amount of managerial time, energy and financial costs. r 'PSNBMQMBOTDBOOPUSFQMBDFJOUVJUJPOBOEDSFBUJWJUZ5IFGPSNBM planning process can easily be reduced to a programmed routine, replacing intuition and creativity in the organisation. This can spell disaster for an organisation. r %FMBZJOEFDJTJPONBLJOH*OTPNFJOTUBODFT QMBOOJOHDBOEJSFDU the focus towards evaluating, rather than doing. This can delay the organisation’s response to changes in its external and internal environment, such as changes in industry, the marketplace or internal operations. Despite the costs that can be associated with planning, no organisation can afford not to plan for its future. Our attention now turns to the various types of plans that an organisation can formulate. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 10.3 TYPES OF PLAN Differentiate between the various types of plan. Plans can be described in terms of their breadth, timeframe, specificity and frequency of use. When described in terms of their breadth, strategic, tactical and operational plans can be distinguished. Plans described in terms of their timeframe refer to long-term, intermediate and short-term plans. When plans are described in terms of their TQFDJųDJUZ EJSFDUJPOBM QMBOT BOEPS TQFDJųD QMBOT DBO CF VTFE -BTUMZ when the frequency of use is the basis, single-use plans, standing plans and individual plans can be identified. 10.3.1 Strategic, tactical and operational plans strategic Rlans 4USBUFHJD QMBOT apply to the entire organisation. A strategic plan establishes the organisation’s overall long-term objectives, it seeks to establish the organisation’s position the organisation in terms of the environment and it drives the overall long-term objectives, seek to position the organisation organisation towards attaining its broad, overall goals. Top-level managers develop strategic plans. Planning at strategic level in terms of the environment and includes: drive the organisation towards r DSFBUJOHBWJTJPOPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO attaining overall goals r USBOTMBUJOHUIFWJTJPOJOUPBSFBMJTUJDNJTTJPOTUBUFNFOU r USBOTMBUJOHUIFNJTTJPOTUBUFNFOUJOUPNFBTVSBCMFMPOHUFSNHPBMT 220 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning r DIPPTJOHBTUSBUFHZPSDPNCJOBUJPOPGTUSBUFHJFTUPBUUBJOUIF vision, mission and long-term goals. Strategic plans have the following characteristics: r 5IFZIBWFBOFYUFOEFEUJNFGSBNF VTVBMMZNPSFUIBOųWFZFBST However, the timeframe depends on the type of industry and may be longer or shorter than five years. r 5IFZGPDVTPOUIFFOUJSFPSHBOJTBUJPO r 5IFZMPPLBUSFDPODJMJOHUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOTTUSFOHUITBOE weaknesses with threats and opportunities in the external environment. r 5IFZGPDVTPODSFBUJOHBOENBJOUBJOJOHBDPNQFUJUJWFBEWBOUBHFGPS the organisation. r 5IFZUBLFTZOFSHZJOUPDPOTJEFSBUJPOBOEBJNBUDPPSEJOBUJOHUIF efforts of departments and individuals to contribute towards the attainment of the overall goals and objectives of the organisation. Strategic plans filter down in the organisation to form the basis for tactical plans. 5BDUJDBMQMBOT specify the details of how the mediumterm objectives of the organisation are to be achieved. The focus of tactical plans could be on the functional areas in an organisation, such as marketing, finance, operations, human resources and so on. Tactical plans are more specific than strategic plans. Tactical plans should take synergy into consideration, in other words, they should contribute to the attainment of the organisation’s overall goals. Middle- and first-line managers usually develop tactical plans. 0QFSBUJPOBMQMBOTfocus on carrying out tactical plans to achieve operational goals and are developed by middle-level and lower-level managers. Operational plans are narrowly focused and have relatively short time horizons (monthly, weekly, day-to-day). Lower-level managers normally formulate operational plans. tactical Rlans specify the details of how the medium-term objectives are to be achieved oRerational Rlans focus on carrying out tactical plans to achieve operational goals 10.3.2 Long-term, medium-term and short-term plans -POHUFSN QMBOT are developed by top management and are developed to achieve the overall goals of the organisation. The time span for strategic planning varies from one organisation to the next. In the case of an aircraft manufacturer, long term could be 20 years. For an organisation in the information technology industry, long term could be 12 months. *OUFSNFEJBUFPSNFEJVNUFSNQMBOT are carried out by middle management for the various functional departments in an organisation and are developed to realise the tactical goals derived from the overall goals. 4IPSUUFSNQMBOT are normally plans that cover less than one year. They are developed by lower management and are concerned with the day-to-day activities of an organisation and the allocation of resources to particular individuals in accordance with particular projects, budgets and so on. longterm Rlans developed to achieve the overall goals of the organisation intermeFiate or meFium term Rlans developed to realise the tactical goals derived from overall goals sJortterm Rlans developed to achieve operational goals CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 221 PART III: Planning 10.3.3 Specific and directional plans Plans are classified as specific when they have clearly defined objectives and leave no room for misinterpretation. Directional plans, on the other hand, are flexible and set out general guidelines. Table 10.1 summarises the key differences between plans in terms of their breadth, timeframe and specificity. Table 10.1: The various kinds of plan in terms of breadth, timeframe and speciƂcity Breadth Strategic plans Seek to position the organisation in terms of the environment and drive the organisation towards attaining its broad, overall goals. Tactical plans Focus on the functional areas in an organisation and deal with people and action to implement strategic plans. Operational plans Focus on smaller segments of the functional areas in an organisation and carrying out tactical plans to achieve operational goals. Timeframe 5peciƂcit[ long term broad intermediate more speciƂc than strategic plans short term narrowly focused 10.3.4 Single-use, standing and individual plans single-use plans used once to meet the need of a particular or unique situation programme describes a set of activities designed to accomplish a specific objective over a period of time There are three basic forms of operational plans, namely single-use, standing and individual plans. Examples of single-use plans are programmes, projects and budgets used once to meet the need of a particular or unique situation. A programme is a type of single-use plan that describes a set of activities designed to accomplish a specific objective over a period of time. Such plans outline the major steps and specific actions necessary to implement the activities prescribed by the programme. The timing and sequencing of the efforts of individuals and units are articulated in the plan. For example, an organisation can implement a diversity programme designed to recruit and hire a more diverse workforce as well as to educate employees on issues related to diverse work environments. SAP is the world’s leading provider of business software. One of the biggest challenges facing SAP South Africa, is that of skills. SAP South Africa developed a programme to attract, retain projects the efforts of individuals or work groups toward the achievement of specific, well-defined goals 222 and develop a diverse portfolio of skills, race and gender to SAP South Africa. Their approach is ‘to find them and farm them’5. A programme can consist of different projects. These are the efforts of individuals or work groups toward the achievement of specific, welldefined goals. A programme manager manages a portfolio of projects and is responsible for the programme meeting its deadlines. Projects are less comprehensive and narrower in focus than programmes and usually have predetermined target dates for completion. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning SAP South Africa has identified various projects to ensure a diverse portfolio of skills, race and gender in the company. For example, they are striving to create product awareness at school level through its First Lego League programme which attracts pupils between the ages of nine and 16 years, so that potential employees have an affinity for the brand from a young age. In addition, SAP is actively involved with supporting career expos. The company also institutionalised a graduate programme to create an additional avenue for broadening the talent pool, and has created more than 120 jobs. The company has also introduced more than 12 000 e-learning courses which can be completed on-line with the aid of webcam or teleconferencing, or with the support of learning circles6. A CVEHFU is a numerical plan for allocating resources to specific activities. Budgets can be used to plan the allocation of human, physical and information resources. SAP South Africa would undoubtedly establish a budget to support the implementation of the programme to ensure a diverse portfolio of skills, race and gender in the company. 4UBOEJOH QMBOT provide guidance for repeatedly performed actions in an organisation. They are on-going and designed to deal with organisational issues or problems that occur frequently. Examples of standing plans are policies, procedures and rules. 1PMJDJFT provide general actions to be followed in order to achieve an objective. Human resources departments maintain policies concerning sick leave, vacation leave and benefit options. Purchasing and supply chain departments establish policies for procurement and inventory management. A university’s administration has policies about admittance to certain academic programmes, exemptions and so on. These policies all provide a framework for decision-making that guides the decision maker in evaluating specific circumstances surrounding each individual case. It is important to note that policies do not state specifically what the decision should or will be. Rather, they state the boundaries of the EFDJTJPOBOEPSXIBUNVTUCFDPOTJEFSFEJOUIFEFDJTJPO 1SPDFEVSFT are sequences of actions to be followed in order to achieve an objective. They are more specific and action oriented than policies. Procedures are designed to give explicit instructions on how to complete a recurring task. For example, a human resources department may have a procedure for filing benefit claims or applying for vacation leave. Production departments establish procedures for identifying and evaluating suppliers and ordering supplies, operating the inventory management system and identifying and implementing specific quality control criteria. 3VMFT provide detailed and specific regulations for actions and state exactly what should and what should not be done. A rule is the strictest type of standing plan found in organisations. They are not intended to serve as guidelines for making decisions. For example, a human resources management department may have rules governing the number of sick days an employee may take with full pay, the months in which vacation leave can be scheduled, and the length of time an organisational member must be employed before qualifying for benefits. The production department may have rules governing the percentage of supplies that can be purchased from a single supplier, the method in buFget numerical plan for allocating resources to specific activities stanFing plan provide guidance for repeatedly performed actions in the organisation polic[ provide general guidelines to be followed when making decisions proceFure sequences of actions to be followed in order to achieve an objective rule provide detailed and specific regulations for actions CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 223 PART III: Planning management b[ objectives /$1 a process in which managers and their subordinates jointly set objectives for the individual employee, derived from broader organisational goals, and periodically evaluate the performance and reward them according to the results which inventory must be accounted for, and the way in which products of sub-standard quality must be handled. Increasingly, organisations are looking for ways to translate broader organisational goals and plans to the level of individual employees. One approach of doing so is NBOBHFNFOUCZPCKFDUJWFT .#0 . MBO is a special planning process on individual level of an organisation. It is a process in which managers and their subordinates jointly set objectives for the individual employee, derived from broader organisational goals, and periodically evaluate the performance and reward them according to the results. Individual objectives and plans are derived from broader organisational goals and plans (remember the words goals and objectives are used interchangeably). The MBO approach to planning helps managers balance conflicting demands by focusing the attention of the manager and the subordinate on the tasks to be completed and the performance to be achieved at an individual level. MBO mainly involves the following steps: 4UFQ Setting individual objectives and plans. The manager and subordinate jointly set objectives and plans for the individual. The organisation’s vision, mission, long-term goals and plans should guide them in setting these objectives. 4UFQIdentify criteria for assessing work performance. Once a set of mutually agreeable objectives has been determined, criteria for assessing the work performance of the individual are determined. 4UFQ Individual employees formulate and implement action plans. Next, employees formulate and implement the action plans that are necessary to achieve their individual goals and review their progress with their managers on an intermittent basis. 4UFQCompare the performance of employee with goals. During this step of the MBO process, the actual performance of the employees is compared with the objectives established at the beginning of the planning period. 4UFQReward performance. Performance rewards should be based on the extent to which the objectives have been achieved. 4UFQPreparation of next period’s objectives by the employee. Once the MBO cycle is complete, employees begin formulating goals to drive the next MBO-planning period. The MBO process is self-renewing in nature. The MBO process can provide three primary benefits7: r .#0QSPWJEFTBGPVOEBUJPOGPSBNPSFJOUFHSBUFEBOETZTUFN orientated approach to planning. The implementation of an MBO programme forces managers to examine how the activities of each individual in a group contribute to the achievement of the overall goals of the group. As the MBO programme works its way up the organisational hierarchy, it provides a system-wide coordinating mechanism. The importance of coordination will be discussed in more detail in Chapter 15 (Principles of organising). r 5IF.#0BQQSPBDISFRVJSFTGSFRVFOUDPNNVOJDBUJPOCFUXFFO employees and their managers because they need to agree on the objectives and plans for the employee. More frequent 224 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning communication often serves to build stronger relationships between managers and their employees. r -BTUMZ .#0TZTUFNTNBZMFBEUPBNPSFQBSUJDJQBUPSZXPSLJOH environment. Employees may have a better understanding of where they fit into the broader organisation. They may also feel they have a voice and can provide input into how their jobs should be designed and what their performance targets should be. At the same time, however, a number of potential disadvantages may GPMMPXGSPNUIFJNQMFNFOUBUJPOPG UIF.#0QSPDFTT r .#0TZTUFNTSFRVJSFBTJHOJųDBOUDPNNJUNFOUPOUIFQBSUPG the manager and may divert attention away from other important managerial activities. r .#0TZTUFNTOPSNBMMZSFRVJSFFYDFTTJWFQBQFSXPSLUIBU complicates the administrative process within the organisation. r 4PNFQFPQMFBSHVFUIBU.#0TZTUFNTGPDVTPOTIPSUUFSNHPBMT rather than on issues that are relevant to the long-term survival and success of the organisation. r -BTUMZ JOTPNFDBTFT HPBMTNBZCFEJŵDVMUUPFTUBCMJTIBOEQVUJOUP operation. *OHFOFSBM UIF.#0DBOCFBOFŲFDUJWFQMBOOJOHUPPMBOECFOFųDJBMUP management when used selectively. MTN is using a form of MBO quite effectively in the company. Managers sit down with individuals to discuss their individual goals. The goals and career path of the individual are confirmed collaboratively and once all parties are in agreement, MTN will make the necessary investment, financially and otherwise, to make sure that the individual’s development is auctioned to the benefit of the company and the individual. For managers to formulate realistic operational plans, they need clear guidance from strategic and tactical plans. Only if the different kinds of plan are understood will lower-level managers be able to derive their sections’ plans from plans at a higher level. This is called the hierarchy of plans and is illustrated in Figure 10.3. Strategic plans Tactical plans Operational plans Individual plans Figure 10.3: The hierarchy of organisational plans CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 225 PART III: Planning Although most managers will admit that they need to plan, many would also admit that they do much less planning than they should. This situation is a result of a number of barriers to effective planning. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 10.4 BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE PLANNING Explain the barriers to effective planning. Why do managers sometimes do less planning (or less effective planning) than they should? Managers fail to plan effectively because of four main reasons. 10.4.1 Planning is time consuming Managers often feel as though they face a continuous stream of problems from the time that they arrive at work, until the time they leave. Through better planning and the implementation of policies, procedures, rules and the like, managers can develop operational systems that are more effective and less problematic and demanding of their time. 10.4.2 Resistance to change Almost by definition, planning involves changing one or more aspects in an organisation to enable it to adapt to a turbulent and everchanging environment. Organisational changes may be required in one or more elements of the organisation, for example the organisational structure, the reward system, the standard operating procedures, office administration and so on. In planning for implementing change, managers almost inevitably encounter resistance from subordinates. Managers themselves may also be resistant to change. Given the importance of focusing on quality, continuous improvement and a total quality approach, resistance to change can have very detrimental results for the organisation over the long term. 10.4.3 Environmental complexity and volatility Complex environments make it very difficult to implement planning processes and to develop plans. However, organisations that operate in rapidly changing and complex environments often find that planning provides a mechanism for coping with such conditions. 10.4.4 Reluctance to establish goals Managers may not always understand the principles for and importance of formulating goals. They may also have a lack of confidence in their own ability and the ability of their subordinates to formulate effective goals. Furthermore, managers may also experience a fear of failure – by not setting goals for their units or departments, managers cannot be accused of not attaining their goals. The barriers to effective planning almost seem insurmountable. However, there are guidelines that managers can use to overcome these barriers. 226 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning 10.5 OVERCOMING BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE PLANNING Achieving success through planning requires the participation of a broad range of organisational members. Managers should therefore develop and maintain a culture that enables planning and reward those who plan effectively. The following guidelines can help managers in this process. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 Explain ways to overcome barriers to effective planning. 10.5.1 Planning should start at the top Planning should start at the top management of an organisation. Without long-term planning for the organisation as a whole, middle managers will not be able to plan for their departments for the medium and short term. Without planning executed by middle managers, lower managers will not be able to plan for the sections for the short term. Top management’s sincere involvement sets the scene for subsequent planning at middle and lower levels of management. Top management should develop an organisational culture that encourages strategic and results-oriented thinking – this will lead to more effective planning. Employees should be provided with training necessary to develop strategic thinking skills and even be given the opportunity to practice those skills in their work environment. Furthermore, individuals can also be rewarded for thinking strategically when developing their plans. The following history describing the fate of LeisureNet illustrates the importance of the commitment of top management to the planning process in an organisation. %&"5)0'"#64*/&448 For a few weeks in September and October 2000, Peter Flack was interim chief executive of the ill-fated LeisureNet. He had been called in as a turnaround specialist. He found that the company had deteriorated so far and so fast that all that could be done for it was to close it. LeisureNet was a large business, but the lessons Flack draws from the LeisureNet failure need to be learned by every entrepreneur and manager. This is his account of one of South Africa’s most spectacular corporate failures. Every organisation, whether it be a club, church, company or country, requires four basic ingredients for it to be successful. They are leadership, a strategic plan, a management team capable of implementing the strategy, and an action plan which breaks the strategic plan down into measureable bite-size bits. This is the basis against which a business is measured. LeisureNet, a successful and profitable company, invited one of the directors of Coronation FRM to sit on their board. A brief look at the results for the year to December 1999 showed a group which turned over in excess of R1bn and which made in excess of R100m after tax. As a rough rule of thumb, we have always said, ‘show us a company which produces after-tax profits equal to 10 per cent of gross revenue and we will show you a healthy business’. The company operated 85 Health & Racquet Clubs in South Africa and employed some 4 500 people who provided an excellent service to nearly one million members. In addition, the company had recently expanded offshore and had built 22 H&R Clubs in Australia, Britain, Germany and Spain, with a number in the process of construction. On the surface, LeisureNet was a company with strong leadership, a clear strategy and an obviously competent management team. At the first board meeting that we attended, accusations were levelled at executive and nonexecutive directors alike and it appeared as if the board had become dysfunctional. The previous joint CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 227 PART III: Planning CEOs of LeisureNet had been transferred recently to Healthland International Limited (again as joint chief executive) and the young managing director of the South African operations had been approached to take the job as CEO of LeisureNet. However, he had not accepted the position and the terms of his appointment had not been finalised. So clearly there was a question of leadership. The previous leaders had sold almost all their interests in LeisureNet and had been awarded a substantial and meaningful stake, free of charge, in Healthland International Limited. Part of the conflict at board level was due to the fact the LeisureNet had been used to fund, staff and train employees of Healthland. The H&R Club business had been pillaged to establish Healthland’s operations and all available cash had been invested in Healthland and little, if any, in the H&R Club business. Some R370m of this available cash had come from selling shares. The result was a lack of maintenance and refurbishment at H&R Clubs. On closer examination, there was no strategic plan. A strategy, which is not reduced to writing, is a hope, wish or prayer but not a plan. A strategic plan requires that its participants go through a procedure which, at the very least, identifies and analyses the various internal and external issues which affect the business. The lack of a coherent strategic plan in LeisureNet can be seen from the fact that over the last five years the company has, in addition to the health and fitness business, embarked on a food business, golfing business, an education business, a casino bid, a gymnasium equipment supplier, a restaurant and the six member IMAX theatre chain. Despite the fact that LeisureNet owned only half the equity of the IMAX group, the company guaranteed 100 per cent of the leases of the purpose built facilities housing the theatres and which extended over 13–20 years. Structure follows strategy and the lack of strategy manifested itself in the composition of the board of directors of LeisureNet. Instead of the various disciplines inherent in a company being represented on the board of directors, for example finance, information systems, human resources and the line operations, the board consisted of two former joint CEOs, the MD of the local operations and a host of non-executive directors. Although the management information system was home grown and, in many instances, required a duplication of effort, the accounting system, sales system, marketing and human resources procedure were well thought out. In moving offshore, the business there had adopted the best of the local operating systems, acquired a standard management information system and had recruited the most senior of the local managers. The glaring omission, however, related to the position of chief financial officer and the treasury and cash management functions for this massively cash hungry growth business in a state of rapid development. Ultimately, this gap in the management structure caused the downfall of Healthland. Finally, there was no action plan of any kind. The group, with the notable exception of the H&R Club business, did not meet, let alone pass, any of the standards required by the four components for any successful business, namely leadership, strategic planning, management and action planning. There were two other glaring omissions in the field of corporate communications and corporate governance. The group could have been saved had it been possible to raise sufficient money to complete the building of the Healthland clubs under construction, or if the sale of these offshore clubs could have been concluded in a way which would have released LeisureNet from its obligations to the Healthland group. In the end, both attempts failed. Both these failures can be traced back to fundamental flaws in the issues of leadership, strategy, and corporate communications. 10.5.2 Involve employees in decision-making and planning processes The role that line and functional managers play in the planning process cannot be overemphasised. They are responsible for executing plans formulated by higher levels of management and their involvement in the planning process should be obvious. People are generally more 228 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 10 Principles of planning committed to plans that they helped to shape. Therefore, employees at all levels of an organisational hierarchy should be involved in planning. For example, managers should seek information from employees and keep them informed about expectations. Managers should also solicit the opinions and views of their employees when formulating plans and they should encourage individual members of the organisation to communicate about the planning efforts of their sections and the organisation. Managers should also take advantage of diverse views and perspectives of employees – it may lead to a broader assessment and evaluation of organisational problems and opportunities. Organisations that encourage a wide range of different ideas and views and have learned to manage diverse groups are more likely to produce plans that are comprehensive and fully developed. It is imperative to learn how to manage diverse work groups. This issue is dealt with in detail in Chapter 9 (Workforce diversity). 10.5.3 Communicate throughout the planning process Communication plays a vital role in the effectiveness of planning. Planning initiated at the top should be communicated to all other levels in the organisation. Managers and all other employees should have a clear understanding of the overall organisational strategy, functional strategies and individual strategies, and how they are interrelated. 10.5.4 Plans should not be cast in stone Any change or changes in the management environment, may lead to the revision of plans. Also, in a turbulent environment contingency planning may be very useful. Contingency planning was defined previously as the development of two or more plans based on different environmental conditions. This chapter addressed planning as the first managerial function that an organisation needs to address. Without proper planning, management cannot proceed to any of the other managerial functions. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 229 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part III: Planning CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Explain the nature and importance of planning. Planning can be defined as the managerial function that determines the organisational vision, mission and goals, identifies ways of attaining the goals and finds the resources needed for the task within a complex environment. Planning done properly enables an organisation to create need-satisfying products and/or services to its customers, to create jobs and to contribute to the wealth and living standard of the community. 2. Demonstrate an understanding of the benefits and costs associated with planning. Planning: • provides direction and helps managers as well as non-managers to focus on forward thinking • leads to a participatory work environment • reduces the impact of change • reduces the overlapping and duplication of activities • sets the standard to facilitate control. The costs associated with planning are: • planning may create rigidity • management time • formal plans cannot replace intuition and creativity • delay in decision-making. 3. Differentiate between the various types of plan. Planning can be described in terms of i. breadth; ii. timeframe; iii. specificity; and iv. frequency of use. When described in terms of its breadth, we can distinguish between strategic, tactical and operational plans. If we describe plans in terms of its timeframe, longterm, intermediate (or medium-term), and short-term plans can be distinguished. When plans are described in terms of their specificity, directional plans and/or specific plans can be used. Based on the frequency of use, single-use plans, standing plans and individual plans can be distinguished. 4. Explain the barriers to effective planning. Effective planning in organisations is often hindered by: • its time consuming nature • a resistance to change • environmental complexity and volatility • reluctance to establish goals. 5. Explain ways to overcome barriers to effective planning. Managers can follow various guidelines to enhance the planning process in their organisations by: • realising that planning starts at the top 230 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 2:30 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 10 Principles of planning • involving employees in decision-making and in the planning process • communicating throughout the planning process • ensuring flexibility. KEY TERMS a-B-C priority system budget contingency planning directional plan environmental complexity and volatility goals individual plan long-term plan management by objectives medium-term plan mission objectives operational plan pareto principle planning policy priorities procedure programme project rule short-term plan single-use plan specific plan standing plan strategic plan tactical plan values vision REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. explain the nature of planning in contemporary organisations. 2. Defend the importance of effective planning in an organisation. 3. Compare the benefits and costs that can be associated with planning. 4. Differentiate between the various types of plans, based on their breadth. 5. explain the various types of plans based on their timeframe. 6. identify and discuss the various types of plans based on their specificity. 7. Use ‘frequency of use’ to distinguish between the various types of plans. 8. ‘managers fail to plan effectively because of mainly four reasons.’ Discuss this statement. 9. explain how managers can overcome the barriers to effective planning in an organisation. Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 2:30 PM via UNISA 231 PART III: Planning END NOTES KWWSHQZLNLSHGLDRUJZLNL*OREDOB3RVLWLRQLQJB6\VWHP$FFHVVHGRQ6HSWHPEHU $GDSWHGIURP.UHLWQHU5Principles of management.WKHGLWLRQ$UL]RQD&HQJDJH/HDUQLQJSSŋ KWWSZZZIXQGLQJXQLYHUVHFRPFRPSDQ\KLVWRULHV)RUG0RWRU&RPSDQ\KLVWRU\KWPO *RRGPDQ6+)DQGW300LFKOLWVFK-) /HZLV36Management challenges for tomorrow’s leaders. 0DVRQ7KRPVRQ6RXWK:HVWHUQSSŋ %HVWHPSOR\HUV6RXWK$IULFDS %HVWHPSOR\HUV6RXWK$IULFDSSŋ *RRGPDQHWDORSFLWSSŋ $GDSWHGIURP)ODFN3'HDWKRID%XVLQHVVSucceed Magazine-XQH-XO\ 232 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Chapter 11 Strategic management Tersia Brevis OPENING CASE Jack Welch at General Electric (GE)1 General Electric (GE) traces its beginnings to Thomas A Edison, who established Edison Electric Light Company in 1878. In 1892, a merger of Edison General Electric Company and ThomsonHouston Electric Company created General Electric Company and the company’s stock began trading on the New York Stock Exchange. In 1894, Edison sold all his shares in the company, remaining a consultant to General Electric. Jack Welch joined GE in 1960 as a chemical engineer in the company’s Plastics division in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. He was elected the company’s youngest Vice President in 1972. In 1979, he became GE’s Vice Chairman. In December 1980, he succeeded Reginald H Jones, and in April 1981 he became the eighth Chairman and CEO. He served in that position until he retired in September 2001. During his 20 years of leadership in this position, radical changes took place at GE and Welch increased the value of the company from $13 billion to several hundred billion. In 1980, the year before Welch became CEO, GE recorded revenues of roughly $26.8 billion; in 2000, the year before he left, they were nearly $130 billion. The company went from a market value of $14 billion to one of more than $410 billion at the time of his retirement, making it the most valuable and largest company in the world, up from America’s tenth largest (based on market capitalisation) in 1981. Under his leadership, GE was listed as the world’s most respected company in 1998 and 2002 (shortly after his retirement). As CEO of GE, Mr Welch’s management skills became almost legendary. He had little time for bureaucracy and archaic ways of conducting business. In his time, he gave managers free reign as long as they followed the GE ethic of constant change and striving to do better. He ran GE like a small dynamic business able to change as opportunities arose or when a business became unprofitable. Soon after his appointment as CEO, Welch realised that it had cost GE more to make a television than it cost to buy a Japanese-made set. GE was in a business that had no technological advantage and where entry barriers were low. Foreign competitors could quickly and easily enter their market. In 1981, Welch began his crusade to eliminate the company’s weak links before they could drag down the entire organisation. His goal was a radical restructuring of the company that would get rid of problem products and focus on profitable businesses immune to foreign competition, particularly in the financial, high-tech, and service sectors. His biggest challenge was to change a company, which the outside world thought was perfect, to face the realities of global competition in the 1980s and 1990s. He launched his controversial restructuring by ordering GE managers to fix, sell or close down businesses that were not first or second in their markets. In all, GE made 1 700 acquisitions and divested 408 businesses while Welch was CEO. The most prominent milestones for GE during the Jack Welch era are briefly discussed below. The GE Credit Corporation, founded in 1943, doubled its assets between 1979 and 1984, primarily due to its expansion into new markets such as the leasing and selling of heavy industrial products, inventories, real estate and insurance. Furthermore, the leasing operations provided by the GE Credit Corporation, provided the parent company with tax shelters from accelerated depreciation on equipment developed by GE and PART III: Planning then leased by the credit corporation. During the 1980s, factory automation became a major activity at GE. Apart from many acquisitions in this period, GE entered into an agreement with Japan’s Hitachi, Ltd. to manufacture and market Hitachi’s industrial robots in the United States. The company also spent $300 million to robotise its locomotive plant in Pennsylvania. The company’s aircraft engine business also participated in an air force plant modernisation programme and GE later manufactured the engines for the controversial B-1B bomber. In 1986, GE made several extremely important purchases, the biggest of which was the $6.4 billion purchase of the Radio Corporation of America (RCA). RCA’s National Broadcasting Company (NBC) was at the time the leading US television network and it brought GE into the broadcasting business in full force. The purchase enabled GE to shift from manufacturing into service and high technology. During this time GE divested itself of RCA’s David Sarnoff Research Center because GE’s laboratories made it redundant. In 1987, GE also sold its own and RCA’s television manufacturing business to the French company Thomson in exchange for Thomson’s medical diagnostics business. In 1986, the company broadened its financial services division by the purchase of the Employers Reinsurance Corporation (a financial services company), an 80 per cent interest in Kidder Peabody and Company (an investment banking firm). GE owned 100 per cent of the latter by 1990, but the unit was liquidated in 1994 due to its poor financial performance. During the early 1990s, GE’s operations were divided into three business groupings, namely technology, service and manufacturing. Its manufacturing operations were traditionally the core of the company. During this time period, however, manufacturing accounted for roughly one-third of the company’s earnings. However, GE still continued to invest more than $1 billion annually into the research and development of manufactured goods. Much of this investment was directed towards energy conservation, for example more efficient light bulbs, jet engines and electrical power transmission methods. During 1992, the company continued the 234 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES restructuring of its existing operations with the aim to become more competitive in all of its business. For example, GE reduced its engineering workforce from 10 000 to 4 000, resulting in a reduction of nearly 50 per cent of its overall Aircraft Engine Group payroll. Its restructuring activities paid off in the form of excellent profit margins in many of its major product divisions. In the late 1990s, GE reached a number of milestones. In 1996, the company celebrated its hundredth year as part of the Dow Jones Industrial Index – GE was the only company remaining from the Index’s original list. In the same year, NBC joined with Microsoft Corporation in launching MSNBC, a 24-hour cable television news channel and internet news service. Overall revenues exceeded the $100 billion mark for the first time in 1998. The company also grew tremendously by means of further acquisitions centered on two growth initiatives: services and globalisation. In 1999 magazine recognised Jack Welch’s success as Manager of the Century. Under Welch’s leadership, the company also adopted ‘six sigma’, a quality control and improvement initiative pioneered by Motorola, Inc. and AlliedSignal Inc. The aim of the programme was to cut costs by reducing errors or defects. GE claimed that six sigma was yielding $1 billion in annual savings by 1998. During this time, the company continued restructuring their business. Redundant facilities were closed and production was shifted to cheaper labour markets. During 1999, GE adopted a fourth growth initiative, namely e-business (the other three were globalisation, services, and six sigma). Like many other companies, GE reacted cautiously when the internet began its late 1990s explosion. Once Welch was convinced of the internet’s potential, he quickly adopted e-commerce as a key to the company’s future growth. During the late 1999s, Welch announced his planned retirement. At the time, GE was one of the world’s fastest growing and most profitable companies with a market capitalisation of $505 billion, second to only Microsoft Corporation. He eventually retired in September 2001, leaving behind an advanced technology, services and financial company, taking on the world’s biggest challenges and dedicated to innovation in energy, health, transportation and infrastructure. CHAPTER 11 Strategic management LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of the strategic management process. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: . Differentiate between the terms nstrategyo and nstrategic managemento. 2. Discuss the various phases in the strategic management process. 11.1 STRATEGY AND STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Differentiate between the terOU nUtrateI[o anF nUtrateIiE OanaIeOento 11.1.1 Strategy All organisations, large or small, profit-seeking or not-for-profit, private and public sector, have a purpose, a reason for its existence. The purpose of an organisation may or may not be articulated in the form of a vision and mission statement. In the preceding chapter, we have explained the vision as a statement of what the organisation wants to become and where it wants to be in future. The mission statement aligns UIFPSHBOJTBUJPOXJUIJUTWJTJPOJOUFSNTPG JUTQSPEVDUTBOEPSTFSWJDFT market and technology. 4USBUFHJFT relate to the pursuit of this purpose. Strategies must be created and implemented. Strategies are relevant for the organisation as a whole, for the individual businesses (or strategic business units), the various functions that comprise the organisation (such as the marketing, finance, operations and supply chain functions) and for the individual in the organisation. Organisations succeed when their strategies are appropriate for the circumstances. In other words, there must be a fit between organisational strategies and the circumstances in its external and internal environment. Jack Welch is a legendary leader and strategist. In our opening case we saw how Welch, as CEO of General Electric, aligned organisational strategies with the vision and mission of the organisation and the circumstances in the company’s managerial environment. Mr Welch ran GE like a small dynamic business able to change as opportunities arose or when a business became unprofitable. He launched his controversial restructuring by ordering GE managers to fix, sell or close down businesses that were not first or second in their markets. As a result, GE made 1 700 acquisitions and divested 408 businesses while Welch was CEO. Strategies should also be feasible in respect of organisational resources, skills and capabilities. In Chapter 2, we identified various resources (or inputs), skills and capabilities that an organisation needs in order to attain its goals and objectives. Resources, skills and capabilities are scarce, and it is therefore important to formulate strategies that are feasible in terms of the scarcity of these inputs. Managers should also ensure that organisational strategies are desirable to all stakeholders. Stakeholders are those individuals and groups, internally as well as externally, who have a stake in or an influence over the business. Organisations fail when their strategies do not meet the expectations UVTCVGI[ helps to explain the things that managers and organisations do in order to fulfill the purpose of the organisation CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 235 PART III: Planning of stakeholders or when the organisation does not produce outcomes that are desirable. To succeed and to ensure sustainability, organisations must compete effectively and outperform their rivals in a dynamic and turbulent environment. Managers should formulate ‘winning strategies’ to compete effectively and to outperform rivals. 11.1.2 A winning strategy What is a winning strategy? A winning strategy is a strategy that2: r MJOLTBOPSHBOJTBUJPOTJOUFSOBMTUSFOHUITBOEXFBLOFTTFTXJUI opportunities and threats from its external environment r CVJMETBTVTUBJOBCMFDPNQFUJUJWFBEWBOUBHFGPSUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO A competitive advantage can be defined as the ability of an organisation to add more value for its customers than its rivals, and thereby attain a position of relative advantage. The real challenge for a winning strategy is to sustain any advantage once achieved r DPOUJOVPVTMZTFFLTXBZTUPJNQSPWFPSHBOJTBUJPOBMQFSGPSNBODF Performance refers to aspects such as profits, job creation, organisational goals and objectives and so on r NFFUTUIFFYQFDUBUJPOTPG FYUFSOBMBOEJOUFSOBMTUBLFIPMEFST r BMJHOTJUTFMG XJUIFOWJSPONFOUBMSFRVJSFNFOUTJOBHMPCBMDPOUFYU 11.1.3 Strategic management UVTCVGIKEOCPCIGOGPV entails strategic analysis, strategy formulation, strategy implementation and strategic control 236 First, TUSBUFHJD NBOBHFNFOU is about the strategy itself, the establishment of a clear direction for the organisation and for every CVTJOFTT QSPEVDU BOEPS TFSWJDF BOE JOEJWJEVBM JO UIF PSHBOJTBUJPO This is called the strategic analysis phase in the strategic management process. Second, strategic management also entails the creation of a means of getting to the required end, called strategy formulation. This requires the creation of strong competitive positions. Third, strategic management requires excellence in the implementation of strategies in order to yield performance. This is referred to as strategy implementation in the strategic management process. Strategic management is also about strategic change. Creativity and innovation are needed to ensure that the organisation is responsive to pressures for change and that strategies are improved and renewed. Current and past successes are no guarantee of success in the future. Organisations need to adapt and change in a dynamic environment. Lastly, strategic management entails strategic control. Strategic control is necessary in order to determine the organisation’s success in attaining its vision, mission, objectives and goals. The results of a comparison between actual results and intended or planned outcomes, may lead to strategic change. A clear vision and mission statement and a winning strategy can provide an organisation with enormous success, as illustrated by the Vanguard Group example on the next page. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 11 Strategic management Vanguard Group3 By the turn of the twenty-first century, the Vanguard Group had become the largest mutual fund family in the world. The reason for their success lies in the vision, winning strategy and steadfastness of John C Bogle, the founder and now retired chairman. As a student in 1950, Bogle was intrigued by the management of mutual funds. At that time, all mutual funds were sold with sales commissions, often eight per cent of the amount invested, which was taken off the top as a front-end load. This meant that if you invested R1 000, only R920 would be earning you money (the R80 goes towards management fees and commissions). In addition, these funds also had high yearly overheads or expense ratios and spent a lot on advertising costs. Bogle wondered why funds could not be bought without salespeople or brokers and their steep commissions, and whether growth could not be maximised by keeping overhead costs down. These ideas lead to the launch of Bogle’s own company, the Vanguard Group of Investment Companies in 1974. Bogle’s company changed the entire structure under which mutual funds were operated into a fund-distribution company mutually owned by shareholders. The Vanguard company was based on the principle of a reduction in overhead costs, management fees and commissions and service to customers. This strategy led to an enormous success for the company. Twenty-five years after its launch, the Vanguard company had more than $92 billion in assets and had beat 86 per cent of all actively managed stock funds in 1998 and an even higher percentage over the past decade. Bogle followed a low-cost investment strategy, with the focus on customer service. He believed in funds being bought and not sold; thus reducing commissions to salespeople and brokers. He also believed in word-of-mouth and spent the minimum on advertising costs. The results gain by this strategy are evident – the Vanguard Group of Investment Companies’ equity and bond funds dominated Best Buys, which are the yearly selected few funds that analysts judge to ‘invest wisely, spend frugally, and you get what you paid for’, and that have performed best in shareholder returns over both up and down markets. 11.2 THE STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PROCESS LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 The management of the strategic process is usually built around four important phases, where each phase consists of a number of steps. The first phase of the strategic management process (strategic analysis) answers the question ‘What is the current position of the organisation?’ It involves the development of a vision, a mission statement and an analysis of the management environment. The second phase (strategy formulation) answers the question ‘Where does the organisation want to be?’ It involves setting goals and objectives and formulating corporate and business strategies. Phase 3 (strategy implementation) answers the question ‘How can the organisation get to where it wants to be?’ It involves formulating functional strategies and institutionalising them. Lastly, Phase 4 (strategic control) answers the question ‘How will the organisation know when it has arrived?’ It involves an analysis of results, comparison with the objectives and goals of the organisation and corrective action. It is important to note that the strategic management process is not simply linear from Phases 1 to 4 which then ends. Managers need to return to prior steps and make changes as an on-going process. Each of these steps will now be discussed in more detail. Discuss the various phases in the strategic management process. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 237 PART III: Planning UVTCVGIKECPCN[UKU 11.2.1 Strategic analysis the determination of the current Figure 11.1 illustrates the phases of the TUSBUFHJDBOBMZTJT process. position of the organisation by formulating a vision, mission and analysis of the management environment &GXGNQRC XKUKQP (QTOWNCVG VJGOKUUKQP UVCVGOGPV r #PCN[UGVJG GPXKTQPOGPV r +nternal environmental analysis 'Zternal environmental analysis (KIWTG 5trategic analysis In order to analyse the current position of the organisation, a vision and a mission statement need to be formulated. An analysis of the organisation’s internal and external environments is also conducted during this phase. Although the vision and mission have been discussed in Chapter 10, a more detailed explanation of these terms is provided below. XKUKQP a statement of what the organisation wants to become and where it wants to be in future 238 Develop a vision The first step in the strategic management process is the development of a clear WJTJPO, which requires managers to think about ways to carry their organisations into the future. For top managers to lead the organisation to success in the future, an inspiring vision is required that everybody in the organisation – internal as well as external stakeholders – shares in and is excited about. Effective visions push organisations and individuals working in the organisation to look outside themselves to see not what or where they are now, but where and what they can be in future. The vision should provide a clear sense of what the organisation hopes to become – an anchor for decision-making in the organisation. A clear vision statement: r QPSUSBZTUIFESFBNUIBUUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOIBTGPSUIFGVUVSF r QSPNPUFTDIBOHFXJUIJOUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO r GPSNTUIFCBTJTGPSQMBOOJOHBOEEFDJTJPONBLJOH r QSPWJEFTBCBTJTGPSTUSBUFHJDDPOUSPM r NPUJWBUFTJOEJWJEVBMTBOEGBDJMJUBUFTUIFSFDSVJUNFOUPGUBMFOU r IBTQPTJUJWFDPOTFRVFODFTGPSUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO JUTJOUFSOBMBOE external stakeholders. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 11 Strategic management When top management effectively communicates the organisation’s vision statement, there is a significantly higher level of motivation, job satisfaction, commitment, loyalty, pride, clarity of the organisation’s values and productivity. Develop a mission statement An organisation’s mission is its reason for being or its reason for existence. The vision statement of an organisation guides the formulation of the mission; the mission in turn provides strategic direction for organisational members. Although NJTTJPO TUBUFNFOUT can vary among organisations, every mission statement should answer at least the following critical questions: r 8IBUJTPVSCVTJOFTT XIBUJTPVSQSJNBSZQSPEVDUTBOEPS services that we offer to our market)? r 8IPBSFPVSDMJFOUT XIPJTPVSQSJNBSZUBSHFUNBSLFUNBSLFUT r )PXXJMMXFQSPWJEFUIJTQSPEVDUPSTFSWJDF XIBUUFDIOPMPHZXJMM be used to provide the primary products and services)? OKUUKQPUVCVGOGPV reflects an organisation’s reason for being (it has three core components: products and/or services, market and technology of the organisation) The answers to these three questions should clearly set the organisation apart from similar organisations. In addition to the three core components of a mission statement discussed above, organisations should also address the following components, or state them in an addendum to the mission statement: r 5IFPSHBOJTBUJPOTDPODFSOGPSųOBODJBMTPVOEOFTTJOUFSNTPG survival, growth, market share and profit. Financial soundness is an important factor in terms of the sustainability and long-term survival of the organisation. r 5IFWBMVFT FUIJDTBOECFMJFGTPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO7BMVFT FUIJDTBOE beliefs form the basis of the way in which business is conducted, or should be conducted, in the organisation. r 5IFTPDJBMSFTQPOTJCJMJUZPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO0SHBOJTBUJPOTIBWF social obligations above and beyond making profit. Organisations are also expected to obey the law, be ethical in their conduct and be a good global corporate citizen. Social responsibility is discussed in more detail in Chapter 8 (Business ethics, corporate social responsibility and corporate governance). r 5IFQVCMJDJNBHFPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO5IFNJTTJPOTUBUFNFOUDBO include the image that the organisation wants to portray to its stakeholders. r 5IFPSHBOJTBUJPOTDPODFSOGPSBMMTUBLFIPMEFST5IFNJTTJPO statement should clearly underline the organisation’s concern for its external and internal stakeholders. r )PXUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOJTEJŲFSFOUGSPN PSCFUUFSUIBO JUT competitors. This refers to the competitive advantage of the organisation. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 239 PART III: Planning The components listed on the previous page are also referred to as the PSHBOJTBUJPOBMQIJMPTPQIZ. The philosophy of International Business Machines Corporation (IBM), as expressed by their current chairman, the organisation’s concern president and CEO, Samuel J Palmisano, is given below. The Computingfor financial soundness, the Tabulating-Recording Company (CTR) was created on June 16, 1911, values, ethics, beliefs of the organisation, social responsibility by the merger of three nineteenth century companies (the Tabulating Machine Company, the International Time Recording Company and of the organisation, public the Computing Scale Company of America). CTR was the precursor image of the organisation, to IBM. In 1914, Thomas J Watson Sr. joined CTR and played a major organisation’s concern for role in transforming the company over the following two decades into all stakeholders and the a growing leader of innovation and technology and a prototype for the competitive advantage of the newly emergent multinational corporation. In 1924 the company’s name organisation changed to International Business Machines Corporation (IBM). IBM is a pioneer in the information technology industry. The company produces innovative IT solutions to meet modern business needs4. QTICPKUCVKQPCNRJKNQUQRJ[ 0VSWBMVFTBUXPSLPOCFJOHBO*#.FS5 We’ve been spending a great deal of time thinking, debating and determining the fundamentals of this company. It has been important to do so. When IBMers have been crystal clear and united about our strategies and purpose, it’s amazing what we’ve been able to create and accomplish. When we’ve been uncertain, conflicted or hesitant, we’ve squandered opportunities and even made blunders that would have sunk smaller companies. It may not surprise you, then, that last year we examined IBM’s core values for the first time since the company’s founding. In this time of great change, we needed to affirm IBM’s reason for being, what sets the company apart and what should drive our actions as individual IBMers. Importantly, we needed to find a way to engage everyone in the company and get them to speak up on these important issues. Given the realities of a smart, global, and independent-minded, twentyfirst century workforce like ours, I don’t believe something as vital and personal as values could be dictated from the top. So, for 72 hours last summer, we invited all 319 000 IBMers around the world to engage in an open ‘values jam’ on our global intranet. IBMers by the tens of thousands weighed in. They were thoughtful and passionate about the company they want to be a part of. They were also brutally honest. Some of what they wrote was painful to read, because they pointed out all the bureaucratic and dysfunctional things that get in the way of serving clients, working as a team or implementing new ideas. But we were resolute in keeping the 240 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES dialog free-flowing and candid. And I don’t think what resulted – broad, enthusiastic, grass-roots consensus – could have been obtained in any other way. In the end, IBMers determined that our actions will be driven by these values: r %FEJDBUJPOUPFWFSZDMJFOUTTVDDFTT r *OOPWBUJPOUIBUNBUUFST GPSPVSDPNQBOZBOEGPS the world. r 5SVTUBOEQFSTPOBMSFTQPOTJCJMJUZJOBMM relationships. I must tell you, this process has been very meaningful to me. We are getting back in touch with what IBM has always been about – and always will be about – in a very concrete way. And I feel that I’ve been handed something every CEO craves: a mandate, for exactly the right kinds of transformation, from an entire workforce. Where will this lead? It is a work in progress, and many of the implications remain to be discovered. What I can tell you is that we are rolling up our sleeves to bring IBM’s values to life in our policies, procedures and daily operations. I’ve already touched on a number of things relating to clients and innovation, but our values of trust and personal responsibility are being managed just as seriously – from changes in how we measure and reward performance, to how we equip and support IBMers’ community volunteerism. Our values underpin our relationships with investors, as well. In late February, the board of directors approved sweeping changes in executive compensation. They CHAPTER 11 Strategic management include innovative programs that ensure investors first receive meaningful returns – a 10 per cent increase in the stock price – before IBM’s top 300 executives can realise a penny of profit from their stock option grants. Putting that into perspective, IBM’s market value would have to increase by $17 billion before executives saw any benefit from this year’s option awards. In addition, these executives will be able to acquire market-priced stock options only if they first invest their own money in IBM stock. We believe these programs are unprecedented, certainly in our industry and perhaps in business. Clearly, leading by values is very different from some kinds of leadership demonstrated in the past by business. It is empowering, and I think that’s much healthier. Rather than burden our people with excessive controls, we trust them to make decisions and to act based on values – values they themselves shaped. To me, it’s also just common sense. In today’s world, where everyone is so interconnected and interdependent, it is simply essential that we work for each other’s success. If we’re going to solve the biggest, thorniest and most widespread problems in business and society, we have to innovate in ways that truly matter. And we have to do all this by taking personal responsibility for all of our relationships – with clients, colleagues, partners, investors and the public at large. This is IBM’s mission as an enterprise, and a goal toward which we hope to work with many others, in our industry and beyond. Samuel J. Palmisano; Chairman, President and Chief Executive Officer The statement above from IBM’s chairman, president and CEO, addresses most of the ingredients of a philosophy as we have discussed it theoretically: r *#.TDPODFSOGPSųOBODJBMTPVOEOFTT*#.IBTCFFODSZTUBMDMFBS and united about their strategies and purpose, including their concern for financial success in the industry. r 5IFWBMVFT FUIJDTBOECFMJFGTPG *#.*#.CSJOHTUIFJSWBMVFTUPMJGF in their policies, procedures and daily operations. r 5IFTPDJBMSFTQPOTJCJMJUZPG *#.*#.IBTTPDJBMPCMJHBUJPOTBCPWF and beyond making profit and management equips and supports community volunteerism of their employees. r 5IFQVCMJDJNBHFPG*#.5IFDPNQBOZJTEFEJDBUFEUPFWFSZ client’s success. r *#.TDPODFSOGPSBMMTUBLFIPMEFST*#.CVJMETPOBUSVTUJOH relationship between management and subordinates. Rather than burden their people with excessive controls, they trust them to make decisions and to act based on values – values they themselves shaped. IBM values good relationships with investors. They implemented innovative programs that ensure that their investors first receive meaningful returns before IBM’s top 300 executives can realise profit from their stock option grants. In addition, these executives will be able to acquire market-priced stock options only if they first invest their own money in IBM stock. r )PX*#.JTEJŲFSFOUGSPN PSCFUUFSUIBO JUTDPNQFUJUPST*#.IBT a strong focus on innovation and their concern for all stakeholders places them in a good competitive position. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 241 PART III: Planning A mission statement should be used as a strategic tool in an organisation. Figure 11.2 illustrates how this should be done. Formulate the vision Formulate the mission statement Identify the key performance areas Ensure buy-in from all stakeholders Base individuals’ performance agreements on key performance areas Figure 11.2: The mission statement as a strategic tool Smit, P.J., Cronjé, G.J. de J, Brevis, T., Vrba, M.J. 2007. Management Principles: A Contemporary Edition for Africa. Cape Town: Juta Publishers, p 90. First, top management should formulate the organisation’s vision and mission statement. In a modern managerial environment, executive managers (such as Mr Palmisamo from IBM), are rethinking their role in the formulation of an organisation’s mission and philosophy. In some instances, the involvement of subordinates in the formulation of mission statements can be very fruitful. Second, management should formulate key performance areas (KPAs) for the organisation as a whole. Third, organisations should seek buy-in from all stakeholders. Fourth, the KPAs should be cascaded down all the way to the performance appraisal level of each individual in the organisation. Finally, if each individual achieves his or her goals, the organisation will achieve its overall goals. Analyse the environment To create value, an organisation’s mission should be congruent with its internal capabilities and its external environment. Therefore, the internal 242 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 11 Strategic management as well as the external environment should be analysed. The purpose of the internal environmental analysis is to identify assets, resources, skills and processes that represent either strengths or weaknesses of the organisation. Strengths can be defined as aspects of the organisation’s operations that represent a potential competitive advantage, while weaknesses can be defined as areas that are in need of change or improvement. Key areas to be assessed in the internal environmental analysis are: r UIFQSPEVDUTBOEPSTFSWJDFTPŲFSFEUPUIFNBSLFU r UIFNBSLFUJOHFYQFSUJTFPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO r BMMUIFBDUJWJUJFTPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPOSFMBUFEUPJUTPQFSBUJPOT r UIFIVNBOSFTPVSDFTPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO r UIFPSHBOJTBUJPOTųOBODJBMQFSGPSNBODF These areas are evaluated in terms of the extent to which they support the competitive advantage sought by the organisation. Managers will then use this information to formulate strategies that capitalise on the organisation’s strengths and remedy its weaknesses. The purpose of the external environmental analysis is to identify opportunities and threats in the organisation’s external environment. Opportunities can be described as those environmental variables on which the organisation can capitalise and improve its competitive position. Threats are conditions that jeopardise the organisation’s ability to survive and be successful in the long term. In Chapter 4, several external environmental variables were discussed. These forces should be analysed to identify threats and opportunities. The analysis of the internal and external environments will indicate to management whether the mission statement is realistic. This will lead to the second phase of the strategic process, namely strategy formulation. strength aspects of organisational operations that represent a potential competitive edge weakness area of organisational operations that are in need of change or improvement opportunities environmental variables that can improve an organisation’s competitive position threats environmental variables that hinder an organisation to survive or be successful 11.2.2 Strategy formulation Figure 11.3 illustrates the phases of the strategy formulation process. Strategy formulation involves setting long-term goals for the organisation and then formulating corporate and business strategies that will lead to the realisation and the long-term goals. Set long-term goals Formulate corporate and business strategies r )eneric strategy r )rand strategy Figure 11.3: Strategy formulation CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 243 PART III: Planning balanced score card (BSC) measurement of organisational performance in four areas of equal importance, namely financial performance, customer service, internal business performance and learning and growth performance 244 Set long-term goals In the previous chapters, the terms ‘goals’ and ‘objectives’ were used interchangeably. However, in this chapter we make a clear distinction between these two concepts. Goals state general targets to be accomplished. Objectives, on the other hand, state what is to be accomplished in singular, specific and measurable terms with a target date. Goals are often translated into objectives. Goals and objectives should flow from the organisation’s mission statement to address strategic issues and problems identified through the strategic analysis phase. Successful strategic management requires a commitment to a defined set of strategic objectives by management. Kaplan and Norton have developed a tool that can be used to ensure that the organisation is achieving its mission. They suggest that organisations focus their efforts and activities on a limited number of specific, critical performance measures which reflect stakeholders’ key success factors. In this way, organisations can concentrate on those issues which are essential for long-term success, sustainability and competitiveness. Kaplan and Norton used the term balanced score card to describe a framework of four groups of performance measures, and argue that organisations should select critical measures for each of these areas. Examples of possible measures of each of these are given below6: r 'JOBODJBMQFSTQFDUJWF5IFųOBODJBMQFSTQFDUJWFBOTXFSTUIF question ‘Is the organisation’s performance resulting in increased shareholder value?’ The financial performance of an organisation is normally evident from its key financial statements, such as the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement. The income statement of an organisation is often referred to as the ‘profit and loss statement’ that shows the organisation’s income, expenses and net profit for a specific financial period, usually one year. A ‘balance sheet’ provides a snapshot of an organisation’s financial position at a certain point in time, showing its assets, liabilities and equity. An organisation’s ‘cash flow statement’ reflects the amounts of cash moving in and out the organisation. By themselves, none of these financial statements portray the full financial picture of an organisation. The income statement, balance sheet and cash flow statement must be used together when assessing an organisation’s financial performance. In addition, an organisation can use its financial statements to calculate financial ratios such as return on capital employed, economic value added and so on. In our opening case, we saw the positive effect of choosing and implementing a winning strategy on the financial performance of General Electric under the leadership of Jack Welch. r $VTUPNFSQFSTQFDUJWF5IFDVTUPNFSQFSTQFDUJWFBOTXFST the question ‘Is the organisation’s performance resulting in an JODSFBTJOHTIBSFPG DVTUPNFSTQFOEJOH $VTUPNFSTBSFJNQPSUBOU stakeholders of an organisation. One measure of customer service is customer satisfaction, which is often used by organisations. It is CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 11 Strategic management also important for organisations to monitor customer defections, that is, by identifying which customers are leaving the organisation and measuring the rate at which they are leaving. r *OUFSOBMQFSTQFDUJWF5IJTQFSTQFDUJWFPGUIFCBMBODFETDPSFDBSE answers the question ‘Are the internal processes effectively aligned to drive and deliver improved performance?’ It focuses on the processes, decisions, and actions that managers and workers make within the organisation that add value to the organisation. The internal perspective of the balanced scorecard typically focuses on quality. Quality can be measured in various ways, for example producing a product or service with unsurpassed performance and features, offering a product with excellent quality for the price or offering a product that conforms to customers’ expectations. r -FBSOJOHBOEHSPXUIQFSTQFDUJWF5IFMBTUQFSTQFDUJWFPGUIF balanced scorecard addresses the question ‘Does the organisation have the necessary human capital, technology and culture to drive the strategy?’ Thus, the learning and growth perspective involves continuous improvement in products and services, continuous learning, and continuous designing and redesigning of processes by which products and services are created. All four dimensions of the scorecard are of equal importance, and results relate to one another through the systems effect. The BSC is discussed in more detail in Chapter 21 (Principles of control). Formulating corporate and business strategies After the vision and mission have been formulated, the situation analysis has been completed and strategic goals and objectives have been set, corporate and business strategies should be developed. Generic strategies When choosing a strategy, strategic planners decide on a core idea about how the organisation can best compete in the marketplace. The term used in strategic planning for this core idea is ‘HFOFSJDTUSBUFHZ’. Michael Porter, a well-known Harvard professor, identified generic strategies that can be used to describe the strategy of most organisations. Porter originally identified three generic strategies, namely: r DPTUMFBEFSTIJQstrategy r EJŲFSFOUJBUJPOTUSBUFHZ r BGPDVTTUSBUFHZ An overall cost leadership strategy attempts to maximise sales of the organisation by minimising costs per unit and hence prices. Several things can be done to minimise costs. First, as workers gain more experience in producing a particular product, productivity increases and unit costs decrease. This is called a ‘learning curve’ or ‘experience curve’. Second, an organisation can expand the size of its operations. As the size of the operations increases, the total costs per unit decrease because the fixed costs (for example the costs pertaining to buildings, machinery, generic strateg[ core idea about how the organisation can best compete in the marketplace cost leadership the first generic strategy, which attempts to maximise sales of the organisation by minimising costs per unit CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 245 PART III: Planning equipment and others) are shared by a larger number of products. This is referred to as ‘economies of scale’. An example of this is the reduction in the price of pocket calculators over the years as a result of economies of scale. Differentiation is the second generic strategy, which distinguishes differentiation an organisation’s products or services from those of its competitors. the second generic strategy, The rationale for differentiation is that the organisation can charge which distinguishes an higher prices (and make more profit per unit) for a product that organisation’s products or customers perceive to be different from similar products offered by services from those of its rivals. Differentiation may be in terms of quality, production process, competitors design, reputation or any number of other attributes. The third generic strategy is to focus on a specific product line or a segment of the market that gives an organisation a competitive focus edge. Initially the focus strategy was anchored in focused low-cost and the third generic strategy, which focused differentiation strategies. Porter suggested that organisations attempts to focus on a specific had to choose either low cost or differentiation; to attempt both would product line or a segment of the cause an organisation to achieve neither and be ‘stuck in the middle’. market that gives an organisation The three generic strategies developed by Porter are usually thought a competitive edge of as separate strategies now, in other words, an organisation needs to choose between the following generic strategies: r DPTUMFBEFSTIJQTUSBUFHZ r EJŲFSFOUJBUJPOTUSBUFHZ r GPDVTFEMPXDPTUTUSBUFHZ r GPDVTFEEJŲFSFOUJBUJPOTUSBUFHZ Over time, many industries have changed, requiring organisations to accomplish the benefits of both low cost and differentiation strategies. Some organisations have actually used the low-cost approach as a way to differentiate themselves from competitors. A best-cost provider strategy usually refers to strategy that combines the advantages of both low cost and differentiation7. Once an organisation has chosen a generic strategy – or core idea – it should decide on a more specific grand strategy for each business. These are referred to as grand or overall corporate-level strategies. Grand strategy A grand strategy can be described as the overall corporate-level strategy of growth and decline. Figure 11.4 depicts the choice of corporate growth strategies. Corporate growth strategy r r r r r r r concentration growth market development product development innovation integration diversiƂcation corporate combination Figure 11.4: %orporate growth strategies 246 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 11 Strategic management $PSQPSBUFHSPXUITUSBUFHZ With a DPSQPSBUF HSPXUI TUSBUFHZ, the organisation makes aggressive attempts to increase its size through increased sales. In our opening case, we saw how Jack Welch implemented various corporate growth strategies, increasing the value of General Electric from $13 billion to several hundred billion during his 20 years of leadership. At his retirement, GE was the most valuable and largest company in the world, up from America’s tenth largest (based on market capitalisation) in 1981. The successful implementation of various growth strategies led GE to be listed as the world’s most respected company in 1998 and 2002. The organisation that wants to grow has seven major options, namely concentration, market development, product development, innovation, integration, diversification and corporate combinations. r $PODFOUSBUJPOHSPXUITUSBUFHZ8JUIBDPODFOUSBUJPOHSPXUI strategy, the organisation grows aggressively in its existing line(s) of business. In other words, the organisation continues to be in the same line of business as far as products, markets and technology are concerned. r .BSLFUEFWFMPQNFOUTUSBUFHZ"NBSLFUEFWFMPQNFOUTUSBUFHZ is closely related to a concentration growth strategy. It involves selling present products (using present technology) in new markets by opening new outlets or attracting other market segments. r 1SPEVDUEFWFMPQNFOUTUSBUFHZ"QSPEVDUEFWFMPQNFOUTUSBUFHZ involves a substantial change in existing products or additions to present products. These products are sold in existing markets by using the existing technology. r *OOPWBUJPOTUSBUFHZ"OJOOPWBUJPOTUSBUFHZSFGFSTUPUIF development of new products, services or technologies that completely replace the existing products, services or technologies in an industry. Organisations choosing this strategy continually search for original or novel ideas. r *OUFHSBUJPOTUSBUFHZ8JUIBOJOUFHSBUJPOTUSBUFHZ UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO enters a forward, backward or horizontal line or business. ‘Forward integration’ occurs when an organisation enters a line of business closer to the final customer. In other words, when an organisation takes control of aspects related to its distribution, transport or selling. ‘Backward integration’ occurs when the organisation enters a line of business further away from the final customer to get increased control over its supply sources. In other words, the organisation produces what it previously bought in. ‘Horizontal integration’ refers to the acquisition or merger of organisations at the same stage in the supply chain. Such organisations may be direct competitors or they may focus on different market segments. r %JWFSTJųDBUJPOTUSBUFHZ8JUIBEJWFSTJųDBUJPOTUSBUFHZ UIF organisation can go into a related or unrelated line of business. ‘Related diversification’ is also called ‘concentric diversification’, and it involves the addition of related business in terms of product, corporate growth strategy the organisation makes aggressive attempts to increase its size through increased sales CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 247 PART III: Planning market and technology. ‘Unrelated diversification’ is also called ‘conglomerate diversification’. It involves the addition of unrelated business in terms of product, market and technology. r $PSQPSBUFDPNCJOBUJPO"OPSHBOJTBUJPODBOBMTPDIPPTFUP grow by means of a corporate combination, which includes mergers, acquisitions, takeovers, joint ventures and strategic alliances. A ‘merger’ occurs when two organisations form one new organisation by pooling all their resources. In a merger, the two organisations simply agree to come together as one new organisation. An ‘acquisition’ occurs when one organisation buys all or part of another organisation for either cash or equity in the parent organisation. One business becomes part of another existing business. When management of the target business rejects the purchasing company’s offer, the purchasing company can make a bid to the target company shareholders to acquire the company through a ‘takeover’. In the case of a takeover, the acquisition is hostile. A ‘joint venture’ is created when two or more businesses join resources to form a separate new business in which they share ownership. Equity positions are usually taken by participants. A ‘strategic alliance’ is an agreement between organisations but does not necessarily involve shared ownership. 4USBUFHZJOBDUJPOBU(FOFSBM&MFDUSJD8 In our opening case, we saw General Electric implementing numerous corporate growth strategies successfully while Jack Welch was CEO, for example: r 5IFDPNQBOZNBEFBDRVJTJUJPOT r 5IF(&$SFEJU$PSQPSBUJPOFYQBOEFECZNFBOT of market development and doubled its assets between 1979 and 1984. The company entered into new markets such as the leasing and selling of heavy industrial products, inventories, real estate and insurance. r *O (&NBEFTFWFSBMJNQPSUBOUQVSDIBTFT the biggest of which was the $6.4 billion purchase of the Radio Corporation of America (RCA), which brought GE into the broadcasting business in full force. This purchase is an example of implementing a diversification strategy which enabled GE to shift from manufacturing into service and high technology. r %VSJOHUIFT (&FOUFSFEJOUPBOBHSFFNFOU with Japan’s Hitachi Ltd. to manufacture and market Hitachi’s industrial robots in the United States. Corporate decline strategy A corporate growth strategy is not the only or always the most appropriate strategies to follow appropriate strategy to follow. A DPSQPSBUFEFDMJOFTUSBUFHZ is an when an organisation needs to appropriate strategy to follow when an organisation needs to regroup regroup its activities to improve its activities to improve efficiency after a period of fast growth, where efficiency after a period of long-term growth and profit opportunities are unavailable, where other fast growth, where long-term opportunities are more attractive or where there is a period of economic growth and profit opportunities uncertainty. At General Electric, the successful implementation of are unavailable, where other appropriate decline strategies at the right time, also contributed to the opportunities are more attractive enormous success of the company. corporate decline strategy or where there is a period of economic uncertainty 248 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 11 Strategic management Corporate decline strategy r turnaround r divestiture r harvesting r liSuidation Figure 11.5: Corporate decline strategies We can distinguish between various corporate decline strategies, of which the most prominent ones are turnaround, divestiture, harvesting and liquidation strategies. r "UVSOBSPVOETUSBUFHZGPDVTFTPOFMJNJOBUJOHJOFŵDJFODJFTJOBO PSHBOJTBUJPO5VSOBSPVOE PSSFDPWFSZ BQQMJFTUPBOPSHBOJTBUJPO PSBCVTJOFTTVOJUUIBUIBTUIFQPUFOUJBMUPCFFŵDJFOU CVUIBT TVŲFSFETFUCBDLJOSFDFOUUJNFT"UVSOBSPVOETUSBUFHZJTBJNFE BUSFTUPSJOHQSPEVDUJWJUZ RVBMJUZBOEDPNQFUJUJWFOFTTPG UIF PSHBOJTBUJPOPSCVTJOFTTVOJU CZNFBOTPGDPTUDVUUJOHBOEPS UIFSFEVDUJPOJOOPODPSFBTTFUT"UVSOBSPVOETUSBUFHZNBZUIVT JOWPMWFBSFEVDUJPOJOTUBŲ BVUPNBUJPO MFBTJOHSBUIFSUIBOCVZJOH assets, and so on. r "EJWFTUJUVSFTUSBUFHZJOWPMWFTUIFTBMFPG BCVTJOFTTPSBNBKPS component of the business to achieve a permanent change in the TDPQFPG PQFSBUJPOT5IFJOUFOUJPOJTUPGPDVTPONPSFFŵDJFOU divisions or business units of the organisation. r "MTPUFSNFEABTTFUSFEVDUJPO BIBSWFTUJOHTUSBUFHZSFGFSTUPBO PSHBOJTBUJPOUIBUEJTQPTFTPGBTVCTJEJBSZPODFJUIBTNBYJNJTFE SFUVSOGSPNJUXJUIUIFBJNUPNBYJNJTFDBTIŴPXJOUIFTIPSUSVO regardless of the long-term effect. r -JRVJEBUJPOJTUIFBQQSPQSJBUFTUSBUFHZUPGPMMPXXIFOOPGVUVSF GPSUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO PSBQBSUPG JU JTFOWJTBHFE-JRVJEBUJPOJTUIF VMUJNBUFFYJUTUSBUFHZ XIFSFUIFFOUJSFPSHBOJTBUJPOJTTPMEPŲ FJUIFSBTBXIPMFPSJOQBSUTPG JU-JRVJEBUJPONBZCFWPMVOUBSZPS JOUIFDBTFPGCBOLSVQUDZ XIFSFUIFPSHBOJTBUJPODBOOPMPOHFS QBZJUTEFCUT NBZCFEJSFDUFECZUIFDPVSU*OPUIFSJOTUBODFT UIF MJRVJEBUJPOJTQSPNQUFECZNBOBHFNFOU TJNQMZXBOUJOHUPIBSWFTU it and move on. General Electric’s restructuring process Our opening case provides numerous examples of the successful implementation of corporate decline strategies. Jack Welch’s primary goal was a radical restructuring of the company that would get rid of problem products and to focus on profitable businesses immune to foreign competition, particularly in the financial, high-tech and service sectors. He launched his controversial restructuring process by ordering GE managers to fix, sell or close down businesses that were not first or second CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 249 PART III: Planning in their markets. As a result, GE divested 408 businesses under his reign. The most prominent of these were: r *O (&EJWFTUFEJUTFMGPGUIF3BEJP Corporation of America’s (RCA) David Sarnoff Research Center because GE’s laboratories made it redundant. r %VSJOH (&TPMEJUTPXOBOE3$"T television manufacturing business to the French company Thomson. r *O (&CPVHIUBOQFSDFOUJOUFSFTUJO Kidder Peabody and Company, of which they owned 100 per cent by 1990. This unit was liquidated in 1994 due to its poor financial performance. r %VSJOH (&SFEVDFEJUTFOHJOFFSJOH workforce from 10 000 to 4 000, resulting in a reduction of nearly 50 per cent of its overall Aircraft Engine Group payroll. These restructuring activities contributed to excellent profit margins in many of its major product divisions. r #ZXFTBXGVSUIFSSFTUSVDUVSJOHBDUJWJUJFT when redundant facilities were closed and production shifted to cheaper labour markets. Select a corporate strategy An organisation now needs to select a corporate strategy or a combination of corporate strategies to implement. Various techniques are available for this purpose. Of the most widely used techniques are the SWOT analysis, the business portfolio analysis, the product portfolio analysis and the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) growth-share matrix. The first phase of the strategic management process (earlier defined as the strategic analysis phase), involves an analysis of the organisation’s environment and we have named the SWOT analysis. An organisation’s resources (which constitute its strengths and weaknesses) should match the demands from its external environment (manifested in a set of opportunities and threats) as effectively and efficiently as possible. Over time, both the internal and external environments can change, leaving the challenge to management to keep this match in dynamic and turbulent times. The CVTJOFTTQPSUGPMJPBOBMZTJTcan be described as a technique business portfolio analysis for determining which line or lines of business the organisation will the process of determining be in and how it will allocate resources among them. A business line, which line or lines of business also referred to as a ‘strategic business unit’ (or SBU), is a distinct the organisation will be in and business with its own customers and is managed independently of other how it will allocate resources businesses within the organisation. among them Figure 11.6 on the next page illustrates the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) growth-share matrix. In the #PTUPO $POTVMUJOH (SPVQ Boston Consulting )roup #$( HSPXUITIBSF NBUSJY, each of the organisation’s strategic growth-share matriZ business units is plotted on a matrix according to its relative market a technique used to plot an growth rate and relative market share. organisation’s strategic business The relative market growth rate of a SBU is plotted on the vertical units (or SBUs) according to its axis and it represents the annual growth rate of the market in which relative market growth rate and the organisation operates and competes. The relative market share of a relative market share SBU (on the horizontal axis of the matrix) indicates the market share in relation to the largest competitor in the market. 250 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES High CHAPTER 11 Strategic management QUESTION MARKS STARS Market growth rate SELECT FEW REMAINDER DIVESTED Net users of resources Net suppliers of resources DOGS Low CASH COWS High HARVESTED/LIQUIDATED Relative competitive position (market share) Low Figure 11.6: The Boston Consulting Group growth-share matrix The growth-share matrix is divided into four quadrants, where each quadrant represents a particular type of business: r 4UBSTBSFUIPTFTUSBUFHJDCVTJOFTTVOJUTXJUIBSFMBUJWFIJHINBSLFU TIBSFBOEBSFMBUJWFIJHINBSLFUHSPXUISBUF4#6TJOUIJTRVBESBOU BSFUIFNBSLFUMFBEFSTJOHSPXUINBSLFUT*OWFTUNFOUJOUIFTF 4#6TJTTUJMMSFRVJSFEJOPSEFSUPNBJOUBJOUIFJSHSPXUISBUFBOEUP LFFQUIFJSMFBEFSTIJQQPTJUJPO r 2VFTUJPONBSLTBSF4#6TXJUIBMPXSFMBUJWFNBSLFUTIBSFBOE BIJHISFMBUJWFNBSLFUHSPXUISBUF5IFTF4#6TDPNQFUFJO IJHIHSPXUINBSLFUT CVUUIFJSSFMBUJWFNBSLFUTIBSFJTMPX)JHI JOWFTUNFOUJTOPSNBMMZSFRVJSFEGPSRVFTUJPONBSLTJOPSEFSUP EFWFMPQUIFVOJUBOEJUTSFMBUJWFQPTJUJPOJOUIFNBSLFU r $BTIDPXTBSF4#6TXJUIBIJHINBSLFUTIBSFBOEBMPXNBSLFU HSPXUISBUF$BTIDPXTBSFUIFXFMMFTUBCMJTIFENBSLFUMFBEFST "TNBSLFUHSPXUITMPXTEPXO UIFSFJTMFTTOFFEGPSBIJHI JOWFTUNFOUJOUIFTF4#6T$POTFRVFOUMZ UIFTF4#6TXJMMCF UIFNPTUQSPųUBCMFVOJUTJOBQPSUGPMJPPG 4#6T$BTIDPXTBSF OPSNBMMZVTFEUPGVOEUIF4#6TJOUIFPUIFSUISFFRVBESBOUT r %PHTBSF4#6TXJUIBMPXNBSLFUTIBSFBOEBMPXNBSLFUHSPXUI SBUF%PHTTIPVMECFXJUIESBXOGSPNUIFNBSLFUXIFOUIFZ CFDPNFMPTTNBLFST CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 251 PART III: Planning SBUs falling into the various quadrants of the BCG matrix, call for various strategies, for example9: r $BTIDPXmANJMLUIF4#6TDBUFHPSJTFEBTDBTIDPXTBOESFEFQMPZ UIFDBTIŴPX r %PHmMJRVJEBUFPSEJWFTUBOESFEFQMPZUIFSFTPVSDFTPSQSPDFFET GSPNMJRVJEBUJPOPSEJWFTUJUVSF r 4UBSmTUSFOHUIFOUIF4#6TDPNQFUJUJWFQPTJUJPOJOBHSPXUI JOEVTUSZ r 2VFTUJPONBSLmNBLFBQQSPQSJBUFJOWFTUNFOUJO4#6TJOPSEFSUP TFDVSFBOEJNQSPWFJUTDPNQFUJUJWFQPTJUJPO An organisation in a single line of business cannot conduct a business QPSUGPMJP BOBMZTJT )PXFWFS TVDI BO PSHBOJTBUJPO TIPVME QFSGPSN B product portfolio analysis GPSXIJDIUIF#$(HSPXUITIBSFNBUSJY DBOBMTPCFVTFE5IFQSPEVDUQPSUGPMJPBOBMZTJTDBOCFEFTDSJCFEBTB UFDIOJRVF GPS EFUFSNJOJOH XIJDI QSPEVDU MJOF PS MJOFT PG CVTJOFTT UIF PSHBOJTBUJPOXJMMCFJOBOEIPXJUXJMMBMMPDBUFSFTPVSDFTBNPOHUIFN 0ODF DPSQPSBUFMFWFM TUSBUFHJFT IBWF CFFO GPSNVMBUFE CVTJOFTT MFWFMTUSBUFHJFTOFFEUPCFEFWFMPQFEGPSFBDICVTJOFTTVOJU product portfolio analysis the process of determining which product line or lines of business the organisation will be in and how it will allocate resources among them 11.2.3 Strategy implementation strategy implementation formulate medium- and shortterm goals and objectives and institutionalise strategy Set functional goals and objectives 5IF GPSNVMBUJPO PG TUSBUFHZ BT EJŵDVMU BT JU NJHIU TFFN JT POMZ IBMG UIFCBUUMFXPO8JUIPVUFŲFDUJWFstrategy implementation, all the HPPEJOUFOUJPOTPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPOXJMMOPUCFSFBMJTFE5PJNQMFNFOU strategies, functional departments need to set goals and objectives EFSJWFE GSPN MPOHUFSN HPBMT BOE MPOHUFSN PCKFDUJWFT GPS UIF NFEJVNBOETIPSUUFSN*O$IBQUFSXFEJTDVTTFEUIFGPSNVMBUJPOPG PSHBOJTBUJPOBMPCKFDUJWFTBOEUIFDSJUFSJBUIBUAHPPEPCKFDUJWFTTIPVME NFFU8FBMTPEJTDVTTFEUIF.BOBHFNFOUCZ0CKFDUJWFTBQQSPBDIUIBU DBO CF VTFE UP FOTVSF FNQMPZFF QBSUJDJQBUJPO JO UIF GPSNVMBUJPO PG PCKFDUJWFT Once goals and objectives have been formulated for the medium term, strategies for the medium and short term also need to be GPSNVMBUFEBOEJNQMFNFOUFEGPSBDIJFWJOHUIFCVTJOFTTMFWFMHPBMTBOE PCKFDUJWFT 'JHVSF JMMVTUSBUFT UIF TUSBUFHZ JNQMFNFOUBUJPO QIBTF 'VODUJPOBMTUSBUFHJFTJODMVEFUIFTUSBUFHJFTGPSUIFNBSLFUJOH PQFSBUJPOT IVNBOSFTPVSDFT ųOBODFBOEPUIFSGVODUJPOBMEFQBSUNFOUT Formulate medium- and short-term strategies Institutionalise strategies through: Figure 11.7: Strategy implementation 252 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES r strategic leadership r organisational culture r organisational architecture CHAPTER 11 Strategic management Secondly, the strategy should be institutionalised within the organisation. Institutionalising a strategy means that every member, work group, department and division of the organisation subscribes to and supports the organisation’s strategy with its plan and actions. There must be a fit between the organisational strategy and its strategic leadership, organisational culture and organisational architecture, if the strategy is to be institutionalised. 4USBUFHJDMFBEFSTIJQis often stated as the key driver of strategy implementation. In Chapter 2, leadership was defined as directing the human resources of the organisation and motivating them in such a way that their actions are aligned with previously formulated goals and plans. Strategic leadership requires managers to understand the entire organisation and the environment within which they operate. Furthermore, strategic leaders should use their understanding of the environment to create strategic change through other people in order to position their organisation in the environment for organisational stability over the short term and organisational sustainability over the long term10. Effective strategic leadership involves tasks such as: r TFUUJOHUIFEJSFDUJPOGPSUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOBTBXIPMF r QSPWJEJOHMFBEFSTIJQUPESJWFUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOBMTUSBUFHZPS combination of strategies r QSPWJEJOHUIFOFDFTTBSZIVNBOSFTPVSDFTGPSFŲFDUJWFTUSBUFHZ implementation r NBOBHJOHTPDJBMDBQJUBM r CVJMEJOHBOEVUJMJTJOHDPSFDPNQFUFODJFTBOETUSFOHUITPGUIF organisation r DSFBUJOHBOBMJHONFOUCFUXFFOPSHBOJTBUJPOBMWJTJPO NJTTJPO HPBMT and strategies r MFBEJOHBOENBOBHJOHDIBOHFFŲFDUJWFMZ 0SHBOJTBUJPOBMDVMUVSF needs to be aligned with the vision, mission and strategy of the organisation in order to realise organisational goals and objectives. Organisational culture can be described as the values, beliefs, norms and attitudes that bind people together and help them make sense of the systems within an organisation. The beliefs, values and norms tell people ‘what is to be done’ and ‘how it is to be done’. Organisational culture determines how people act in an organisation, the way people relate to each other, to customers, to shareholders and to their business partners. Some of the most obvious displays of organisational culture are rituals, ceremonies, language, metaphors, symbols, stories and sagas. In an organisation with a strong culture, shared values and believes create a setting in which people are committed to one another and to the overriding vision, mission and strategic goals of the organisation11. strategic leadership leading the entire organisation organisational culture the values, beliefs, norms and attitudes that bind people together and help them make sense of the systems within an organisation CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 253 PART III: Planning organisational architecture an integrated model of how the organisation is doing business Organisational architecture Organisational architecture can be defined as the integrated strategic response which draws together the key dimensions of the organisation. These dimensions are for example, the organisational structure, its leadership, culture, policies and strategies. Organisational architecture’s purpose is to guide strategic formulation, the alignment of strategies with the vision, mission and goals of the organisation and the effective implementation of strategies. Organisational architecture provides a model of the organisation’s way of doing business. An organisational architecture should: r CFDPOUBJOFEJOBGPSNBMEPDVNFOU MFOEJOHDMBSJUZUPXIBUUIF organisation is about r SFGFSUPUIFLFZTUSBUFHJDESJWFSTPGUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO r SFMBUFFBDILFZBTQFDUPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPOBMBSDIJUFDUVSFUPUIF organisation itself, thus creating a blueprint which is unique and specific to the organisation r CFDPMMFDUJWFMZBHSFFEVQPOCZBMMDPOTUJUVFODJFTJOUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO in order to attain maximum strategic impact r CFDPNNVOJDBUFEBTXJEFMZBTQPTTJCMF 11.2.4 Strategic control r Strategic control r r organisational performance productivity management effectiveness Figure 11.8: Strategic control strategic control involves monitoring the implementation of the strategic plan and ensuring quality and total effectiveness in terms of organisational performance, productivity and management effectiveness 254 The last phase of the strategic process is strategic control, which involves monitoring the implementation of the strategic plan and ensuring quality and total effectiveness in terms of organisational performance, productivity and management effectiveness. This is illustrated in Figure 11.8. An effective strategic control process identifies problems and signals to the organisation that a change may be needed. The chief concern when examining an organisation’s total effectiveness is determining the extent to which it attains its mission and goals. This is often referred to as an organisation’s total effectiveness. The productivity of an organisation, as a strategic control instrument, refers to an economic measure of efficiency that summarises what is produced (output) relative to what resources the organisation used (input) to produce the output. Lastly, management effectiveness refers to a management audit of an organisation’s main success factors, such CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 11 Strategic management as profitability, the organisational structure, research and development, financial policy, and market share. These factors should be measured on a regular basis, providing feedback to management that can be used as input for the next cycle of strategic planning. The strategic management process is therefore an on-going process, with the output of strategic control used as an input for the following strategic management process. The formulation and implementation of successful strategies is a complex managerial task, which is affected by numerous factors and variables. This chapter identified a logical process for conducting the strategic management process, which is summarised in Figure 11.9. Strategic analysis r develop a vision r formulate the mission statement r analyse the environment r set long-term goals r formulate corporate and Strategy business formulation strategies r select corporate and business level strategies Strategy implementation r set functional goals and objectives r formulate medium- and short-term strategies r institutionalise strategies Strategic control r organisational performance r productivity r management effectiveness Outputs of the control phase serve as input to the next strategic management process Figure 11.: Summary of strategic management process CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 255 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part III: Planning CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Differentiate between the terms ‘strategy’ and ‘strategic management’. • A strategy is a means to an end. • Strategic management is a process that entails various phases, namely strategic analysis, strategy formulation, strategy implementation and strategic control. 2. Discuss the various phases in the strategic management process. • Strategic analysis. Determine the current position of the organisation by formulating a vision, mission statement and analysing the external and internal environment of the organisation. • Strategy formulation. Involves the setting of long-term goals and objectives and the selection of corporate and business strategies. A generic strategy is the core idea about how the organisation can best compete in the marketplace. Porter identified generic strategies, namely cost leadership strategy, differentiation strategy, focused low cost strategy and a focused differentiation strategy. After the identification of a generic strategy, the organisation needs to select a grand strategy. A grand strategy is the overall corporate-level strategy of growth and decline. With a corporate growth strategy, the organisation makes aggressive attempts to increase its size through increased sales by implementing one, or a combination of more than one of the following strategies: concentration growth, market development, product development, innovation, integration, diversification or corporate combination. A corporate decline strategy is the appropriate strategy to follow when the organisation needs to regroup its activities to improve efficiency. Corporate decline strategies can be categorised as turnaround, divestiture and liquidation strategies. Various techniques are available to assist management in the selection of a corporate strategy or a combination of corporate strategies, namely the SWOT analysis, the business portfolio analysis, the product portfolio analysis and the Boston Consulting Group growth-share matrix. Once corporate-level strategies are formulated, business-level strategies need to be developed for each business unit. • Strategy implementation. Involves the formulation of medium- and short-term goals and the institutionalisation of the strategy, where the latter refers to strategic leadership, organisational culture and organisational architecture. • Strategic control. This phase involves the determination of the total effectiveness, productivity and management effectiveness of the organisation. KEY TERMS acquisition Boston Consulting group growth-share matrix business portfolio analysis concentration growth strategy corporate combination corporate decline strategy corporate growth strategy cost leadership strategy differentiation strategy diversification strategy 256 divestiture environmental analysis focus strategy generic strategy goal grand strategy harvesting innovation strategy integration strategy liquidation Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 12:48 PM via UNISA CHAPTER 11 Strategic management management effectiveness market development strategy merger mission objective opportunity organisational architecture organisational culture overall effectiveness product development strategy product portfolio matrix productivity strategic analysis strategic business unit strategic control strategic leadership strategic management strategy strategy formulation strategy implementation strength takeover threat turnaround vision weakness winning strategy REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Differentiate between the terms ‘strategy’ and ‘strategic management’. 2. Identify the characteristics of a winning strategy. 3. Define ‘strategic analysis’ and discuss the various steps involved in it. 4. Explain the term ‘strategy formulation’. 5. Differentiate between the terms ‘goal’ and ‘objective’. 6. Discuss the various generic strategies developed by Michael Porter. 7. Define the term ‘grand strategy’. 8. Explain the various corporate growth strategies that an organisation can follow. 9. Discuss the various corporate decline strategies that an organisation can implement. 10. Various techniques are available to assist management in the selection of a corporate strategy or a selection of strategies. Discuss these techniques. 11. Explain the various steps to follow when institutionalising organisational strategies. 12. Discuss strategic control. END NOTES 1 Adapted from (i) [Online] Available: http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/General-Electric-CompanyHistory.html. Accessed on 19 October 2011. (ii) Anonymous. Strategic direction; Jul/Aug 2002, 18(8):4–7. (iii) http://www.answers.com/topic/jack-welch. Accessed on 19 October 2011. 2 Louw, L. & Venter, P. 2006. Strategic Management: Winning in the Southern African workplace. Cape Town: Oxford University Press, p 35. 3 Hartley, R.F. 2011. Management mistakes and successes. 10th edition. Cleveland: Wiley, pp 179–189. 4 [Online] Available: http://www-03.ibm.com/ibm/history/interactive/ibm_ohe_pdf_13.pdf. Accessed on 11 April 2011. 5 [Online] Available: http://www.ibm.com/ibm/values/us. Accessed on 1 January 2011. 6 (i) Kaplan, R. & Norton, D. 2004. The strategy map: guide to aligning intangible assets. Strategy and leadership, 32(5):10–17. (ii) Williams, C. 2011. Principles of management. 6th edition. South-Western Cengage Learning, pp 507–519. (iii) Louw, L. & Venter P. 2006. Strategic Management: Winning in the Southern African workplace. Cape Town: Oxford University Press, p 437. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 257 PART III: Planning 7 Goodman, S.H., Fandt, P.M., Michlitsch, J.F. & Lewis, P.S. 2007. Management: Challenges for tomorrow’s leaders. Mason: Thomson South-Western, p 93. 8 (i) [Online] Available: http://www.fundinguniverse.com/company-histories/General-Electric -Company-History.html. Accessed on 19 October 2011. (ii) Anonymous. Strategic direction; Jul/Aug 2002; 18(8):4–7. (iii) [Online] Available: http://www.answers.com/topic/jack-welch. Accessed on 19 October 2011. 9 Thompson, J. & Martin, F. 2005. Strategic management. 5th edition. London: Thomson, p 322. 10 Louw et al, op. cit., p 355. 11 Goodman et al, op. cit., pp 230–235. 258 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Chapter 12 Decision-making Tersia Brevis OPENING CASE OPENING CASE Disney’s Euro Disneyland venture1 The Walt Disney Company (Disney) is known around the world for bringing decades of entertainment, fun and fantasy to families through amusement parks, television series and numerous classic live-action and animated motion pictures. The founder of the company, Walt Disney, was born in 1901 in Chicago and raised in a humble, middle-class family. Together with Ub Iwerks, Walt Disney formed Iwerks-Disney Commercial Artists in 1919, and in 1923 Walt created Disney Bros. Studios with his brother Roy. In 1955, the first theme park was opened by the company in Anaheim, California. In 1966, Walt Disney died of lung cancer. Shortly after Walt’s death, his brother Roy issued a statement pledging that Walt Disney’s philosophy and genius would be carried on by his employees – a pledge that was fulfilled. In 1971, Walt Disney World opened near Orlando, Florida. In 1983, Disney was one of many American organisations to expand on foreign soil by opening Tokyo Disney. This theme park was an instant success. In fact, Disney’s executives believed that they had learned so much about opening a theme park in another country, and since Tokyo Disneyland was an instant success, they immediately began to search for a site for a fourth park. Disney decided on Paris, France and opened Euro Disney (later named Disneyland Paris) in 1992. Why Paris? To find a site for their fourth theme park, Disney considered Europe where Disney films historically had done better than in the United States. From 1983 until 1987, Disney searched for sites in the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Spain and Italy. Finally, they decided on Paris, France for various reasons. France had a large population with a spectacular transportation network. The very successful Tokyo Disneyland was located in a cold-weather climate and virtually the same latitude as Paris. For this reason, Disney executives assumed they would be able to operate in similar weather conditions in Paris. The French government sold Disney the 4 400acre site at a fraction of its market value in a region called Marne-la-VallŽe. Marne-la-VallŽe is located in an ideal geographical location since it is 32 kilometers due east of the centre of Paris, and halfway between the two international airports Orly and Roissy-Charles-de-Gaulle. Disney assumed that Paris would offer Euro Disneyland a wealth of potential guests and employees. The agreement In the agreement between Disney and the French government, the latter promised Disney favourable loan terms, an extended railway system from Paris to the theme park, two additional interchanges linking Euro Disney with a main highway and a special station for high-speed trains at the theme park. Disney agreed to offer new jobs and contracts to local suppliers. In a region that suffered from a high unemployment rate, Disney executives believed that they could provide economic benefits to the region. Once the decision had been taken to open Euro Disney in Paris, Disney executives had to integrate American risk management techniques into a French environment. They needed to cope with language barriers and an unfamiliar French legal framework. PART III: Planning 0QFOJOHEBZ Euro Disney opened its doors on April 12, 1992, with the hope of attracting eleven million guests per year, more than twice the number that visits the Eiffel Tower. Half were expected to be French. Disney’s dream of achieving at least the same success that they had in Japan did not become a reality. Why? The problems Euro Disney reported a loss of $905 million in their first year in operation and by December 1993, they had accumulated a loss of $1.03 billion. Various factors can be attributed to their poor financial performance. First and foremost, Disney was overly ambitious in their estimated sales and profit figures. Strategic and financial miscalculations were made and they relied on debt during a period when European interest rates were beginning to increase. Disney also miscalculated European habits which impacted negatively on their sales and profit figures. Disney also displayed no regard for bottom-line construction cost – over expenditure also impacted negatively on sales and profit figures. Labour costs were also underestimated – Disney Executives estimated that labour costs would be 13 per cent of revenue. In 1992, the actual figure was 24 per cent and in 1993 it increased to 40 per cent, contributing even further to Euro Disney’s debt. Furthermore, Euro Disney opened during a European economic recession, where the real estate market collapsed. Operational problems were also experienced. For example, Euro Disney had difficulty in allocating staff effectively and efficiently, problems were experienced with bus drivers in terms of the size of the designated space for buses and insufficient restroom facilities for bus drivers. To add to the operational problem is the difference in employee acceptance of conditions of employment. In Orlando, cast members are accustomed to and have learned to accept being sent home if they are not needed. However, French cast members feel irritated by and have a very difficult time accepting flexible time schedules. Lastly, operational errors were also made by Disney that involved the computer stations at the hotels. Disney executives estimated that guests would stay at the park for several days but this did not happen. Many guests 260 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES arrived early in the morning, spent the day at the park, checked into the hotel late night, and then checked out early the next morning. Since so many guests checked in and out, additional computer stations had to be installed at the hotels to decrease the time the guests stood in lines. Human resources estimates were made and Disney needed to recruit, hire, train and house 12 000 cast members 12 months before the opening of the park. This is a challenge for any company, but even more complex for Disney, whose cast members become more like members of a theatre troupe. Language and cultural barriers complicated the process even further. Miscalculations in terms of per capita spending are probably the biggest detrimental factor to Euro Disney’s poor financial performance. Disney had assumed that guests visiting Euro Disneyland would spend large amounts of money as they did in the US and Tokyo. Actual spending was 12 per cent less than predicted. Further, European’s per capita income is lower than the Japanese, and they are likely to spread their money over long vacations, not four-day spending sprees. The total construction cost of Euro Disney was $4 billion, of which $2.9 billion was borrowed at high interest rates. Thus, from the offset, the project was highly leveraged. Euro Disney made a huge mistake not considering the views of the French when developing their marketing strategies. The Walt Disney Company agrees there may have been marketing mistakes, but they blame the mistakes on a lack of data on how Europeans would react to the ‘Disney Magic’. Investors, on the other hand, believe that they are the victims of Euro Disney since the Walt Disney Company communicated its difficulties poorly. Paris winters also contributed to the financial difficulties of Euro Disney. Lastly, the Magic Kingdom concept, successful in California and Tokyo, is apparently not compelling enough for Europe. The future The park’s future will be shaped by many outside influences over time, requiring Disney executives to learn from past mistakes and closely monitor the main events that will impact on its future performance and success. CHAPTER 12 Decision-making LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of creative problem solving and managerial decision-making. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Contextualise decision-making in terms of the management process. 2. Explain the relationship between problems, problem-solving and decision-making. 3. Compare the different types of managerial decisions. 4. Compare the various decision-making conditions. 5. Explain the various decision-making models. 6. Discuss group decision-making. . 5uggest techniSues for improving group decision-making. 8. Recommend tools for decision-making under the various decision-making conditions. 12.1 DECISION-MAKING AND THE MANAGEMENT PROCESS LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Managers at all levels of an organisation are constantly faced with problems, opportunities and threats and they need to evaluate alternative courses of action to deal with them. In other words, they need to make decisions. This chapter explores creative problem-solving and managerial decision-making as well as models and techniques that can assist managers in these processes. All managers, regardless of their skills or the level at which they are involved perform the four fundamental management functions of planning, organising, leading and controlling. While performing these functions, managers are constantly faced with opportunities and threats that need to be addressed and decisions that need to be made. When planning, a manager must make decisions about goals and when, where and how they will be realised. When controlling, the manager may notice that these goals have not been realised. Thus a problem exists that needs to be solved and the manager needs to decide on the most appropriate corrective action to take. When organising, managers must make decisions that involve the creation of an organisational structure and the deployment of resources that will enable the organisation to attain its goals. When leading, a manager must decide how to influence and direct the behaviour of subordinates so that they will work willingly to pursue the goals of the organisation. Decision-making is therefore a central aspect of all four fundamental management functions. When managers perform these functions with skilled decision-making, they will have fewer problems to solve2. Regardless of its goals, the organisation’s long-term survival depends on its managers’ ability to solve problems and make decisions. It depends on theirEFDJTJPONBLJOHTLJMMT. The decision-making skills of managers refers to their ability to make better decisions than their competitors, to make these decisions faster than their competitors and have the ability to implement their decisions effectively and efficiently. A decision implies that managers are faced with a threat, a problem or an opportunity. Various courses of action are proposed and analysed, Contextualise decision-making in terms of the management process. FGEKUKQPOCMKPIUMKNNU the ability of managers to make better decisions than their competitors, make decisions faster than competitors and implement decisions effectively and efficiently CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 261 PART III: Planning and a choice is made that is likely to move the organisation in the direction of its mission and goals. In making a choice, a manager comes to a conclusion and selects a particular course of action that he or she feels might enhance the success of the organisation. In our opening case, the Walt Disney Company saw an opportunity to open a fourth theme park in Europe, mainly based on their successes in the US and Japan. Disney executives needed to take extremely important decisions with vast consequences. First, they needed to decide on the most appropriate location for the park. They also needed to decide on the agreement entered into and between the Walt Disney Company and the French government. Important decisions also needed to be made in terms of the management of risk in a foreign country and projections needed to be made in terms of the financial performance of the European theme park. Environmental influences needed to be taken into account. The success of the new venture depended mostly on the effectiveness of the decisions taken by executives and top management of the Walt Disney Company. Certain principles can be applied to help managers, such as the management of the Walt Disney Company, when they are faced with a problem or opportunity and need to make a major decision. These principles will be addressed later in this chapter. First, we need to make a distinction between problems, problem-solving and decision-making. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Explain the relationship between problems, problemsolving and decision-making. RTQDNGO whenever managers perceive a difference between what has actually happened and what they planned to happen RTQDNGOUQNXKPI the process of taking corrective action that will solve a problem FGEKUKQPOCMKPI a process of selecting an alternative course of action that will solve a problem LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 Compare the different types of managerial decisions. 262 12.2 THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PROBLEMS, PROBLEM-SOLVING AND DECISION-MAKING Managers at all managerial levels are responsible for setting goals. Whenever these goals are not being met, a QSPCMFN exists. In other words, a problem exists whenever managers perceive a difference between what has actually happened and what they planned to happen. 1SPCMFNTPMWJOH is the process of taking corrective action that will solve a problem and it realigns the organisation with its goals. %FDJTJPO NBLJOH is the process of selecting an alternative course of action that will solve a problem. Managers need to make a decision whenever they are faced with a problem. Although certain problems cannot be solved and others do not deserve the time it would take to solve them, managers are responsible for achieving the goals of the organisation. Therefore, they need to attempt to solve most problems. This can be done by applying a decision-making model, which is discussed in Section 12.5. 12.3 TYPES OF MANAGERIAL DECISIONS Although managers in large organisations, government offices, hospitals and schools may be separated by background, lifestyle and distance, they must all make decisions involving several options and outcomes. These decisions vary in terms of their content and uniqueness. In general, the decisions made by managers are either programmed or non-programmed. Rather than being distinct categories, these types of decisions represent a continuum, with highly programmed decisions at one end and highly non-programmed decisions at the other. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 12 Decision-making 12.3.1 Programmed decisions The managers of most organisations face large numbers of repetitive and routine programmed decisions in their daily operations. These decisions do not have to be investigated anew each time they occur as there are usually definite methods for obtaining a solution. Such decisions should be made without spending unnecessary time and effort on them. Examples of programmed decisions include the processing of payroll vouchers in an organisation, the processing of graduation candidates at a university, and processing the admission of athletes to a sports club. Managers can usually handle programmed decisions by means of policies, standard operating procedures and rules. These enable the decision-maker to eliminate the process of identifying and evaluating options and making a new choice each time a decision is required. While programmed decisions do, to some extent, limit the flexibility of managers, they free the decision-maker to devote attention to other, more important decisions. programmed decisions programmed decisions are repetitive and routine 12.3.2 Non-programmed decisions Decisions are non-programmed to the extent that they are novel and unstructured. Non-programmed decisions have never occurred before, they are complex and elusive, and there is no established method for dealing with them. Managers at all levels of an organisation make non-programmed decisions. Non-programmed decisions made by lower management in an organisation will include firing an employee or changing the workflow procedures in a section. Decisions such as these are complex to make and require the use of creative problemsolving. Techniques to encourage creative problem-solving are discussed in Section 12.7. In our opening case, a number of problems were identified that caused a barrier to Disney’s dream of achieving the same degree of success in Europe as they had in Japan. Miscalculations in terms of per capita spending in Europe are stated as the biggest detrimental factor to Euro Disney’s performance. Furthermore, a huge amount of capital was borrowed at high interest rates, the views of the French were not taken into consideration when marketing strategies were developed, Disney displayed no regard for bottom-line construction cost, labour costs were underestimated and operational problems were experienced. These are examples of non-programmed decisions taken by Disney’s executives in an uncertain environment. Disney’s Euro Disneyland venture illustrates the complexity of the management environment and the difficulty that top management often face when taking decisions in such an environment. non-programmed decisions non-programmed decisions are novel, unstructured and have not occurred before LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 12.4 DECISION-MAKING CONDITIONS By identifying the type of decision (programmed or non-programmed), as well as the conditions under which it will be made, managers should be in a position to make better decisions. Decision-making conditions such as certainty, risk and uncertainty are depicted in Figure 12.1 on the next page. Compare the various decisionmaking conditions. decision-making conditions certainty, risk and uncertainty CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 263 PART III: Planning Certainty Risk Uncertainty Figure 12.1: Decision-making conditions Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. 12.4.1 Certainty certainty available options and the benefits and costs associated with each option are known A decision is made under conditions of certainty when the available options and the benefits and costs associated with each option are known. No element of change intervenes between the option and its outcome. Under conditions of certainty, managers are simply faced with identifying the consequences of available options and selecting the outcome with the greatest potential benefit. As we may expect, managers rarely make decisions under conditions of certainty, because the future is rarely known with perfect reliability. The purchase of a government treasury bill, however, is made under at least near certainty. Barring the fall of the government, R1 000 invested in a treasury bill for one year at ten per cent will yield R100 in interest. Similarly, knowing that income taxes are due on 15 April, a financial manager can also make decisions under conditions of near certainty. 12.4.2 Risk Decisions under conditions of risk are perhaps most common when when managers make decisions the outcomes of alternatives are not known in advance, but a probability can be assigned to each. Probability falls into two categories: objective under conditions of risk, the and subjective. Objective probability is based on historical evidence. It outcomes of alternatives are refers to the likelihood that a particular state of things will occur, based not known in advance, but a on hard facts and figures. Managers cannot be sure that certain events probability can be assigned to will occur, but, by examining past records, they can determine the likely each outcome of an event. The probability of obtaining either heads or tails on the toss of a fair coin is 50 per cent: the coin is equally likely to land face up or face down. Thus, there is a condition of risk. In many cases, historical evidence is not available, so a manager must rely on a personal estimate and belief, or subjective probability, of the situation outcome. risk uncertainty when managers make decisions under conditions of uncertainty, the outcomes of alternatives are unpredictable and probabilities cannot be determined 264 12.4.3 Uncertainty A decision is made under conditions of uncertainty when there is a lack of information, the outcomes of alternatives are unpredictable and probabilities cannot be determined. Decisions made under conditions of uncertainty are unquestionably the most difficult. In such situations, a CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 12 Decision-making manager has no knowledge on which to base an estimate of the likelihood of various outcomes. No historical data are available from which to infer probabilities, or the circumstances are so novel and complex that it is impossible to make comparative judgements. Although managerial intelligence and competence are widely available, the ability to deal with uncertainty is rare3. Perhaps the most common occasions for decisions to be made under conditions of uncertainty are those involving the introduction of new technology or new markets, as in the case of the Walt Disney Company. In such instances, management has to rely on its ‘gut feelings’. Many factors may be sources of uncertainty and high risk for organisations and its management. These factors may fall into seven categories, namely4: r FDPOPNJDSFDFTTJPOT TUPDLNBSLFUDSBTIFT IPTUJMFUBLFPWFST r physical industrial accidents, supply breakdowns, product failure r personnel strikes, workplace violence r criminal theft of money and goods, product tampering r theft of information, tampering with company records, cyber attacks r reputation rumour mongering, defamation r natural disasters: fires, floods, earthquakes. The Walt Disney Company mainly used historical evidence of their existing parks in making decisions in terms of the envisaged European park. Disney’s executives believe they should learn from past mistakes and not to repeat them. Tokyo Disneyland presented them with one past mistake to learn from. When a Japanese company first proposed this park to Disney, Disney opted for the security of royalty payments in lieu of the risks of ownership. In 1992, Tokyo Disneyland earned more than $200 million during the worst recession in modern Japanese history. That same year, the entire Walt Disney Company earned only $299 million. From this one misstep, Disney has possibly sacrificed billions of dollars in profits to date. Thus in France, Disney bought far more land than it needed to eventually build 700 000 square meters of office space, a 750 000 square meter corporate park, 2 500 individual homes, a 95 000 square meter shopping mall, 2 400 apartments and 3 000 time share apartments. Euro Disney planned to develop the land and then sell it to prospective buyers, making a huge profit. Unfortunately, this revenue generating plan never materialised due to the collapse of the real estate market. This example may lead us to the conclusion that the more successful a company, the greater the need to ensure objectivity in new venture calculations. Success can in some cases breed a false sense of security, especially when a whole new operating environment can radically change the game, as Disney unfortunately discovered5. Table 12.1 on the next page summarises decision-making conditions and the various levels of certainty. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 265 PART III: Planning Table 12.1: Summary of decision-making conditions and levels of certainty Certainty Risk Uncertainty Decision-maker has complete certainty Decision-maker has some certainty Decision-maker has complete uncertainty #XailaDle options anF the DeneƂts or costs of each are known Outcome of each alternative is not known in advance Outcome of each alternative is unpredictable No element of change intervenes between the option and its outcome Probability can be assigned to each alternative outcome Probability cannot be assigned to each alternative outcome Decision is a sure thing Decision is a ‘gamble’ Decision requires ‘guts’ LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 12.5 DECISION-MAKING MODELS Explain the various decisionmaking models. After looking at the type of decision and the conditions under which the decision has to be made, managers also need to consider the two primary decision-making models: the rational model and the boundedrationality model. In the case of the rational model, the decision-maker should select the best possible solution. This is known as optimising. In the case of the bounded-rationality model, the decision-maker uses satisficing and selects the first possible solution to a problem that meets the minimal criteria. Managers need to know which model to use, and when. They should optimise – apply the rational model – when they are making non-programmed, high-risk decisions (caused by the factors identified in Section 12.4.3) in conditions of uncertainty. This process is explained in the section below. When managers are making programmed low-risk, or certain decisions, they should select the first option that meets the minimal criteria, in other words, they should satisfice. optimising decision-maker selects the best possible solution to a problem satisƂcing decision-maker selects the first possible solution to a problem that meets the minimal criteria 12.5.1 The decision-making process The decision-making process describes a set of phases that individual decision-makers or decision-making teams should follow in order to increase the probability that their decisions will be optimal. Optimal decisions will lead to maximum achievement of goals and objectives. In most decision-making situations, managers go through a number of stages that help them think through the problem and develop alternative solutions. Figure 12.2 on the next page summarises each stage in the normal progression that leads to an optimal decision. Note that these steps are more applicable to non-programmed decisions than to programmed decisions. Problems that occur infrequently with a great deal of uncertainty require the manager to utilise the entire process. In contrast, problems that occur frequently with a great deal of certainty are often handled by policies, standard operating procedures, and rules, making it unnecessary to develop and evaluate alternatives each time these situations arise. 266 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 12 Decision-making 5tage 1: Recognise classiHy and deƂne tJe problem or opportunity 5tage 2: 5et goals and criteria 5tage : )enerate creatiXe alternatiXe courses oH action 5tage : 'Xaluate alternatiXe courses oH action 5tage : 5elect tJe best option 5tage : +mplement tJe cJosen option 5tage : Conduct HolloY-up eXaluation Figure 12.2: The decision-making process Stage 1: Recognise, classify and define the problem or opportunity. 5IFųSTUTUBHFJOEFDJTJPONBLJOHJTSFDPHOJTJOHUIBUUIFSFJTBQSPCMFN threat or an opportunity. The problem or opportunity may be classified in terms of the type of decision (programmed or non-programmed) that needs to be made, the decision-making condition (certainty, risk or uncertainty) and the decision-making model (the rational or boundedrationality model) used6. After the problem or opportunity has been classified, it should be accurately defined. An important part of defining the problem or opportunity is to distinguish the symptoms from the cause of the problem. For example, a conscientious worker who suddenly starts arriving late for work should not be defined as an ‘absenteeism situation’. Being late is a symptom of the problem, not the cause. The cause could be illness, personal problems, transport problems, or something else entirely. Management should recognise and look into the cause. If the situation is incorrectly classified or defined, any decisions made will be directed towards solving the wrong problem. A lack of motivation is not always the cause of poor work performance. Poor work performance may be a symptom of poor training, of a mismatch between the organisation’s culture and the values of its employees, or of outdated equipment, and so on. Stage 2: Set goals and criteria. Generally, in programmed decisions, Stages 2 to 5 need not be followed as criteria have been set for these decisions. However, in the case of non-programmed decisions, no goals or criteria have been set. The manager will be responsible for this task. He or she can make an individual decision or involve a group in decisionmaking (group decision-making and the techniques associated with it, will be discussed in Sections 12.6 and 12.7). CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 267 PART III: Planning The foundation of the decision-making process lies in the organisational goals that give it purpose, direction and continuity. A given goal represents an end point towards which management directs its decision-making. Several recent studies place the setting of well-defined goals at the top of the list of chief executives’ responsibilities7. A goal should state what the decision should accomplish. Stage 3: Generate creative alternative courses of action. Once a problem or an opportunity has been recognised and goals and criteria have been set, the next stage is to identify various courses of action to deal with the situation. Bear in mind that it is impossible to identify all available options. However, a systematic effort should be made to identify as many courses of action as possible. Innovation and creativity play a major part in generating various courses of action. Using groups to generate solutions could enhance this process. The availability of information (see Chapter 13) and technology should also be considered. South African managers are fortunate in that they can tap into the creativity of a diverse workforce. The number of available options identified is limited by certain constraints – mainly time and the cost associated with the decision. Rarely do managers have enough time or money to identify, let alone evaluate, an unlimited number of options. Indeed, there may be times when doing something immediately may be more important than taking a different course of action at a later date. Managers often need to balance time and expense against identifying additional options. During this stage managers need to decide whether they want to consider all options and optimise their decision (rational model) or search only until a satisficing option (bounded rationality) has been reached. Stage 4: Evaluate alternative courses of action. Once various courses of action have been identified, the next step is to evaluate the options. Each option should be evaluated in terms of its strengths and weaknesses, advantages and disadvantages, benefits and costs. Because each option is likely to have both positive and negative features, most evaluations involve balancing anticipated consequences. The evaluation of options may either be intuitive or follow a more scientific approach. Some of these approaches are discussed in Section 12.8. Stage 5: Select the best option. In the previous two stages, options were identified and evaluated. The next stage is to select the best option. The success rate of the average manager in selecting the best option is rarely more than 50 per cent: this is only slightly better than deciding on the toss of a coin8. Therefore, this step requires a manager to evaluate each option carefully against the goals and criteria set during the second stage, with a view to ranking the options in order of priority. In practice, selecting an option is often subjective: the manager’s experience, values, internal politics, and so on influence this choice. Stage 6: Implement the chosen option. Once an option has been selected, appropriate steps should be taken to ensure that it is properly implemented. A decision is only an abstraction and needs to be put into action. It is possible for a good decision to be damaged by poor implementation, while a poor decision may be helped by good 268 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 12 Decision-making implementation. Therefore, implementation may be just as important as the activity of selecting an option. Decisions should be explained in such a way that all the relevant parties understand them. Those concerned should understand not only the logic behind a decision, but also what they are supposed to do. A suitable organisational structure, good leadership, a strong organisational culture, and a fair reward system will enhance the implementation of decisions. Stage 7: Conduct follow-up evaluation. Once a decision has been set in motion, evaluation is necessary to provide feedback on its outcome. Adjustments are invariably needed to ensure that actual results compare favourably with planned results – as determined in Stage 2 of the decision-making process. The process of evaluation closes the feedback loop shown in Figure 12.2. The soundness of a decision may be evaluated against planned results. If necessary, modifications can be made and further options identified and evaluated. This should be seen as an opportunity for acquiring new knowledge in order to improve future decisions. 12.6 GROUP DECISION-MAKING LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 Stages 2 and 3 of the decision-making process, namely the setting of goals and criteria and the generation of creative alternative courses of action, rely heavily on creativity and innovation. Group decision-making can enhance this process, especially in the case of non-programmed decisions where there is usually a great deal of uncertainty about the outcome. The complexity of many of these decision-making situations requires specialised knowledge in a number of fields. Whether groups make better decisions than individuals working alone has been the topic of extensive discussion. Groups are subject to social factors when making decisions. These factors include social conformity, levels of communication skill, dominance by a specific group member, and so on. While groups often make better decisions than those made by the average group member, their decisions consistently fall short of the quality of decisions made by the best individual member. Group decision-making, therefore, has certain advantages and disadvantages. Advantages of group decision-making are the following: r (SPVQNFNCFSTDPOUSJCVUFBWBSJFUZPGTLJMMTBOETQFDJBMJTFE knowledge that can be used to define and solve a problem or recognise an opportunity. This will lead to an improvement in the quality of decisions taken. r Group members may have multiple and conflicting views, which can be taken into account in order to improve the quality of decisions. r The different beliefs and values of group members can be transmitted and aligned. Discuss group decision-making. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 269 PART III: Planning r Group decision-making may lead to improved commitment to decisions by organisational members, since they will have participated in the decision-making process. r Participation in problem-solving and decision-making will improve the morale and motivation of employees. r Allowing participation in problem-solving and decision-making may contribute to people’s ability to work effectively and efficiently in groups and teams. On the other hand, group decision-making also has some potential disadvantages: r Group decision-making may be more time-consuming than individual decision-making. r Groups are more likely to choose the first possible option or solution to a problem that meets the minimal criteria. Individuals tend to put more effort into the decision-making process and work towards the best possible solution to a problem. r One group member, or a sub-group, may dominate the group’s decision-making process and nullify the group decision. r Group decision-making may inhibit creativity and lead to conformity and ‘groupthink’. We now go on to examine techniques for improving group decisionmaking. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7 Suggest teSniSues for improving group decisionmaking. 270 12.7 TECHNIQUES FOR IMPROVING GROUP DECISION-MAKING In order to overcome the disadvantages and to capitalise on the advantages of group decision-making, techniques have been suggested to make group decision-making more creative. We shall discuss four of these techniques, namely brainstorming, the nominal group technique, the Delphi technique, and group-decision support systems (GDSS). These techniques are illustrated in Figure 12.3 on the next page. It indicates where the different techniques are mainly used. However, the techniques can be used at any managerial level. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 12 Decision-making Top management Delphi technique Middle management nominal group technique Lower management brainstorming Figure 12.3: Techniques for improving group decision-making 12.7.1 Brainstorming One of the problems of decision-making groups is that group norms develop over time, and group members tend to conform to dominant group opinions. As a result, the creativity of a decision-making group declines after having peaked early in the forming of the group. Brainstorming is a technique used to stimulate creative or imaginative solutions to organisational problems. Group participants informally generate as many ideas as possible without evaluation by others. This prohibition should encourage contributions from members who are particularly shy, have divergent ideas, or have low status within the group. During idea generation, group members are encouraged to build on, but not criticise, ideas produced by others. This cross-fertilisation is assumed to produce a synergistic effect. The objective is to generate as many ideas as possible in the belief that the more ideas that are conceived, the greater will be the likelihood of one outstanding idea emerging. The following rules govern brainstorming sessions: r $SJUJDJTNJTQSPIJCJUFE5IFQSJNBSZQVSQPTFPGCSBJOTUPSNJOHJT to generate as many possible solutions to a problem as possible. Judgement of the creative or imaginative solutions to organisational problems should be withheld until all the solutions have been generated. r No ‘Yes, but ...’ comments are allowed. r Imaginative solutions are welcome. The wilder and more ‘farfetched’ the solution, the better. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 271 PART III: Planning r Quantity is important. The greater the number of solutions, the greater the likelihood that there will be an outstanding solution to the problem. r 5IFDPNCJOBUJPOPG WBSJPVTTPMVUJPOTUPBQSPCMFNBOEUIF improvement of the suggested solutions, are encouraged. Brainstorming sessions usually last from 30 minutes to an hour. A one-hour session can generate up to 150 ideas. Typically, most of the ideas will be impractical, but a few will merit serious consideration. Brainstorming has been used effectively in the fields of advertising, new product development and by organisations following an innovative strategy. It is important to note that brainstorming is merely a process for generating ideas. The next two techniques go further by offering methods of actually arriving at a preferred solution. 12.7.2 Nominal group technique This is a structured group decision-making technique. The nominal group technique restricts discussion or interpersonal communication during the decision-making process. Group members are all physically present, as in a traditional committee meeting, but members operate independently. A problem is usually presented, with the following steps taking place: r Seven to ten members meet as a group. Before any discussion takes place, each member independently writes down his or her ideas on the problem. r The group leader systematically gathers information from all participants. Each member presents one idea to the group. No discussion takes place until all the ideas have been recorded. r The ideas are clarified through a guided discussion. r The group leader then instructs participants to vote on their preferred solutions. r Each member silently and independently ranks the ideas. r The process may conclude with an acceptable solution. The nominal group technique is appropriate for situations in which groups may be affected by a dominant person, conformity or ‘group think’ because it minimises these effects. 12.7.3 Delphi technique Decisions often have to be made by experts in different geographical areas. In this case neither brainstorming nor the nominal group technique can be used, as both techniques require the presence of participants. The Delphi technique is a process of decision-making that does not require the physical presence of the participants. 272 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 12 Decision-making Origin of the Delphi technique This technique gets its name from Delphi, a place that was famous in ancient times as the seat of the most important temple of the Greek god Apollo. Kings and other powerful rulers from all over the ancient world came to Delphi to consult with Apollo through his priestesses, whom they believed could foretell the future. The Delphi technique involves using a series of confidential questionnaires to refine a solution. In this technique the group’s members never meet face to face. The following steps characterise the Delphi technique: r The problem is identified and members are asked to provide potential solutions through a series of carefully designed questionnaires. r Each member anonymously and independently completes the first questionnaire. r The results of the first questionnaire are compiled at a central location, transcribed and reproduced. r Each member then receives a copy of the results. r After viewing the results, members are again asked for their solutions. The results typically trigger new solutions or cause changes in the original position. r The last two steps are repeated as often as necessary until consensus is reached. Brainstorming, the nominal group technique, and the Delphi technique should not be seen as competing choices, but as complementary techniques. 12.7.4 Group-decision support systems Group-decision support system (GDSS) is a generic term that refers to various kinds of computer-supported group decision-making systems. Most of the GDSSs can be used to support face-to-face groups as well as groups that communicate through electronic media. When the process of brainstorming is supported by sophisticated computers, it is called ‘electronic brainstorming’. In an electronic brainstorming session, the participants have at their disposal networked workstations. Instead of contributing their ideas in a round-robin fashion, they simply type in their suggestions. These ideas are disseminated to the other group members without an identifying mark. Thus anonymity is preserved and the group members can respond more freely than in a conventional brainstorming session. This technique blends the nominal group-technique with sophisticated computer technology. Group members sit around a horseshoe-shaped table, empty except for a series of computer terminals. Issues are CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 273 PART III: Planning presented to participants and they type their responses onto a computer screen. Individual comments, as well as aggregate votes, are displayed on a projection screen in the room. Electronic meetings can be as much as 55 per cent faster than traditional face-to-face meetings. In real-time Delphi, a computer conference is substituted for the mail questionnaires of the conventional Delphi. This allows participants to respond immediately to the comments anonymously entered by the other members of the group. In this way the time required to complete the Delphi is much reduced. In deciding which of the techniques to use for improving group decision-making, management should consider issues such as time and money costs, the potential for interpersonal conflict and commitment to the solution. In general, it can be said that top management commonly uses the Delphi technique for a specific decision. Brainstorming and the nominal group techniques are frequently used at middle- and lowermanagement where work groups are involved. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 8 Recommend tools for decisionmaking under the various decision-making conditions. 12.8 TOOLS FOR DECISION-MAKING UNDER VARIOUS DECISION-MAKING CONDITIONS Various tools are available to assist managers in performing Stages 4 (the evaluation of alternative courses of action) and 5 (the selection of the best option) of the decision-making process. In this section we discuss quantitative tools for decision-making, the Kepner-Fourie method and the cost-benefit analysis. 12.8.1 Quantitative tools for decision-making Many of these techniques have their origin in the quantitative management school (discussed in Chapter 1) and propagate the use of mathematical relations in solving management problems. Our objective in this section is to make you aware of these techniques, not to make you a mathematician. For the same reason, we use the dominant model in this chapter as a guide, that is, the conditions of decision-making – certainty, risk and uncertainty. Figure 12.4 on the next page will serve as the point of reference for our discussion in this section. 274 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 12 Decision-making Top management r conditions of uncertainty r simulation r capital budgeting Middle management r r r r r conditions of risk break-even analysis decision tree pay-off matrix probability analysis Lower management r conditions of near certainty r queuing theory r linear programming Figure 12.4: Quantitative tools for decision-making Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. Decision-making tools in conditions of certainty r -JOFBSQSPHSBNNJOH0G BMMUIFRVBOUJUBUJWFUPPMTJEFOUJųFE MJOFBS QSPHSBNNJOHJTQFSIBQTUIFNPTUGSFRVFOUMZBOEFYUFOTJWFMZVTFE *UJTBRVBOUJUBUJWFUPPMGPSPQUJNBMMZBMMPDBUJOHTDBSDFSFTPVSDFT BNPOHDPNQFUJOHVTFTUPNBYJNJTFCFOFųUTPSNJOJNJTFMPTTFT 5IFSFTPVSDFTJORVFTUJPONBZCFIVNBO ųOBODJBM QIZTJDBMPS JOGPSNBUJPOBM 5IFTPDBMMFEAUSBWFMMJOHTBMFTNBOQSPCMFNJTBDMBTTJDMJOFBS QSPHSBNNJOHBQQMJDBUJPO5IFQSPCMFNJTUPEFUFSNJOFUIF TIPSUFTUPSMFBTUDPTUMZSPVUFGPSBTBMFTQFSTPOUPUSBWFMJOPSEFS UPWJTJUBTFUMJTUPG DJUJFT5IFTBMFTQFSTPONVTUWJTJUFBDIDJUZPOMZ PODF OFWFSSFUSBDFBOZTUFQT BOESFUVSOUPUIFTUBSUJOHDJUZ-JOFBS QSPHSBNNJOHJTDBQBCMFPG EFUFSNJOJOHUIFTIPSUFTUPSMFBTUDPTUMZ SPVUFUPGPMMPX r 2VFVJOHUIFPSZ2VFVJOHUIFPSZJTBRVBOUJUBUJWFUPPMGPSBOBMZTJOH UIFDPTUTPG XBJUJOHJORVFVFT5IFPCKFDUJWFPG RVFVJOHUIFPSZ JTUPBDIJFWFBOPQUJNBMCBMBODFCFUXFFOUIFDPTUPG JODSFBTJOH TFSWJDFBOEUIFBNPVOUPG UJNFJOEJWJEVBMT NBDIJOFTPSNBUFSJBMT NVTUXBJUGPSTFSWJDF /PUPOMZBSFUIFSFDPTUTBTTPDJBUFEXJUIBMMPXJOHBXBJUJOH RVFVFUIFSFBSFBMTPDPTUTBTTPDJBUFEXJUIJODSFBTJOHTFSWJDF UPQSFWFOUTVDIRVFVFT5IFQSPCMFNJTUPEFUFSNJOFUIFCFTU CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 275 PART III: Planning balance between the cost of upgrading service and the amount of time users of a service must wait in line. In such situations, queuing theory can be used to identify an optimal solution for maximising service while minimising costs. Decision-making tools in conditions of risk and uncertainty In this section, probability analysis, the pay-off matrix, the decision tree, break-even analysis, capital budgeting and simulation are discussed as possible decision-making tools in conditions of risk and uncertainty. r 1SPCBCJMJUZBOBMZTJT5IFUFSNAQSPCBCJMJUZSFGFSTUPUIFFTUJNBUFE likelihood, expressed as a percentage, that an outcome will occur. There are two complementary approaches to using probability analysis, namely pay-off matrices and decision trees. Both are among the most helpful quantitative tools available to a manager. r 1BZPŲ NBUSJY5IFQBZPŲ NBUSJYJTBUFDIOJRVFGPSJOEJDBUJOH possible pay-offs, or returns, from pursuing different courses of action. Each option is pursued under different states of nature, or circumstances beyond the control of the decision-maker. r %FDJTJPOUSFF"EFDJTJPOUSFFJTBHSBQIJDJMMVTUSBUJPOPGUIFWBSJPVT solutions available to solve a problem. It is designed to estimate the outcome of a series of decisions. As the sequence of the major decision is drawn, the resulting diagram resembles a tree with branches. r #SFBLFWFOBOBMZTJT"OPUIFSUFDIOJRVFUIBUDBOCFVTFEUP evaluate alternative courses of action, and to select the best option, is the break-even analysis. This technique involves the calculation of the volume of sales that will result in a profit. It requires a forecast of the sales volume and the cost of production. The break-even point is then calculated as the level of sales where no profit or loss results. r $BQJUBMCVEHFUJOH$BQJUBMCVEHFUJOHJTBUFDIOJRVFUIBUDBOCF used to evaluate alternative investments. It involves a process by which each alternative investment is analysed in financial terms and placed on the capital budget. Various methods exist to analyse investments in financial terms. For example, the payback period can be used to calculate the years it will take to recover the initial cash invested. The alternative that offers the shortest payback period (in years, months, etc) is then preferred. Another method computes the average rate of return of each investment and selects the investment with the highest average rate of return. A more sophisticated technique is the net present value of an investment, which is the present value of the future benefits less the cost. It is the difference between what is to be received, in current worth, and what will be paid for it. 276 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 12 Decision-making r 4JNVMBUJPO4JNVMBUJPOJTBRVBOUJUBUJWFUPPMGPSJNJUBUJOHBTFUPG SFBMDPOEJUJPOTTPUIBUUIFMJLFMZPVUDPNFTPG WBSJPVTDPVSTFTPG BDUJPODBOCFDPNQBSFE5IFTFNFUIPETJOWPMWFDPOTUSVDUJOH BOEUFTUJOHBNPEFMPG BSFBMXPSMEQIFOPNFOPO*OCVTJOFTT TJNVMBUJPODBOCFVTFEXJUINBUIFNBUJDBMNPEFMTUPQSFEJDUUIF QPTTJCMFPVUDPNFTPG JOWFTUNFOUBOEQSJDJOHEFDJTJPOT QSPQPTFE JOWFOUPSZDPOUSPMTZTUFNT BTTFNCMZMJOFTDIFEVMJOHSPVUJOFT WBSJPVTEFTJHOTQFDJųDBUJPOT BOEWBSJPVTDPNQFUJUJWFTUSBUFHJFT 0SHBOJTBUJPOTBSFNBLJOHJODSFBTJOHVTFPG DPNQVUFSTUPSVO CVTJOFTTTJNVMBUJPOT5IJTFOBCMFTNBOBHFSTUPTBWFUJNFBOE NPOFZBOELFFQTUIFNCFUUFSJOGPSNFE BMMPXJOHUIFNUPNBLF CFUUFSEFDJTJPOT 12.8.2 The Kepner-Fourie method *O UIF QSFWJPVT TFDUJPO XF FYQMBJOFE PCKFDUJWF RVBOUJUBUJWF UPPMT GPS EFDJTJPONBLJOH 5IF ,FQOFS'PVSJF NFUIPE DPNCJOFT UIF PCKFDUJWF RVBOUJUBUJWF BQQSPBDI XJUI TPNF TVCKFDUJWJUZ 5IF TVCKFDUJWJUZ DPNFT GSPNEFUFSNJOJOHANVTUBOEAXBOUDSJUFSJBBOEBTTJHOJOHWBMVFXFJHIUT UP UIFN *U JT B NFUIPE GPS DPNQBSJOH BMUFSOBUJWFT VTJOH UIF DSJUFSJB TFMFDUFEJO4UBHFPG UIFEFDJTJPONBLJOHNPEFM 5IFGPMMPXJOHFYBNQMFJMMVTUSBUFTUIFVTFPG UIFNFUIPE-FUTTUBUF UIBU PVS PCKFDUJWF JT UP CVZ B IPVTF XIJDI DBO CF PDDVQJFE JO UXP NPOUITUJNF5IJTJTPCWJPVTMZBOPOQSPHSBNNFEEFDJTJPO5BCMF TIPXTUIFVTFPG UIFNFUIPEUPEFDJEFXIJDIIPVTFUPCVZ Table 12.2: Method to decide which house to buy using the Kepner-Fourie method ‘Must criteria’ House 1 House 2 House 3 House 4 Cost under R500 000 Yes Yes No Yes Available within two months Yes Yes Yes No House 1 WS** House 2 WS** ‘Want criteria’ Meets criteria Importance* 4 bedrooms 8x 5 = 40 10 = 80 2 bathrooms 7x 5 = 35 10 = 70 Double garage 10 x 9 = 90 9 = 90 Near schools 9x 10 = 90 6 = 54 Security 10 x 10 = 100 8 = 80 Pool 5x 6 = 30 9 = 45 385 419 Total weighted score *Indicates the quantity of importance – on a scale of 10 (high) to 1 (low) assigned to each ‘want’ criterion as a weight. **Indicates the weighted score awarded to each alternative. Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 277 PART III: Planning Step 1: Compare each alternative to the ‘must’ criteria listed in Column 1. Eliminate any alternative that does not meet the ‘must’ criteria. Houses 3 and 4 do not meet all the ‘must’ criteria and are eliminated. Step 2: Rate each ‘want’ criterion (Column 1) on a scale of 1 to 10 (10 being most important). Note that the same number may be used more than once (10, for example). Step 3: Assign a value of 1 to 10 (10 being the highest) to how well each alternative meets all the ‘want’ criteria. These values are shown in the vertical columns labelled House 1 and House 2, and they can be compared for each house. Again, factors can have equal weights, for example 5. Step 4: Compute the weighted scores (WS) for each alternative by multiplying (horizontally) the importance value by the ‘meets criteria’ value for each house. Next, add these weighted scores vertically to obtain the total weighted score for each house. Step 5: Select the alternative with the highest total weighted score as the solution to the problem. House 2 should be selected because it has the highest weighted score. 12.8.3 Cost-benefit analysis The quantitative tools for decision-making make maximum use of objective mathematical approaches to compare alternatives. The Kepner-Fourie method combines the objective quantitative approach with some subjectivity. However, managers may be faced with situations when the benefit received for the cost is uncertain, making these methods unusable. In such situations, the cost-benefit analysis can be used. It compares the costs and benefits of each alternative course of action using subjective intuition and judgement. This method makes the minimum use of mathematics to make the decision. The advantages (which can be considered the benefits) and disadvantages (which can be considered the cost) are identified for each alternative. 278 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 12 Decision-making CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Contextualise decision-making in terms of the management process. While performing the fundamental functions of management (planning, organising, leading and control) managers are faced with opportunities and threats that need to be addressed and problems to be solved. 2. Explain the relationship between problems, problem-solving and decision-making. • Problems exist whenever managers perceive a difference between what has actually happened and what they planned to happen. • Problem-solving is the process of taking corrective action. • Decision-making can be defined as the process of choosing between various courses of action. 3. Compare the different types of managerial decisions. Decision-making can be classified by its relative uniqueness. • Programmed decisions are decisions that are made by habit or policy and involve simple, common, frequently occurring problems. • Non-programmed decisions deal with unusual or novel problems and require creative thinking. 4. Compare the various decision-making conditions. Managers usually make decisions under conditions of certainty, risk or uncertainty. • Under conditions of certainty, all available options and the benefits and costs associated with each are known. • When making a decision under the condition of risk, the manager does not know the outcome of each alternative in advance, but can assign a probability to each outcome. • A decision is made under conditions of uncertainty when the available options, the probability of their occurrence, or their potential benefits or costs are unknown. 5. Explain the various decision-making models. When using the rational decision-making model, the decision-maker selects the best possible solution to a problem. The model involves seven stages: Stage 1: Recognise, classify and define the problem or opportunity Stage 2: Set goals and criteria Stage 3: Generate creative alternative courses of action Stage 4: Evaluate alternative courses of action Stage 5: Select the best option Stage 6: Implement the chosen option Stage 7: Conduct follow-up evaluation In the case of the bounded-rationality model, the decision-maker selects the first option that meets the minimal criteria. Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 1:17 PM via UNISA 279 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part III: Planning 6. Describe group decision-making. Group decision-making can enhance creativity in the decision-making process, although there are advantages and disadvantages associated with it. 7. Suggest techniques for improving group decision-making. To overcome the disadvantages and to capitalise on the advantages of group decisionmaking, we have presented various ways of making this process more creative. The techniques discussed are: • brainstorming • the nominal group technique • the Delphi technique • group-decision support systems. 8. Recommend tools for decision-making under the various decision-making conditions. Tools for decision-making under various decision-making conditions can be categorised as quantitative tools for decision-making, the Kepner-Fourie method and the cost-benefit analysis. Quantitative tools can further be categorised as decision-making tools under conditions of certainty, risk and uncertainty. Decision-making tools in conditions of certainty are linear programming and queuing theory. Decision-making tools under conditions of risk and uncertainty, are profitability analysis, the pay-off matrix, decision tree, break-even analysis, capital budgeting and simulation. KEY TERMS bounded-rationality decision-making model brainstorming break-even analysis capital budgeting certainty cost-benefit analysis decision-making decision tree Delphi technique group decision-making group decision support systems Kepner-Fourie method linear programming 280 nominal group technique non-programmed decisions pay-off matrix probability analysis problem solving problems programmed decisions queuing theory rational decision-making model risk simulation uncertainty Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 1:17 PM via UNISA CHAPTER 12 Decision-making REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Contextualise decision-making in terms of the management process. 2. Define the terms ‘problems’, ‘problem solving’ and ‘decision-making’ and explain the relationship to each other. 3. Compare the different types of managerial decisions and the various decision-making conditions. 4. Compare the various decision-making models. 5. Explain the meaning of group decision-making and refer to the advantages and disadvantages associated with it. 6. Suggest various techniques that decision-makers can use to improve group decision-making in organisations. 7. Recommend tools for decision-making by referring to specific tools under various decision-making conditions. END NOTES L 7KH:DOW'LVQH\&RPSDQ\>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZIXQGLQJXQLYHUVHFRPFRPSDQ\KLVWRULHV7KH:DOW'LVQH\ &RPSDQ\&RPSDQ\+LVWRU\KWPO$FFHVVHGRQ1RYHPEHU LL %XUJR\QH/>2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZRLWF FRP'LVQH\3DULV(QJOLVK/\Q(XUR'LVQH\KWPO$FFHVVHGRQ1RYHPEHU LLL 6SHQFHU(3(XUR'LVQH\ :KDW+DSSHQHG":KDWQH[W"Journal of International Marketing ŋ /XVVLHU51Management Fundamentals: Concepts, Applications, Skill Development.&LQFLQQDWL6RXWK:HVWHUQ &ROOHJH3XEOLVKLQJS 0F/DXJKOLQ',6WUHQJWKHQLQJH[HFXWLYHGHFLVLRQPDNLQJHuman Resource Management. ŋ +HOOULHJHO'-DFNVRQ6( 6ORFXP-:Management: A Competency-based ApproachWKHGLWLRQ $XVWUDOLD7KRPVRQS 6SHQFHU(3(XUR'LVQH\:KDW+DSSHQHG":KDWQH[W"Journal of International Marketing +DUULVRQ() 3HOOHWLHU0$7KHHVVHQFHRIPDQDJHPHQWGHFLVLRQManagement Decision +DUULVRQ() 3HOOHWLHU0$5HYLVLWLQJVWUDWHJLFGHFLVLRQVXFFHVVManagement Decision ,ELG CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 281 Chapter 13 Information management Tersia Brevis OPENING CASE Steve Jobs: The man who created our world1 The name Steve Jobs is synonymous with the Macintosh-computer, iMac, iTunes, iPod, iPhone, iPad and Toy Story, to name only a few. When he died in October 2011, he left behind an information technology world – a world in which he was a great role player. Steve Paul Jobs was born in 1955 in San Francisco and adopted at birth by Paul Reinhold Jobs and his wife Clara. Steve Jobs knew from a very early age that he was adopted. In his conversations with Walter Isaacson, author of his exclusive biography Steve Jobs, he recalled sitting on the lawn of his house when he was six or seven years old, telling the girl who lived across the street that he was adopted. ‘So does that mean your real parents didn’t want you?’ she asked. ‘Lightning bolts went off in my head’, Jobs explained. ‘I remember running into the house, crying. And my parents said, “No, you have to understand. We specifically picked you out.”’ Abandoned. Chosen. Special. These three words became part of who Steve Jobs was and how he regarded himself. And indeed he had a special life, with many high- and lowlights. The most prominent of these are discussed below. Jobs attended Monta Loma Elementary, Mountain View, Cupertino Junior High and Homestead High School in California. He frequently attended after-school lectures at the Hewlett Packard Company and was later hired by the company. Here, he worked with Steve Wozniak as a summer employee. Jobs graduated in 1972 from high school and enrolled at Reed College, Oregon. He dropped out after only one semester. The Apple Company On April 1, 1976, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak founded the Apple Inc. Company. From the Jobses’ garage, they produced the Apple I. The Apple II, one of the first commercial lines of personal computers, was engineered by Steve Wozniak. He designed a computer terminal, with a keyboard and monitor that had the ability to connect to a distant computer. Using a microprocessor, Wozniak could put some of the capacity of the minicomputer inside the terminal itself, so it could become a small stand-alone computer and desktop. Jobs was responsible for the aesthetic design and marketing of this personal computer, which they launched in April 1977 at the West Coast Computer Faire. Apple got three hundred orders at the show. It was also at this show that Jobs met a Japanese textile maker, Mizushima Satoshi, who became Apple’s first dealer in Japan. During the same time Jobs and Wozniak moved their company from the Jobses’ garage into a rental office. An independent developer hired by the Apple company came up with the first spreadsheet and personal finance programme for personal computers, called VisiCalc. For some time, it was only available on the Apple II personal computer. This made the Apple II into something that business and individuals could justify buying. For the next sixteen years, various models of the Apple II was marketed, selling close to six million machines. More than any other machine, it launched the personal computer industry. Steve CHAPTER 13 Information management Wozniak deserves the credit for the design of its circuit board and related operating software, but Steve Jobs was the one who integrated the circuit board into a friendly package, from the power supply to its sleek case. Steve Jobs also created the company that sprung up around Steve Wozniak’s machine. During the early 1980s, Jobs played a huge role in recognising the commercial potential of the Xerox PARC’s mouse-driven graphical user interface. This led to the creation of the Apple Lisa. One year later, an employee of Apple, Jef Raskin, created the legendary Macintosh computer, which was launched in 1984. After losing a power struggle with the board of directors in 1985, Jobs left Apple and almost immediately founded NeXT, a computer platform development company. NeXT specialised in the higher-education and business markets. The NeXT company NeXT workstations were first released in 1990. The NeXT workstation was known for its technical strengths, of which the most important was its object-oriented software development system. It was on a NeXT computer that Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web. The NeXT workstation was followed by the release of a second generation, characterised by an innovative multimedia e-mail system, having the ability to share voice, image, graphics, and video in e-mail for the first time. This machine allowed interpersonal computing to revolutionise human communications and group work. In 1993, the company transitioned fully to software EFWFMPQNFOU BOE SFMFBTFE /F9545&1*OUFM In 1993, the company reported its first profit of $1.03 million. In 1996, WebObjects, a framework for Web application development, was released. Back to the Apple company In 1997, the NeXT company was acquired by Apple Inc., bringing Steve Jobs back to the company he co-founded almost 20 years before. In 1997, Jobs was interim CEO of the company and from 2000 until his resignation in 2011, he was CEO. During this time, the Apple company diversified, introduced and improved upon other digital appliances. For example, they introduced the iPod portable music player, iTunes digital music software, and the iTunes Store. In 2007, the company even entered the cellular phone business with the introduction of the iPhone, a multi-touch display cell phone, which also included the features of an iPod and, with its own mobile browser, revolutionised the mobile browsing scene. Pixar and Disney In 1986, Steve Jobs bought The Graphics Group, which was later renamed Pixar, from Lucasfilm’s computer graphics division. Toy Story, the first film produced by the new partnership and in which Jobs was credited as executive producer, brought fame to the studio when it was released in 1995. Over the next 15 years, Pixar produced box-office hits, such as A Bug’s Life, Toy Story 2, Monsters, Inc., Finding Nemo, The Incredibles, Ratatouille, WALL-E, Up and Toy Story 3. In 2006, the Disney Company announced their decision to purchase the Pixar company, making Steve Jobs The Walt Disney Company’s largest single shareholder with seven percent of the company’s shares. Losing a visionary and creative genius In 2003, Jobs was diagnosed with a pancreas neuroendocrine tumor. Initially, the disease was treated. By 2009, his health further deteriorated and he was diagnosed with a hormone imbalance. He underwent a liver transplant, taking medical leave for most of 2011. In August the same year, he resigned as CEO of the Apple company. Hours after his resignation was announced, Apple shares dropped by five per cent and the Walt Disney company’s shares dropped by 1.5 per cent in afterhours trading. When Steve Jobs died of respiratory arrest related to the tumor on October 5, 2011, the world lost an amazing human being. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 283 PART III: Planning LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of the chapter is to provide an overview of information management in an organisation. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Contextualise information management in terms of the decision-making process. 2. Explain the importance of managing information for sustaining competitive advantage. 3. Explain the basic functioning of an information system. 4. Identify the characteristics and costs of useful information. 5. Explain the organisation of information systems in modern organisations. 6. Classify information systems in terms of their use in operational and managerial support. 7. Develop a generic information system for managers. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Contextualise information management in terms of the decision-making process. 284 13.1 INFORMATION MANAGEMENT AND THE DECISION-MAKING PROCESS In our opening case, we highlighted the contribution of Steve Jobs to the modern computer and the role that he played in modern information technology. His contributions are a far cry from the earliest dataprocessing devices which included fingers, stones and sticks for counting, knots on a string, scratches on a rock, or notches in a stick. The Babylonians wrote on clay tablets with a sharp stick, while the ancient Egyptians developed written records on papyrus using a sharp-pointed reed as a pen and organic dyes for ink. The earliest form of a manual calculating device was the abacus. Pebbles or rods laid out on a lined or grooved board were early forms of the abacus and were used for thousands of years in many civilisations. Many people’s contributions were necessary over the following centuries before practical, working data-processing machines were developed2. Today information is available at all times, and in every conceivable format to almost everybody. This chapter deals with the ways of managing information for use in the decision-making process, which was described in detail in the previous chapter. In the late 1940s, Herbert A Simon popularised the notion that management was primarily a decision-making process. He later received the Nobel Prize for economics for his work on managerial decisionmaking. He argued that all managerial activities involve the conscious or unconscious selection of particular actions. In many cases, the selection process consists simply of an established reflex action or habit. In other cases, the selection is the product of a complex chain of activities. He suggested that for any decision there are numerous possible solutions, any of which may be selected. By applying the decision-making process, the possible options are narrowed down to the one that is selected. Essential to the process of narrowing down options is information – which is provided by an organisation’s information system. The quality of the decision is related to the quality of the information, whereas the quality of the information depends on the accuracy with which data is CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 13 Information management gathered, coded, processed, stored, presented and protected. These are the main elements of an information system. Electronic technology designed to process and transport data and information has been developing at exceptional rates for more than four decades. In our opening case, the enormous contribution of people such as Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Tim Berners-Lee to information technology has been highlighted. This information technology (IT) revolution has significantly affected employees, managers and their organisations. It has created opportunities as well as challenges for millions of organisations and individuals. The challenges facing managers are extremely high – managers need to learn to maximise the advantages offered by IT, while avoiding the many pitfalls associated with it. The purpose of this chapter is to introduce and provide an overview of information management. As managers, we need to understand the uses of information systems in today’s business environment. We discuss the fundamental concepts of information systems, identify the characteristics of useful information and examine ways in which information systems can support managerial activities. The many kinds of information systems available are classified and described. To conclude the chapter, we discuss the development of a generic information system that can be used by most types of organisation. In Chapter 4, the external and internal environments in which the organisation operates were discussed. An information system transforms data from an organisation’s external and internal environments into information that can be used by managers in the decision-making process. This process is illustrated in Figure 13.1. Figure 13.1: The relationship between an organisation’s information system and decision-making Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 285 PART III: Planning The environment in which management must operate today is becoming increasingly complex. Managerial problems are also more complex and this is likely to continue into the future. First, the number of available options is much greater today than ever before, thanks to technological and communication system improvements. Second, the cost of making errors may be excessive, owing to the complexity and magnitude of operations, automation and the domino effect of an error throughout the organisation. By the same token, the benefits may be numerous, if correct decisions are being made. Because of these trends and changes, it is extremely unwise to rely on a trial-and-error approach to decision-making. Managers need to become more sophisticated – they must learn how to manage the information for a sustainable competitive advantage. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Explain the importance of managing information for sustaining competitive advantage. competitive advantage the ability to provide greater value to customers than one’s competitors (in the longer term, this kind of competitive advantage is called sustainable competitive advantage) 286 13.2 MANAGING INFORMATION FOR SUSTAINING COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE Competitive advantage can be defined as the ability of an organisation to provide greater value to customers than its competitors. A sustainable competitive advantage occurs when other organisations tried unsuccessfully to duplicate an organisation’s competitive advantage. In an ever-changing environment, information is as important as capital for the sustainable success, competitive advantage and longterm survival of the organisation. It takes capital, entrepreneurial skills, information and various other resources to start an organisation, but the organisation will not be able to survive and grow without information. In general, organisations need to address three questions in order to sustain a competitive advantage through information technology3. First, does the use of information technology create value for the organisation by lowering costs or providing a better product or service? Should the use of information technology not add value to the organisation, then investing in it would put the organisation in a competitive disadvantage relative to organisations that choose information technologies that will add value. Second, is the information technology the same or different across competing organisations? If all organisations have access to the same information technology and make use of it in the same way, then no organisation will have an advantage over another. Third, is it difficult for another organisation to create or acquire the information technology used by the organisation? If so, the organisation has succeeded in establishing sustainable competitive advantage over its competitors through the management of information technology. If not, the competitive advantage will only be temporary. The key to establishing a sustainable competitive advantage is not in having faster computers, more memory or more capacity but in using and managing information technology to continuously improve and support the core business and functions of the organisation. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 13 Information management 13.3 THE BASIC FUNCTIONING OF AN INFORMATION SYSTEM LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 Explain the basic functioning of an information system. 13.3.1 A definition of an information system We tend to use the terms data and information interchangeably, although there is a definite distinction between the two concepts. Data refers to raw, unanalysed numbers and facts about events or conditions from which information is drawn. Management information is information that is timely, accurate and relevant to a particular situation. It enables management to establish what should be done in a specific situation. A system comprises sub-systems that form a whole. These sub-systems are linked and interact in such a way that they achieve a goal. An information system is defined as the people, procedures and other resources used to collect, transform and disseminate information in an organisation. An information system accepts data resources as input and processes them into information products as output. 13.3.2 The basic components of an information system data raw, unanalysed numbers and facts about events or conditions from which information is drawn management information information that is timely, accurate and relevant to a particular situation information system people, procedures and other resources that collect, transform and disseminate information in an organisation An information system uses hardware, software and human resources to perform the basic activities of input, processing, output, feedback, control and storage. This is illustrated in Figure 13.2. Human resources Hardware resources Software resources Control Storage Procedures Figure 13.2: An information system model Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 287 PART III: Planning JardYare resources a broad term referring to the physical components of a computer system softYare resources programs or detailed instructions that operate computers Juman resources required to operate an information system, including specialists and end-users Information systems receive data as input. An information system needs to process this data by organising and analysing it in a meaningful way to provide information as output to managers. The information, and not the data, should enable management to make decisions. This information must then be stored. Storage refers to the activity by which data and information are retained for subsequent use. Magnetic tape cartridges, computer disks, or other means of storage can be used for this purpose. Finally, an information system provides feedback on its activities in order to determine whether the system meets established performance standards. Information systems include certain resources that contribute to their information-processing activities. The four main categories of IBSEXBSFSFTPVSDFT in a computer system are: r *OQVUEFWJDFT TVDIBTLFZCPBSET PQUJDBMTDBOOJOHEFWJDFT BOE magnetic ink character readers, which allow one to communicate with one’s computer. r A central processing unit (CPU), which consists of electronic components that interpret and execute the computer program’s instructions. The CPU can be seen as the ‘brain’ of the computer. r Output devices, for example, printers, audio devices and display screens. r Auxiliary storage, for example, magnetic disks and tape cartridges and optical disks. 4PGUXBSFSFTPVSDFT include: r System software, which manages the operations of a computer. r Application software, which performs specific data-processing or text-processing functions, such as a word-processing package or a payroll programme. r Procedures that entail the operating instructions for users of an information system. )VNBO SFTPVSDFT are required to operate an information system which include specialists and end-users – people who develop and operate information systems, such as systems analysts, programmers and computer operators. End-users are people who use the information produced by a system. Managers, for example, are end-users of information. 5IF,OPXMFEHF"HF4 The Knowledge Age is at hand, and with it, new worldwide demands for the creation of a learning society. Learning societies now need to learn with information and communication technologies. As people progress in their use of information and communication technology for learning, they normally go through some common stages: 288 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES r %JTDPOOFDUFEmQFPQMFVTFMPDBMPŶJOFXPSE processing and possibly one or two other productivity applications if these are available. r /PWJDFTmUIFBCPWFTUBHFQMVTPOMJOF research, uploading and downloading of online information, online completion of documents and transactions and simple online games. CHAPTER 13 Information management r &BSMZNBKPSJUZmUIFBCPWFTUBHFQMVTDSFBUJOH and publishing documents and web pages, interacting and sharing ideas online, participating in standards-based online learning activities, and collaborative interactions, forums, groups and communities. r &BSMZBEPQUFSTmUIFBCPWFTUBHFQMVTDSFBUJOH collaborating and sharing in online projects including group multimedia productions and websites, collaborating with asynchronous and synchronous tools, taking facilitated courses and seminars and use online simulations and multiplayer games. r *OOPWBUPSTmUIFBCPWFTUBHFQMVTCFJOHBDUJWFJO global learning community projects, learning with mentors, sharing journals, blogs and portfolios of projects and work, creating and sharing databases and data-based websites. r .BWFSJDLTmUIFBCPWFTUBHFQMVTDSFBUJOHPOMJOF tools and environments for others to create learning games and simulations, to collaboratively build complex interactive media productions, and to build highly interactive communities of learners that can work together on learning projects and knowledge-building activities. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 13.4 CHARACTERISTICS AND COSTS OF USEFUL INFORMATION Identify the characteristics and costs of useful information. Information must have certain benefits over raw data to be considered a value-added resource to the organisation. There are certain characteristics that information should have in order to be useful and of value to the organisation: r Quality (accuracy). Information is of high quality if it portrays reality accurately. The more accurate the information, the higher its quality. r Relevance. Managers and employees often receive information that is of little use. Information is relevant only when it can be used directly in problem-solving and decision-making processes. r Quantity (sufficiency). Managers and employees often complain about an information overload. Quantity is the sufficient amount of information available when users need it – more is not always better. r Timeliness (currency). Timeliness means the information is received while it is current and before it ceases to be useful for problem-solving and decision-making processes. Receiving information too late can have a detrimental impact on an organisation. cJaracteristics of usefuN information useful information is information of high quality, that is relevant, of sufficient quantity and timely *OGPSNBUJPOUFDIOPMPHZJOBDUJPO5 Portsmouth is a scenic city on the Southern coast of England. It attracts nearly 6.5 million visitors per year, mainly because of its historic role as the home of the British Royal Navy. In order to manage the crush of visitors, the city relies on 320 buses which are all equipped with computers and quad-division multiple access radio communication. Buses are networked. Passengers who are waiting at bus stops can access a weatherproof computer terminal to find out when the next bus will arrive and what route that bus is taking. Passengers can also access their electronic mail, use trip planning software to determine which bus routes to take, or swipe their credit card to purchase bus tickets. The success of the system depends on the accuracy, relevance, quantity and timeliness of the information. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 289 PART III: Planning The four characteristics of useful information are interrelated and are essential to the provision of information that serves as a value-added managerial resource. However, the costs of useful information costs of useful information include: useful information involves acquisition, processing, storage, r Acquisition costs. The costs of obtaining data and/or information that the organisation does not have. retrieval and communication r Processing costs. The costs attached to receiving raw, unanalysed costs data and processing it into usable information. Likewise, an organisation may also receive information, but not in the correct format or combination that will be helpful in decision-making processes. In such a case processing costs will also be involved. r Storage costs. The costs of physical or electronic storage (archiving) of the information for later retrieval and use. r Retrieval costs. Data and information will not be usable if it cannot be retrieved. Retrieval costs refer to the cost of accessing alreadystored and processed data and information. r Communication costs. Data and information often need to be communicated to different decision-makers in the organisation. Communication costs are those costs involved in transmitting data and information from one place to the other. In the next section, we examine how organisations organise information systems so that they can provide managerial end-users with information that is accurate, relevant, sufficient and current. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 13.5 ORGANISING INFORMATION SYSTEMS Explain the organisation of information systems in modern organisations. An organisation’s corporate or grand strategy feeds down, through divisional or business unit strategies, into a number of functional strategies, such as the marketing strategy, the financial strategy and also the information systems (IS) strategy. Most organisations organise information systems in such a way that it has similar status to other functions of the organisation6. Figure 13.3 on the next page illustrates the hierarchy of an organisation’s strategies. As one of an organisation’s functional strategies, IS strategy may have various sub-strategies. Examples are the IT strategy, the communications strategy and the manual systems strategy. These sub-strategies can then be developed into more detailed strategy elements. For example, IT strategy can be developed into a hardware and software strategy; the manual systems strategy can be developed into a planning and staffing strategy and the communications strategy can be developed into a data and voice strategy. In this way, the IS strategy is viewed as an element of a system of strategies. In many organisations, the IT function operates as a business within a business, supporting all the other functional units in a variety of ways. Table 13.1 on the next page provides examples of some functional units and the IT applications that typically support them. Senior IS managers and most IS functions have both line and staff responsibilities. Because of this shared responsibility, IS is a hybrid organisation in most firms. The next section focuses on the classification of IS in terms of their use in operations and management support activities. 290 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 13 Information management Corporate strategy Divisional or business unit strategies Functional strategies Figure 13.3: Hierarchy of an organisation’s strategies Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. Table 13.1: Organisational functions and IT supporting them Function Supporting IT applications Product development design automation and component catalogue Manufacturing materials logistics and factory automation Distribution warehouse automation, shipping and receiving Sales order entry, sales analysis and commission calculation Service failure analysis, call centres Financing and accounting recordMeeping and Ƃnancial planning Administration ofƂce systems and personnel records Source: Frenzel, C.W. & Frenzel, J.C. 2004. Management of Information Technologies. Canada: Course Technology, p 10. 13.6 CLASSIFICATION OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 ISs perform operational and managerial support roles in organisations. Figure 13.4 provides a conceptual classification of ISs. Classify information systems in terms of their use in operational and managerial support. Figure 13.4: The classiƂcation of information systems Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 291 PART III: Planning 13.6.1 Operations IS operations information system Operations information systems process data generated by and used in business operations. The major categories of these systems and supports business operations by the roles they play are: 1. Transaction processing systems. Organisations use transactionprocessing data generated by processing systems (TPSs) to record and process data resulting and used in business operations from business transactions, such as sales, purchases and inventory changes. These systems produce a variety of documents and reports for internal and external use. They also update the databases used by an organisation for further processing by its management information system. 2. Process control systems. Operations IS can make routine decisions that control physical processes. The financial health and success of the Coca-Cola Company’s bottling partners is a critical factor in the company’s ability to create and deliver leading brands. Coca-Cola may, for example, implement an automatic inventory reorder system. Reordering from their bottling partners then becomes a programmed decision. Decision rules outline the actions to be taken when the IS is confronted with a certain set of events. Information systems in which decisions adjusting a physical production process are automatically made by computers are called ‘process control systems’ (PCSs). 3. Office-automation systems. Office-automation systems (OASs) transform traditional manual office methods and paper communications media. These systems support office communication and productivity. For instance, instead of using typewriters to produce the company’s annual reports, organisations can use word-processing systems. Other examples of office-automation applications are electronic mail (e-mail), desktop publishing and teleconferencing. Teleconferencing has become very popular in South Africa because of the long distances that managers and employers otherwise have to cover to attend meetings. 13.6.2 Management information systems (MIS) management information system (MIS) a management information system supports the decision-making needs at the operational, tactical and strategic levels of management 292 The term management information systems has several popular meanings. Many writers use the term as a synonym for information systems. In this text we use MIS to describe a broad class of IS, the goal of which is to provide information on and support for decision-making by managers. At the operational level, decisions are mainly structured, and MIS process transactions as they occur in order to update internal records and provide reports and documents. At the tactical level, decisions are semi-structured, and middle-level managers receive results from the operational level. At this level, information is needed on important matters such as problems with suppliers, abrupt sales declines or increased consumer demand for a particular product line. In addition, middle-level managers also access data from external sources to CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 13 Information management support their own planning and control activities. At the strategic level, decisions are unstructured. Top-level management needs information from internal and external sources in order to gauge the organisation’s strengths and weaknesses, as well as opportunities and threats in the external environment. Information on the financial performance of the organisation is derived from internal sources and is needed by top-level management to make sound financial decisions. Management needs information on quarterly sales and profits, on other relevant indicators of financial performance (such as share value), on quality levels, on customer satisfaction and on the performance of competitors. Information from external sources is more difficult to obtain and to computerise than internal information. Top-level management also needs information on interest rates, possible changes in tax laws, the latest technological breakthroughs, substitute products and other variables. Providing information and support for managerial decision-making at all levels of management is a complex task. Several major types of IS are needed to support a variety of managerial end-user responsibilities, indicated in Figure 13.4 on page 291. These are information-reporting systems, decision-support systems and executive information systems. Information-reporting systems (IRS) Information-reporting systems provide managerial end-users with the information reports they need for making decisions. These systems access databases on internal operations containing information previously processed by transaction-processing systems. Data on the external environment is obtained from external sources. The IRS processes provide end-users with information reports they need for making decisions. Decision-support systems (DSS) Decision-support systems are a natural progression from transaction-processing systems and information-reporting systems. They are computer-based ISs that provide interactive information support to managers during the decision-making process. Decisionsupport systems use: r BOBMZUJDBMNPEFMT r TQFDJBMJTFEEBUBCBTFT r UIFEFDJTJPONBLFSTPXOJOTJHIUTBOEKVEHFNFOU r BOJOUFSBDUJWF DPNQVUFSCBTFENPEFMMJOHQSPDFTTUPTVQQPSU the making of semi-structured and unstructured decisions by the individual manager. information reporting system (IRS) provides managerial end-users with information reports they need for making decisions decision-support system (DSS) provides interactive information support to managers in the decision-making process Electronic spreadsheets and other decision-support software allow a managerial end-user to receive interactive responses to ad hoc requests for information posed as a series of ‘what-if ’ questions. When using a DSS, managers are exploring possible options and receiving tentative information based on different sets of assumptions. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 293 PART III: Planning eZecutive information system (EIS) a management information system that supports business operations by processing data generated by and used in business operations Executive information systems (EIS) &YFDVUJWF JOGPSNBUJPO TZTUFNT are management information systems that are tailored to the strategic information needs of top management. The function of computer-based executive information systems is to provide top-level management with immediate and easy access to information on the organisation’s critical success factors – that is, the factors critical to accomplishing the organisation’s strategic goals. 13.6.3 Other classifications of information systems There are several major categories of information systems that provide unique or broader classifications compared to those just mentioned. These are information systems that can support business operations as well as managers at the operational, tactical, or strategic levels of an organisation. Examples are expert systems, business function ISs, the internet, the extranet, the intranet and electronic commerce (or e-commerce). Expert systems (ES) When an organisation has a complex decision to make or problem to solve, it often turns to experts for advice. These experts have specific knowledge and experience in the problem area. They are aware of the alternatives, the chances of success and the costs the organisation may incur. Organisations engage experts for advice on matters such as equipment purchases, mergers and acquisitions, and advertising strategy. The more unstructured the situation, the more specialised and expensive the advice is. An FYQFSUTZTUFN is a branch of applied eZpert system artificial intelligence (AI). Expert systems are an attempt to mimic human an attempt to mimic human FYQFSUT *U JT B EFDJTJPONBLJOH BOEPS QSPCMFNTPMWJOH QBDLBHF PG experts consisting of a decisioncomputer hardware and software that can reach a level of performance making and/or problem-solving comparable to – or even exceeding that of – a human expert in some package of computer hardware specialised and narrow area. The logic behind expert systems is simple. and software that can reach Expertise is transferred from the human being to the computer. This a level of performance knowledge is then stored in the computer and users call on the computer comparable to – or even for specific advice as needed. The computer can make inferences and exceeding that of – a human arrive at a specific conclusion. Then, like a human consultant, it advises expert in some specialised and non-experts and explains the logic behind the advice. narrow area Expert systems are used today in thousands of organisations and they support many tasks. Their capabilities can provide organisations with improved productivity levels and increased competitive advantages. &YQFSUTZTUFNJOBDUJPO7 In 2004, the Mayo Clinic and IBM announced a broad collaboration to accelerate advances in patient care and research with an aggressive set of technology initiatives. The collaboration between the clinic and IBM focuses on new techniques to harness patient data in order to improve diagnoses, deep computing power to model diseases to find cures, 294 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES and new devices to access information to transform how patients and physicians interact, leading to more individualised medical care. Under the collaboration, the Mayo Clinic was the first medical institution to tap into the power of IBM’s Blue Gene supercomputer. CHAPTER 13 Information management Business function IS #VTJOFTTGVODUJPO*4T support the functions of accounting, finance, human resource management, administration, purchasing, marketing, and operations management. Such ISs are needed by all business functions. For example, marketing managers need information on sales performance and trends – provided by marketing ISs; financial managers need information on financing costs and investment returns – provided by financial ISs. The internet Information on the JOUFSOFU is potentially available to almost everyone in the world. It offers almost unlimited communication opportunities. The internet can be defined as a web of thousands of international corporate, educational and research knowledge and information bases in the public domain that allows any person or institution with access to a network point and a computer to view, extract and utilise the information. One drawback in communication through the internet is the limited privacy of information sent over it. As a result, finding methods to make information secure is a high priority of both researchers and users8. Internet access usually provides four primary capabilities: r &MFDUSPOJDNBJM FNBJM FOBCMFTVTFSTUPTFOE SFDFJWFBOEGPSXBSE messages from people all over the world. Users can reply to, save, file and categorise received messages. E-mail makes participation in group decision-support systems such as electronic brainstorming, electronic meetings and real-time Delphi possible. r Telnet enables users to log in to remote computers and to interact with them. Users’ computers are remotely connected to computers at other locations, but act as if they were directly connected. r File transfer protocol (FTP) enables users to move files and data from one computer to another. Users can download magazines, books, documents, software, music, graphics and much more. r World Wide Web (or ‘the Web’) is a set of standards and protocols that enables users to access and input text, documents, images, video, and sound on the internet. The Web is non-linear by design and permits users to jump from topic to topic, document to document, and site to site9. business function IS an information system directly supporting the business functions in an organisation internet web of thousands of international corporate, educational and research knowledge and information bases in the public domain that allows any person or institution with access to a network point and a computer to view, extract and utilise the information As Web-based systems began to flourish, businesses gained efficiency by integrating the individual systems that supported their value chains. This led to the introduction of enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems. These complex, comprehensive systems cover most of the value-chain elements and are used to purchase parts and supplies, accept customer orders, maintain work-in-process inventories, service customers, support sales people and help manage many other important activities10. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 295 PART III: Planning 5IFOJOFUIFNFTPGEJHJUBMDJUJ[FOTIJQ Due to the increased use of information technology by all people all over the globe, our society has become an electronic society. An electronic society needs to demonstrate digital citizenship, which can be defined as the norms of appropriate, responsible behaviour in the use of technology. Digital citizenship is based on nine themes: 1. Digital access. Technology users need to be aware of and support electronic access for all in order to create a foundation for digital citizenship. All people should have fair access to technology, no matter who or where they are. 2. Digital commerce. Users of technology need to be aware that a large share of market economy is being done electronically. Legitimate and legal exchanges are occurring, but the buyer and the seller need to be aware of the issues associated with it. Unfortunately, goods and services which are in conflict with the laws and morals of some countries are also surfacing, such as illegal downloading, pornography and gambling. Technology users should learn how to be effective and responsible consumers in a new digital economy. 3. Digital communication. Digital communication options, such as e-mail, cellular phones and instant messaging, enable people to keep in constant communication with anyone else. Everyone has the opportunity to communicate and collaborate with anyone from anywhere and at anytime. Technology users need to be able to make appropriate decisions when faced with so many different digital communication options. 4. Digital literacy. People in a digital economy need to learn about technology and the use of technology. They must also have the ability to learn anything, anytime and anywhere. As new technologies develop, people need to learn how to use that technology quickly and appropriately. 296 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 5. Digital etiquette. Digital etiquette refers to appropriate electronic conduct. Technology users should be responsible digital citizens in the new society. 6. Digital law. Digital law deals with the ethics of technology within a society. Ethical use manifests itself in the form of abiding by the laws of society. Technology users need to know that causing damage to other people’s work, hacking into other’s information, downloading illegal music, plagiarising, creating destructive worms, viruses or creating Trojan Horses, sending spam or stealing anyone’s identity or property are unethical. 7. Digital rights and responsibilities. There is a basic set of rights extended to every digital citizen. They have the right to privacy, free speech and so on. However, with these rights come responsibilities. Users must help define how the technology is to be used in an appropriate manner. In a digital society, these two areas must work together for everyone to be productive. 8. Digital health and wellness. Eye safety, repetitive stress syndrome and sound ergonomic practices are issues that need to be addressed in a new technological world. Beyond the physical issues, psychological issues are also becoming increasingly important, such as internet addiction. Technology users should protect themselves through education and training. 9. Digital security (self-protection). As in any other society, there will also be people who steal, deface or disrupt other people in a digital community. Technology users are responsible for their own digital security. Virus protection, backups of data and surge control of equipment are examples of self-protection. CHAPTER 13 Information management The extranet The FYUSBOFU is a wide area network that links an organisation’s employees, suppliers, customers and other key stakeholders electronically. Unlike the internet, the general public does not have access to an extranet. Its purpose is to provide vast, reliable, secure and low-cost computer-to-computer communication for a wide variety of applications, such as sales, marketing, product development and employee communications. The intranet The JOUSBOFU is a semi-private internal network where access is limited to an organisation’s employees. The intranet uses the infrastructure and standards of the internet and the Web. It enables managers and employees to communicate with one another and to access internal information and databases for which they have been cleared, through their desktop or laptop computers. Access to sensitive information, such as employee salaries and performance appraisals, can be restricted to particular authorised employees12. Electronic commerce &MFDUSPOJD DPNNFSDF FDPNNFSDF can be defined as the process of buying and selling goods and services electronically by means of computerised business transactions13. The internet has emerged as the dominant technology for conducting e-commerce. Almost on a daily basis we read in newspapers of some new organisation that will sell its products or services online. Three types of e-commerce exist, namely business-to-consumer, business-to-business and consumer-toconsumer. Business-to-consumer (B2C) e-commerce involves selling products and services to customers over the internet. Although this may be the most visible expression of e-commerce to the public, the fastestgrowing area of e-commerce is business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce, which refers to electronic transactions between organisations. Many B2B transactions take place over the internet. Lastly, consumer-to-consumer (C2C) e-commerce is made possible when an internet-based business acts as an intermediary between and among consumers. An example is web-based auctions where consumers can buy and sell directly between one another, often handling the entire transaction via the Web. Figure 13.5 on the next page summarises the relationship between management information systems and the various levels of management. Top-level management mainly uses executive information systems and expert systems in their decision-making and problem-solving processes. Middle-level management will probably use decision support systems and business function information management systems, while lower levels of management will mainly need information reporting systems, the internet, extranet, intranet and e-commerce. Lastly, on operational levels, office-automation systems, transaction processing systems and process control systems will be used to a larger extend than other types of information systems. eZtranet a wide area network that links an organisation’s employees, suppliers, customers and other key stakeholders electronically intranet a semi-private internal network where access is limited to an organisation’s employees electronic commerce (e-commerce) the process of buying and selling goods and services electronically by means of computerised business transactions CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 297 PART III: Planning Management information systems Top-level management Middle-level management Lower-level management Business operations Operations information systems Other classifications executive information systems expert systems decision support systems business function systems informationreporting systems internet, extranet, intranet, e-commerce office automation systems transaction-processing systems process control systems Figure 13.5: The relationship between management information systems and levels of management Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7 13.7 DEVELOPING AN INFORMATION SYSTEM Develop a generic information system for managers. Most managers are not IS specialists. However, they are IS users in line and staff departments, such as accounting, operations, marketing, purchasing and so forth. Their performance will, in part, depend on the quality of the IS support available. It is therefore imperative for endusers to have a say in the development efforts of IS specialists in order to ensure that the system meets their information requirements. An IS is usually conceived, designed and implemented through a systematic development process in which end-users (managers) and technical staff design systems based on an analysis of the specific information requirements of an organisation, or of departments in an 298 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 13 Information management organisation. In this way, a systems development life cycle emerges, as illustrated in Figure 13.6. All the activities involved in the development cycle are closely related and interdependent, with the result that several development activities can, in practice, occur at the same time. Figure 13.6: Information system development life cycle Source: Smit, P.J., Cronje G.E., Brevis T. & Vrba M.J. 2011. Management Principles: A contemporary edition for Africa. 5th edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers. 13.7.1 Systems investigation The first step in the IS development life cycle is systems investigation which involves the determination of the nature and scope of the need for information. If the need is incorrectly or incompletely defined, the entire process could address the wrong issues. Management has to define these needs clearly so that the systems specialist knows which systems to use in order to generate the information. Since the development process may be costly, systems investigation frequently requires a preliminary study, known as a ‘feasibility study’, to be conducted. The purpose of the feasibility study is to evaluate different systems, to analyse the costs and benefits of each option, and to propose the most feasible system for development. A feasibility study therefore determines the information needs of prospective users and the objectives, resource requirements, cost benefits and feasibility of proposed projects. The findings of a feasibility study are usually formalised in a written report and submitted to management for approval before development begins. systems investigation determine the nature and scope of the need for information 13.7.2 Systems analysis Systems analysis involves many of the activities used when a feasibility study is conducted but it is a more in-depth study of enduser requirements. The first step in systems analysis involves a study of the information requirements of an organisation and its end-users. The second step in systems analysis is to understand the current system that is to be improved or replaced, and to determine the importance, complexity, and scope of the problem at hand. Much of this phase involves gathering information on what is being done in this regard, why it is being done, how it is being done, who is doing it and what major problems have developed. The third step is to determine the system requirements for a new or improved IS. This means finding out an end-user’s specific information requirements as well as the information- systems analysis an in-depth study of end-user requirements CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 299 PART III: Planning processing capabilities required for each system activity to meet these information needs. 13.7.3 Systems design Whereas systems analysis describes what a system should do to meet the information requirements of end-users, TZTUFNTEFTJHOspecifies how a system will accomplish this goal. The systems specialist plays specifies how an information system will meet the information the major role because the area now being focused on is seldom one in which management plays an active part. Systems design involves requirements of end-users logical and physical design activities. Logical design activities involve the development of a logical model of the proposed system. A logical dataflow diagram is used to depict the system, its procedures, and the flow of information graphically. Physical design activities entail the process of developing specifications for a proposed physical system. This process includes the design of report layouts, screens and input documents, forms and physical file structures. The design specifies the types of hardware, software and human resources needed. Once the proposed system has been designed, it is implemented. systems design 13.7.4 Systems implementation, maintenance and security The TZTUFNT JNQMFNFOUBUJPO phase involves acquiring hardware and software, developing software, test programmes and procedures, acquiring hardware and developing documentation and carrying out installation activities. It also software, developing involves the training of end-users and operations personnel. software, testing programs 4ZTUFNT NBJOUFOBODF involves monitoring, evaluating and and procedures, developing modifying or enhancing a system once it is up and running. It includes documentation and carrying out a post audit, which establishes whether a system satisfies the system installation activities specifications and how efficiently the system investigation activities were conducted. systems maintenance 4ZTUFNT TFDVSJUZ is the protection of all resources related to monitor, evaluate, modify or information systems in an organisation and is an issue that must be enhance a system once it is up addressed in the design and implementation stages. The goals of systems and running security are to: r SFEVDFUIFSJTLPG JOGPSNBUJPOTZTUFNTDFBTJOHPQFSBUJPOT systems security r NBJOUBJOEBUBBOEJOGPSNBUJPODPOųEFOUJBMJUZ the protection of all resources related to information systems in r FOTVSFJOUFHSJUZBOEUIFSFMJBCJMJUZPGEBUB r FOTVSFUIFVOJOUFSSVQUFEBWBJMBCJMJUZPGEBUBBOEJOGPSNBUJPO an organisation resources and online operations r FOTVSFDPNQMJBODFXJUIQPMJDJFTBOEMBXTQFSUBJOJOHUPTFDVSJUZBOE privacy. systems implementation 300 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 13 Information management 1BTTXPSEEPTBOEEPOUT14 Any person with access to sensitive and/or confidential information has the responsibility to protect these data and information from unauthorised access. One way of protecting data and information, is by using passwords. The following rules can be helpful in maintaining a strong password system. 1. In creating a password, do not use any public information such as a part of your name, address, or date of birth. 2. Password software using ‘dictionary attacks’ is freely available, therefore do not use complete words that can easily be guessed. 3. Use eight or more characters and include unique characters such as &*%$. The longer the password and the more unique characters used, the more difficult it is to guess. 4. Remember your password and do not write it down on a sticky note attached to your computer. 5. Change passwords every six weeks. 6. Do not reuse old passwords. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 301 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part III: Planning CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Contextualise information management in terms of the decision-making process. Computer-based ISs play a vital role in the operations, management and strategic success of organisations. Information systems transform data obtained from an organisation’s external and internal environments into information that can be used in decision-making. 2. Explain the importance of managing information for sustaining competitive advantage. Competitive advantage is the ability of an organisation to provide greater value to customers than its competitors. A sustainable competitive advantage occurs when other organisations tried unsuccessfully to duplicate an organisation’s competitive advantage. Organisations need to address three questions in order to sustain a competitive advantage through information technology. First, does the use of information technology create value for the organisation by lowering costs or providing a better product or service? Second, is the information technology the same or different across competing organisations? Third, is it difficult for another organisation to create or acquire the information technology used by the organisation? 3. Explain the basic functioning of an information system. An IS uses the resources of hardware, software and people to perform input, processing, output, storage and control activities that transform data resources into information products. Data is first collected for processing (input), then manipulated or converted into information (processing), stored for future use (storage), or communicated to the ultimate user (output), according to the correct processing procedures (control). 4. Identify the characteristics and costs of useful information. Useful information has the following characteristics: • accurate • relevant • sufficient • timely. The costs of useful information are: • acquisition costs • processing costs • storage costs • retrieval costs • communication costs. 5. Explain the organisation of information systems in modern organisations. Most organisations organise information systems in such a way that it has similar status than other functions in the organisation. 302 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 2:30 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 13 Information management 6. Classify information systems in terms of their use in operational and managerial support. Conceptually, an IS can be classified as either an operations or a management IS. Operations ISs process data that is generated by and used in business operations. The major categories of such systems are transaction-processing systems, process control systems, and officeautomation systems. Management information systems constitute a broad class of ISs, the function of which is to provide information and support decision-making by managers. The types of management IS needed to support a variety of managerial end-user responsibilities include informationreporting systems, decision-support systems and executive ISs. Several major categories of IS provide unique or broader classifications than operations ISs and management ISs. Examples are expert systems, business function ISs, the internet, the extranet, the intranet and e-commerce. 7. Develop a generic information system for managers. An IS is usually conceived, designed and implemented through a systematic development process comprising the following steps: systems investigation, systems analysis, systems design, systems implementation, maintenance and security. KEY TERMS business-to-business e-commerce business-to-consumer e-commerce business unit strategy competitive advantage consumer-to-consumer e-commerce corporate strategy data decision support system (Dss) digital citizenship electronic commerce (e-commerce) electronic mail (e-mail) executive information system (eis) expert system (es) extranet file transfer protocol (Ftp) functional strategy hardware information information reporting system (irs) information system (is) information systems strategy internet intranet management information system (mis) operations information system software systems analysis systems design systems implementation systems investigation sustainable competitive advantage telnet World Wide Web Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 2:30 PM via UNISA 303 PART III: Planning REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Explain the link between information management and the decision-making process. 2. Explain the importance of managing information in sustaining competitive advantage. 3. Explain the basic functioning of an information system. 4. Identify the most important characteristics and costs of useful information. 5. Explain how information systems can be organised in modern organisations. 6. Classify information systems in terms of their use in operational support. 7. Classify information systems in terms of their use in managerial support. 8. Explain other information systems that cannot be classified as either operations or management information systems. 9. Explain the steps to be followed in the development of an information system. END NOTES L ,VDDFVRQ:Steve Jobs/LWWOH%URZQ6LPRQ 6FKXVWHU LL >2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZDSSOHFRP VWHYHMREV LLL KWWSHQZLNLSHGLDRUJZLNL6WHYH-REV 2ł%ULHQ-$Introduction to Information Systems in Business Management.WKHGLWLRQ+RPHZRRG,UZLQS :LOOLDPV&ManagementWKHGLWLRQ0DVRQ6RXWK:HVWHUQS 7ULOOLQJ%Towards learning societies and the global challenges for learning with ICT. :LOOLDPV&Principles of management.WKHGLWLRQ&LQFLQQDWL6RXWK:HVWHUQ&HQJDJH/HDUQLQJS )UHQ]HO&: )UHQ]HO-&Management of Information Technology&DQDGD&RXUVH7HFKQRORJ\S >2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZLEPFRPLEPKLVWRU\KLVWRU\KLVWRU\BLQWURKWPO$FFHVVHGRQ0DUFK )UHQ]HOHWDORSFLWS +HOOULHJHO'-DFNVRQ6( 6ORFXP-:Management: A Competency-based ApproachWKHGLWLRQ &LQFLQQDWL6RXWK:HVWHUQ&ROOHJH3XEOLVKLQJSSŋ +HOOULHJHOHWDORSFLWS >2QOLQH@$YDLODEOHKWWSZZZGLJLWDOFLWL]HQVKLSQHW1LQHB(OHPHQWVKWPO$FFHVVHGRQ-XO\ )UHQ]HOHWDORSFLWS +HOOULHJHOHWDORSFLWS :LOOLDPVRSFLWS 304 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Chapter 14 Project management Louis Botha OPENING CASE The opening case is based on a fictitious international company, Management@ZA. Management@ZA Management@ZA with Managing Director Bheki Sindane, is an international financial services company that is well established in South Africa with major offices in eleven South African cities. The mother company, Management@Inc with CEO Luke Hands, has acquired a decentralised customer relationship management system that requires local integration and desktop setup with training in system support. South Africa is one of the last countries to receive the system with the result that the implementation specifications are tried and tested. As in other countries, Management@ZA has adopted a matrix type organisation with a dedicated project office and is managed by the programme director, Carli Sunshine. The rollout of the customer relationship management system forms part of a decentralised programme aimed at improving total quality management in Management@ZA offices internationally. Jhan Louis is the programme manager appointed at Management@ZA. His sole responsibility is to realise the benefits from the total quality management initiative. The customer relationship management system roll-out in South Africa will include integration with company information systems at each site with training for a local support team who will work with the visiting integration specialist in order to familiarise themselves with the system. The visiting integration specialist will lead the local team in setting up all desktops as well as coordinating initial user training. The integration team will procure and coordinate a specialist training company that will develop and facilitate user training. A fixed fee contract of R15 000 per site for user training has been approved by management. The roll-out plans include a project charter, work breakdown structure, network (PERT) diagram, bar chart (Gannt chart), stakeholder plan, communication plan, change management plan, human resources plan, cost management plan, procurement plan, risk management plan and finally a quality management plan. The mother company sent a team of consultants to develop and fine-tune the roll-out plans in close working relation with the local implementation team that consists of three integration specialists of which one will take responsibility for project management. The Management@ZA team is given below, indicating the roles, responsibilities and daily charge rate of each team member. Name Role and responsibility Charge rate (daily) ,QEM$WUJ +PVGITCVKQP.GCF5RGEKCNKUV2TQLGEV/CPCIGT R5 000 /GTT[ RKDDQPU +PVGITCVKQP 6GCO /GODGT R3 200 $CTT[ ,GEM[NN +PVGITCVKQP 6GCO /GODGT R3 200 PART III: Planning The additional resource list of Management@ZA, also indicating roles, responsibilities and charge rates, is given below. Name Role and responsibility Charge rate (Total cost) International team Consult to Integration team R250 000 Local Support team Local System Support and training R50 000 (per site) All Star training Specialist Training company R15 000 (per site) This information will be used in the chapter to illustrate the implementation of a project management process. In Chapter 2, planning was identified as the first fundamental managerial function. In Chapter 10, various types of organisational plans were examined, namely strategic, tactical and operational plans. Further to this, organisational structures need to be contemplated that will facilitate the realisation of organisational goals and objectives. In the context of planning and delivering on goals and objectives, we will explore project management as a management philosophy before considering how best to take advantage of the tools and techniques of project management. LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of the chapter is to provide an overview of project management. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Explain the philosophy and meaning of project management. 2. Distinguish between the various perspectives of project management. 3. Identify the key role players in project management. 4. Lead and direct the implementation of the project management process and activities. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Explain the philosophy and meaning of project management. 306 14.1 THE PHILOSOPHY AND MEANING OF PROJECT MANAGEMENT In broad terms the application of project management as a management philosophy greatly facilitates the deconstruction of work required to deliver the organisation’s strategic intent. Work is deconstructed in a top down process to a level that the organisation is willing and able to manage. During the deconstruction process, work is categorised at distinct levels starting at the top managerial level with strategy and, depending on the size of the organisation strategy, is deconstructed to portfolios that in turn are deconstructed to programmes, programmes to projects and projects to activities. Final deconstruction of work to activity level (lowest level of work depicted in the WBS) allows for organisational resources and assets to be allocated in order to start the bottom-up planning process. Estimating the total organisational assets required to achieve the set objectives can then be calculated. A prime example of where work is deconstructed from strategy and which subsequently sets organisational structure is found in the South CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management African provincial government. Strategic service delivery requirements are deconstructed to portfolios which, in this case, happens within the individual government departments, for example education, health, and housing. All departments are then made responsible to deliver benefits from programmes which are aimed at contracted service delivery objectives that are set at national level. These programmes are achieved through projects with the required activities planned to a level of detail sufficient to ensure project success. This structure ultimately facilitates the allocation and management of the required financial resources that will ensure the delivery of the strategy as contracted. In Chapter 10, we defined a programme as a single-use plan that describes a set of activities designed to accomplish a specific objective over a specified period of time. A programme therefore consists of related projects working collectively towards the achievement of a common goal. A programme manager manages a portfolio of projects and is responsible for the organisational benefits derived from the programme, which is in contrast to a project manager whose sole responsibility is bringing their project in on time, within budget and meeting set project requirements. Project management uses knowledge, skills, tools and resources to execute activities and to meet clients’ needs and expectations. In order to achieve this, a project manager needs to be in full control of the project schedule, cost and requirements. Product and/or service quality is achieved as a result of finding a systemic balance between the interrelated constraints of project schedule, cost and requirements. All sources of risk should be taken into consideration from inception throughout project execution. Traditionally in project management we speak of the ‘triple constraint’ which is made up of time, cost and requirements. The triple constraint has been extended to also include quality and risk. Considering the triple constraint the project manager needs to be in control of at least two of the three constraints at all times, in order to ensure successful delivery as contracted with the stakeholders. These constraints also serve to differentiate projects where the emphasis is placed on a specific constraint. A typical example is where project feasibility is negated by slim financial margins. Personal values displayed by the project manager towards time, cost and requirements will also largely influence team behaviour and attitude in the achievement of quality project objectives. The influence of specific professions with disparate and, at times, even opposing values should also be considered. The project manager might be required to strike a balance between an engineer who values technology and an accountant who is cost conscious. Managing any project entails planning, organising, coordinating and controlling the associated project activities and resources. These resources can include but are not limited to the following: r IVNBOSFTPVSDFT r money r equipment r machinery project management a management tool used to plan, organise, implement and control activities in order to attain a predefined objective, using knowledge, skills, tools and resources to execute activities to meet clients’ needs and expectations CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 307 PART III: Planning r information systems r organisational processes r time. The identification of these resources should be done by taking a systems approach whereby all the elements that will contribute toward ultimately achieving the set objectives are identified, planned for and contracted. All the elements of the system need to function optimally for the system to work effectively. An example of an ineffective system could be where state of the art technology has been deployed but insufficient training has left the human resources wanting. This reduces the technology to a white elephant. In the event of service delivery issues arising, symptoms of poor performance identified during performance reviews would lead to analysis of the system elements in order to determine the actual causes. An example of this would be where time delays are experienced. Contributing factors could include skills, team conflict or poor planning to name a few. The fishbone or Ishikawa diagram, also known as the Cause and Effect diagram, serves as a good tool in undertaking a Root Cause Analysis (RCA) to determine possible causes to the problem. Project management can be used effectively in the following situations: r to effect improvements and change r when a task is complex r when a task requires the integration of activities across functional lines r when more resources are needed than are available r when the task is a unique one-off task r to implement a strategy r in situations with a defined start and finish. Apart from improvement, change and strategy listed above (which are business objectives focused on throughout the project management life cycle), the list addresses characteristics typical of project management. An alternative to project management would typically be a process which is continuous by nature such as a production line. Project management has the following advantages: r Control is exercised over all the activities of the project, which leads to higher overall productivity. r Effective project management may lead to a shorter completion period for a defined project. r The costs of each activity of the project can and should be controlled. r Effective project management can improve the quality of the product or service. r Transparency can be improved when all role players are involved. 308 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management Project management is characterised by the level of planning undertaken prior to project implementation. During the planning phase projectspecific tools such as the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS), PERT or Network Diagram and the project bar chart plus Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are developed. These project-specific tools and techniques empower the project manager to effectively monitor and control all aspects of the project relating to schedule, cost and requirements during implementation. Project managers that understand best how to take advantage of these tools and techniques consistently produce the best results. They are consistent in delivering quality outputs, at reduced costs, in acceptable timeframes but more importantly, with increased stakeholder and customer satisfaction. On completing a project, the project manager should ask the following questions in order to determine the efficiency and/or effectiveness of project management: r Were the predetermined objectives attained? r Was the project completed within the planned period of time? r Was the project completed within the planned budget? r Was the final product or service the quality that was planned for? r Were all sources of risk addressed? r Is the client happy with the final product or service? PERT Project Evaluation and Review Technique – used for estimating the delivery of project constraints with improved certainty bar chart a chart displaying scheduled project work on a calendar to a generally accepted project standard These questions form part of the activities undertaken during project closure. Negative responses to these questions will call for analysis and provide opportunities to learn. A major challenge facing project managers, and one that usually catches them off guard, is the amount of administration and resulting paperwork generated throughout the project life cycle. Projects that have been administered well generally prove to be easy to reconcile with minimal conflict between the project manager and customer. Well-documented projects serve as benchmarks for future projects specifically concerning risk management and they also provide qualitative reflection on project achievements. Most importantly the project closure process informs the organisation’s knowledge base for future reference. 14.2 PERSPECTIVES OF PROJECT MANAGEMENT LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Project management has both an internal and an external perspective. Distinguish between the various perspectives of project management. 14.2.1 Internal perspective of project management Internal projects are those launched within an organisation to use scarce resources more effectively, improve existing procedures and methods, ensure more efficient service and improve the quality of the final product and/or service. To launch internal projects, the project manager needs to allocate resources, tasks and responsibilities to an individual or group in order to complete the task within a certain time. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 309 PART III: Planning However, the project manager remains primarily responsible for the successful execution of the project. Although the community should benefit indirectly from effective project management, internal project management has no direct benefits to the community. External projects, on the other hand, affect communities directly. Generally the JOUFSOBM KnternaN perUpectKXe QFSTQFDUJWFof project management allows the organisation to focus an inward perspective taken on efficiency in relation to system processes and procedures. Before an on the efficiency of systems, organisation carries out a certain project, they should ask themselves methods and procedures the following questions: employed by the organisation to r *TUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOŴFYJCMFNBUVSFFOPVHIUPJNQMFNFOUQSPKFDU deliver quality products and/or management? services r Will the organisation be able to handle the level of quantity (project scale) and complexity required by the project(s)? r Lastly, what are the requirements of the client or community? These questions should be asked in context of the organisation’s level of maturity in terms of the existence and adoption of project management processes and organisational assets. Many organisations adopt the International Standards Organisation (ISO) standards in documenting their processes but maturity is found in the adoption and even consistent exploitation of processes. The level of project management maturity is further characterised by the specific organisational structure adopted by organisations in deploying project management. These structures will be discussed in more detail in Chapter 15 (Principles of organising). At the lowest level of maturity project management can be deployed in a traditional functional organisation that is structured hierarchically. In such a case the role of the project manager is reduced to one of coordination. This makes their organisational and negotiation skills critical due to a lack of authority. Also discussed in Chapter 15 is the matrix type organisation where the project manager works across functional boundaries. Although the project manager’s authority is still an issue due to the allocated project resources having dual reporting lines, this type of structure serves the organisation better in terms of implementing more complex projects. The project manager’s authority could be strengthened by the existence of a Project Management Office (PMO) especially if the head of the PMO reports directly to the highest authority in the organisation. Chapter 15 also looks at projectised organisations which are the most mature in the range of organisational structures. In this case only the top structure of the organisation enjoys a sense of permanency, UIF MPXFS MFWFMPSHBOJTBUJPOBM TUSVDUVSF JT GPSNFE BOE EJTNBOUMFE BT dictated and required by the projects undertaken. Internal project management has the following advantages: r Undivided attention can be given to a specific project by every person working on the project. 310 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management r The initial and final responsibility for successful execution of the project can be given to an independent division. r Although authority relations (which will be discussed in more detail in Chapter 15) can become very complex, the flexibility of such relations compensates for this, so that end results are still achieved optimally. Internal projects can be executed at three different levels within an organisation, namely at the strategic, tactical and operational levels: r At the strategic level, top managers consider the external and internal environment of the organisation and formulate the overall direction of the organisation with assurance of organisational efficacy. r At the tactical level, middle managers translate the direction of the organisation into initiatives which will later become different projects. r At the operational level, line managers play the role of project managers who are responsible for the actual planning, execution and control of a project. 14.2.2 External perspective of project management Any community strives to develop and improve its quality of life. Given the inequalities between communities in a developing society such as South Africa, upliftment and development programmes are needed. Project management can be used to coordinate such development programmes. In the context of service delivery programmes (or improvement of quality of life) in South Africa, projects with anFYUFSOBMQFSTQFDUJWF cannot be managed in isolation. Different government departments invariably have to collaborate to ensure the success of these projects. An example of this would be a project aimed at crime prevention where various departments like Social Development, Housing and Education will need to collaborate with Safety and Security in order to ensure that the system finds itself in balance and meets the strategic objective of the project. In a broader context, projects with an external perspective are undertaken in a competitive environment where the work is acquired through a bidding process through either quotations or tenders as dictated by the procurement policy of the organisation. From a government point of view, an internal project manager could be allocated to oversee the delivery of this work thereby ensuring the achievement of quality and stakeholder value. External and internal projects require competent key role players in order to be successful. eZternaN perUpectKXe an outward perspective taken to determine the effectiveness of the organisations’ products and/ or services in the market place CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 311 PART III: Planning LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 Identify the key role players in project management. Me[ roNe pNa[erU in the project management process these are the strategic manager, the tactical or programme manager, the project sponsor and the operational or project manager 14.3 KEY ROLE PLAYERS IN PROJECT MANAGEMENT In any project, two types of role players can be distinguished, namely LFZ SPMF QMBZFST and supporting role players. The project team consists of a group of people with different, yet complementary skills. Key role players in the project management process are the strategic manager, the tactical or programme manager, the project sponsor and the operational or project manager. The project management office is responsible for monitoring programmes and projects. Lastly, the client is the person or institution which originated the request and is the owner of the final product or service of the project. Figure 14.1 illustrates the organisational structure of the opening case, Management@ZA. Management@ZA $heki 5indane National Programme OfƂce Carli 5unshine Gauteng KZN (ree 5tate Cape Programme Manager Jhan Louis Johannesburg Durban Bloemfontein Worcester East London Pietermaritzburg Project Manager Jock Bush Port 5hepstone Port Elizabeth George Cape Town Beaufort West (KgWre Organisational structure of Management@ZA 14.3.1 Strategic manager (programme director) The strategic manager, together with the managerial team, analyses the internal and external environments of the organisation. They then define the strategic direction and priorities of the organisation as a whole, taking all potential sources of risk into consideration. A healthy internal environment ensures organisational efficiency which addresses 312 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management the speed and cost with which quality outputs are delivered. A strong focus on the external environment in turn ensures organisational effectiveness, measured largely by customer satisfaction. Organisational efficacy finds a balance between the internal and external focus of the organisation. 14.3.2 Tactical manager (programme manager) The UBDUJDBMNBOBHFStranslates the strategic priorities and goals (as formulated by the strategic manager) of the organisation into potential programmes, consisting of various projects. The tactical manager assists the project manager with any issues that occur during the implementation of the project. Corrective action must be taken on issues that influence the project’s progress and successful completion. The tactical manager is then responsible for ensuring that the projects relating to their programme produce the expected organisational benefits. tactKcaN manager manages at the tactical level (middle management) and ensures that systems, methods, processes and resources are available and in place to deliver the organisation’s strategy 14.3.3 Project sponsor In project management the QSPKFDU TQPOTPS is not necessarily the person holding the purse strings of the project, but rather the person in the project who will remove obstacles encountered by the project team during the entire project life time. The project sponsor normally is a well-connected, influential senior person in the organisation with open communication channels to the top of the organisation. project UponUor mediates at the strategic level on behalf of the project manager/team 14.3.4 Operational manager (project manager) The PQFSBUJPOBMNBOBHFS is responsible for the planning, execution, control and finalisation of the project. He or she compiles a project plan which states how, when, where and by whom the various tasks will be done. The project manager ensures that the project objectives are met within the project constraints thereby bringing the projects in on time, on budget and meeting user requirements with consistent quality. 14.3.5 The project team The QSPKFDUUFBN should comprise people with different skills to assist the project manager in the planning and implementation of a project. Each member of the team has an individual responsibility aimed towards the project’s implementation. Team members with the right skills are allocated to the appropriate activities at the right time. The just-in-time principle is generally followed with resource allocation and when their work is completed, they return to the functional environment they came from. 14.3.6 The project management office (PMO) The QSPKFDU NBOBHFNFOU PŵDF is responsible for overall project quality in the organisation and their responsibilities generally include: r %FWFMPQNFOUBOENBJOUFOBODFPGQSPKFDUNBOBHFNFOUQSPDFTTFT Project management policies, processes and procedures are operatKonaN manager manages at the operational level (lower management) and ensures that systems, methods, processes and resources are optimally used to deliver tactics that support the organisation’s strategy project team a cohesive group of professionals working together to achieve contracted project deliverables project management oHƂce an office that forms part of the organisation’s structure and is responsible for the management and administration of project specific systems, processes, procedures, methods, tools and techniques CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 313 PART III: Planning r r r r developed, documented and maintained. The PMO further develops and maintains document templates and ensures the effective and uniform utilisation of the processes and documents. "DRVJTJUJPOBOEVUJMJTBUJPOPG QSPKFDUNBOBHFNFOUTZTUFNTBOE tools. Project management systems could include a workflow management system that enables cross-functional collaboration, planning and scheduling tools, document management including version control, and a single project database (project repository). 1SPKFDUNBOBHFNFOUTLJMMTBOEEFWFMPQNFOU&OTVSFUIF availability and development of project management skills in terms of the science, art and industry certification in relation to work requirements. The PMO will take responsibility for setting standards whereas the project manager will be responsible for ensuring that the available skills set on the project will meet project specific quality requirements. 1SPKFDUNBUVSJUZ"TTVSBODFPG PWFSBMMQSPKFDURVBMJUZNBZCFEPOF by the measurement of processes, procedures, systems and people used to deliver project objectives against set quality standards which may be informed by benchmarking. 1SPKFDUBENJOJTUSBUJPO.BUVSF1.0TFWPMWFUPCFDPNFUIF administrative hub for all project-related activities which would include the management of a knowledge base utilised for organisational learning. Administration centres around monitoring, control and reporting on projects as well as programmes. The PMO also facilitates the change management process adopted for managing the approval of extensions or scope changes. 14.3.7 The client cNKent recipient of the project deliverables The DMJFOU is the recipient of the project deliverables. The client originates the request on which the project is planned and this individual or organisation is the most important entity in the project management process. A project team usually also involves supporting role players, which may include subject specialists (not necessarily the project manager), a communications expert and representatives from human resources management, finance, logistics, information systems and management. The key role players are responsible for executing the project management process successfully. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 14.4 THE PROJECT MANAGEMENT PROCESS Lead and direct the implementation of the project management process and activities. To enable managers to launch or control a project effectively, practical steps in a logical framework and structure should be followed. The logical process followed is dictated by the progressive work elaboration where the output of a tool serves as input to the next tool under development. Figure 14.2 on the next page illustrates the project management process. 314 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management 5tep Identify need for the project 5tep Choose the project team and appoint the project manager tactKcaN project pNan 5tep Develop a UBDUJDBMQSPKFDUQMBO a plan for delivering strategic project objectives 5tep Develop the RVBMJUZNBOBHFNFOUQMBO SWaNKt[ management pNan a plan describing how project management quality will be ensured during the project life cycle 5tep DeƂne change control procedure 5tep Develop stakeholder plan 5tep Develop communication plan 5tep DeƂne the scope of the project 5tep Develop the project schedule with the following: The work breakdown structure WB5 PERT diagram Bar chart Human resources plan Procurement plan 5tep Develop the project budget 5tep Develop key performance indicators 5tep Conduct the risk management plan 5tep Implement the project 5tep Monitor and control project activities 5tep Close project (KgWre The project management process CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 315 PART III: Planning An important fact to consider at this point is to acknowledge the difference in the purpose of the project specific tools during planning as opposed to implementation. These differences are important enough to state here and revisit again later in the chapter where they are addressed in more detail. A project charter is developed during the scoping exercise with project charter the main purpose of identifying all inclusions as well as exclusions of project document authorising the project. The inclusions are used during the planning process as the project, allocating resources input to the work breakdown structure (WBS). After completing the and chartering project work implementation process the charter is used to verify that the project outputs met the contractual obligations. The WBS is used during planning as a means to deconstruct the contracted work, whether strategy, product or service related. The deconstruction organises the work in deliverables as required. The final process in developing the WBS is the allocation of Cost Account Codes (informed by standard codes as applied by the organisation such as wages, taxes, fuel, stationery, etc.) to activity levels which then facilitates the allocation/booking of all expenses to the associated codes during implementation. The choice of the financial application utilised should be influenced by its ability to integrate a WBS with its system. As a result, the WBS then becomes the guideline by which the project accountant functions. With this level of detail included, the WBS serves to optimise the project manager’s ability for cost allocation, aggregation, monitoring and control. The work is deconstructed to a level that the project manager is willing and able to manage and control. The standard upheld by project managers generally dictates that the WBS should rarely be deconstructed beyond five levels with the lowest level constituting work packages. The PERT (better known as the network diagram) is derived from the WBS and an important consideration is to only include activities from the same level of the WBS in the network diagram. The network diagram organises activities from left to right in related paths. During the planning phase the network diagram provides the means to determine schedule constraints by identifying the critical path (longest path in the network) and the level of flexibility in the other paths that would indicate by how much they can be delayed before they become critical. During project implementation the network diagram serves to allocate activity priorities as focus areas and allows the observer to identify the knock-on effect when priorities are not achieved as planned. The bar chart (also called Gannt Chart) is the project calendar and portrays activities as bars against a calendar proving a visual effect over time. If colour is introduced with intelligence to plot performance progress, the bar chart can be used as a source of information that indicates resource productivity. A resource allocation calendar may be combined with the bar chart in order to optimise resource utilisation. The steps involved in the project management process are outlined in the next section. 316 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management Step 1: Identify the need for a project. The first step in the project management process is to identify the need for a project. Several methods can be used, which can be divided into formal and informal methods. Examples of formal methods are questionnaires, scientific surveys and opinion polls. Examples of informal methods are debates at community committees, discussions and observations. When identifying the need for a project, it is important that any information should be based on facts and not merely on personal PQJOJPOT BOEPS BTTVNQUJPOT 5IF JEFOUJųFE OFFET BSF DBQUVSFE JO B business case that addresses the feasibility and motivates the project. The stakeholders who will be affected by the end results of the project must find the project acceptable and they must support it. Step 2: Choose the project team and appoint a project manager. Once the project has been approved, the next step is to appoint a project team. When deciding on the members of the project team, it is important that they must be knowledgeable in several specialised areas, depending on the nature of the project. For example, a financial specialist is necessary to manage and control the budget, a human resources expert is necessary to manage the people and a public relations expert is necessary to create a positive and favourable image amongst all stakeholders. An effective and efficient project manager is needed to ensure that the project will attain its objectives within set quality parameters and within the limited budget and time. Project managers should have the following characteristics: r the ability to see the project as a whole, its purpose and the activities needed to attain its purpose r organisational experience r experience in leadership, management, teamwork and motivation r the ability to contact and build relationships with all stakeholders, such as the community, project members, suppliers and so on r project management skills with the ability to coordinate the project’s activities as well as its diverse pool of resources r effective communication, negotiation and procedural skills r the ability to delegate and control the activities of the project team r the ability to manage adversity and applying risk management in the process. Step 3: Develop a tactical project plan. In order to attain the purpose of the project, it should be divided into logical, progressive steps. The members of the project team must gather information on all aspects relating to the project. Project planning mainly involves a tactical plan, stakeholder plan, communication plan, project schedule, a QSPKFDU project bWFget CVEHFU(a plan for project expenditure) and supporting documentation. the plan for project expenditure The tactical plan developed for the project serves to contract the policies and procedures that will be applied to ensure the project deliverables are met. The plan addresses the leadership and management CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 317 PART III: Planning change management pNan a plan describing how proposed changes to the project scope will be managed 318 principles of the project and includes, but is not limited to, policies on quality, stakeholders, communication, people, finances and risk. Step 4: Develop the quality management plan. Quality in project management must, like all other deliverables, be planned for and will not happen automatically. Quality can be designed into the process by taking advantage of a number of quality principles. A widely used approach is Total Quality Management (TQM) which is a people centered approach and has the objective to satisfy customers, which supports the principles of project management. TQM was also discussed in Chapter 1. In the context of project management the main pillars of TQM are: r 4ZTUFNTBQQSPBDImBTEJTDVTTFEFBSMJFSJOUIJTDIBQUFS BMMUIF system elements must be identified, and for the system to be effective all elements should function optimally. r $VTUPNFSGPDVTmUBLJOHBDVTUPNFSGPDVTJTBQIJMPTPQIZPO treating people as customers who are internal or external to the organisation or project. With this philosophy everybody takes responsibility for the quality of their own work deliverables and in this way quality is designed into the process. r 1FPQMFJOWPMWFNFOUmUIFQSPKFDUNBOBHFSUBLFTBGBDJMJUBUJWF approach to people and ensures their involvement in all aspects of planning. This approach ensures that people take ownership of the project objectives and deliverables. r 1SPDFTTPG DPOUJOVPVTJNQSPWFNFOUmJNQSPWFNFOUJOBMMBTQFDUT of delivering quality work output can only be achieved through continuously measuring work output against set objectives. The BEPQUJPOPG UIF 1BSFUP QSJODJQMFBTTJTUTJOGPDVTJOHFŲPSUT on project aspects that largely affect quality. Step 5: Define the change control procedure. The one certainty of management, whether engaged in projects or not, is that things will change. In project management uncertainty prevails in customer requirements that in turn will impact on cost and schedule. In order to manage scope changes as well as extensions to the project, a change control procedure should be adopted that allows for screening and approval of changes by a change control committee. As discussed earlier the PMO should manage the approval process with the project manager taking responsibility in preparing submissions or change requests put forward to the committee. A well administered change process will prevent conflict during project close-out and ensure timely reconciliation. Table 14.1 on the next page provides an example of a DIBOHF NBOBHFNFOUQMBO of the opening case Management@ZA. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management TabNe Change management plan Change control procedure estaDlisJ a cJange control committee contract cJange control committee memDers log cJange reSuest analyse cJange reSuest prepare motiXation and suDmissions to committee arrange cJange control committee meeting attend meeting and maMe suDmissions compile minutes oH meeting YitJ decisions outlined distriDute and implement decision on cJange reSuest close cJange reSuest log Change control committee Committee Member Position Contact Role $JeMi Sindane *ead oH /gt"<A 555-12324 *onorary Carli SunsJine Programme Director 555-45231 CJairperson ,Jan Louis Programme /anager 555-67687 Recommendation ,ocM $usJ ProLect /anager 555-92345 TaDle suDmissions Step 6: Develop the TUBLFIPMEFS QMBO. This is a plan describing how stakeholder relations will be managed during the project life cycle. Project stakeholders are people with an interest in the project and who are able to influence the project deliverables in one way or another. The stakeholders’ attitude toward the project together with their ranked interest and influence will indicate risks associated with the particular stakeholder. The needs and associated risk is used to develop a stakeholder plan to ensure that requirements and needs are ultimately met with satisfaction. Table 14.2 on the next page illustrates the stakeholder identification and requirement analysis for Management@ZA. Table 14.3 on the next page provides an analysis of stakeholders for Management@ZA in terms of their interest in the project (high or low), the influence that they can exercise (high or low) and their attitude towards the project (for example supportive or indifferent). UtaMehoNFer pNan a plan describing how stakeholder relations will be managed during the project life cycle CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 319 PART III: Planning Table 14.2: 5takeholder identiƂcation and reSuirement analysis Stakeholder Position Requirements Luke Hands Head of Mgt@Inc drive international shareholder value Mgt@Inc Management team of Mgt@Inc country contribution to shareholder interest Bheki Sindane Head of Mgt@ZA create an environment in South Africa, conducive to effective and efƂcient delivery of shareholder eZpectations Mgt@ZA employees All employees of Mgt@ZA professional Yorking environment Yith Yorld class resources and tools Carli Sunshine Programme Director of Mgt@ZA realise maZimum beneƂt from all Management@ZA programmes Jhan Louis Programme Manager of Mgt@ZA responsible for the T3M programme maZimum beneƂt from the CRM system contributing to effective customer relations as part of T3M International team Team of visiting consultants set local integration team up for successful implementation of the CRM system Integration team SA integration team bring the CRM proLect in on time, Yithin budget and meeting customer requirements Local support team Local support team at each SA ofƂce become comfortable and knoYledgeable enough Yith the neY CRM system to install and support it Mgt@ZA IT team SA management team of Mgt@ZA understand Yhat Yill be required from it during implementation and support in order to contract service levels Organised labour Labour unions representing labour gain mileage for their union Yith their involvement Table 14.3: 5takeholder analysis Stakeholder Interest (H/L) Inƃuence (H/L) Attitude Luke Hands high loY supportive Mgt@Inc loY loY supportive Bheki Sindane high loY supportive Mgt@ZA employees loY high indifferent Carli Sunshine high loY supportive Jhan Louis high high supportive International team high loY supportive Integration team high high supportive Local Support team high high supportive Mgt@ZA IT team loY loY supportive All Star training high high supportive Organised labour loY high supportive 320 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management The information contained in Table 14.3 (stakeholder analysis) is used in Table 14.4 to compile a stakeholder matrix with two axes and four quadrants. On the horizontal axis, stakeholder influence is plotted, and on the vertical axis, stakeholder interest is plotted. In the top left quadrant, stakeholders are listed that have a high interest but low influence on the project. The most appropriate strategy is to keep these stakeholders satisfied. In the top right quadrant, stakeholders are listed that have a high interest in and high influence on the project. The best strategy is to build strong relationships with these stakeholders. The bottom left quadrant lists the stakeholders with a low interest in and low influence on the project; they should receive the minimal effort from the project team. Lastly, the bottom right quadrant lists the stakeholders with a low interest in and a high influence on the project; they should be kept informed about the project progress. Table 14.4: Stakeholder matrix High interest LoY inƃuence -eep satisƂed High interest High inƃuence Build strong relationship Stakeholders Luke Hands Bheki Sindane Carli Sunshine International team Stakeholders Jhan Louis Integration team Local Support team All Star training LoY interest LoY inƃuence Minimal effort LoY interest High inƃuence -eep informed Stakeholders Management@Inc Management@ZA IT team Stakeholders Management@ZA employees Organised labour The stakeholder matrix in Table 14.4 is used to compile a tactical plan for each stakeholder group in Table 14.5 on the next page. Step 7: Develop the communication plan. This is a plan describing a communication flow during the project cycle. The project team informed by the stakeholder analysis is able to segment or group stakeholders according to the influence and interest ranking which allows the team to structure an effective communication plan. A close relationship should be fostered with stakeholders with a high interest and influence and conversely stakeholders with a low interest and influence should receive minimal effort. These aspects of the communication plan may at times be kept confidential due to sensitivity which may prove career limiting. Table 14.6 provides the stakeholder protocol requirements for Management@ZA as per escalation procedure. communication plan a plan describing communication flow during the project life cycle CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 321 PART III: Planning Table 14.5: Stakeholder tactical plan Stakeholder group Tactical plan for stakeholder group (interaction/communication/reporting) LoY Interest and LoY Inƃuence Minimal effort Create a landing page on the company intranet and post milestone reports Establish a Facebook page with an events timeline Create a general Twitter account for ‘push’ communication to stakeholders in general Invite stakeholders to take advantage of these communication mediums LoY Interest and High Inƃuence Keep informed Invite to take advantage of social media channels Put on mailing list for published newsletter articles Host a public event and invite keynote speakers High Interest and LoY Inƃuence Keep satisƂed Set up a communications forum that meets with this group on a monthly basis Invite feedback and comments High Interest and High Inƃuence Strong relationship Set up one-to-one meetings with these stakeholders and contract to meet requirements Compile two-weekly status reports Appoint a relationship manager who will also deliver the status report Table 14.6: Stakeholder protocol requirements Stakeholder Protocol Luke Hands All communication with Luke Hands to be channelled through Bheki Sindane Mgt@Inc All communication to functional divisions at Mgt@Inc to be channelled through the respective programme ofƂces Bheki Sindane Although Bheki Sindane practices open door policy, it is preferred that communications directly to Bheki Sindane be channelled through Carli Sunshine Organised labour Communicate labour relations matters through the ofƂce of the labour union Table 14.7 on the next page illustrates a project communication plan, with communication requirements pertaining to each individual, the communication medium and the frequency of communication. 322 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management Table 14.7: The project communication plan Stakeholder Communication requirement Medium Frequency of communication Luke Hands No direct project communication required, only needs notiƂcation that South Africa is online Completion notiƂcation 1 Mgt@Inc No direct project communication required, only needs to know that the new system is fully functional and integrates with the international platform Electronic high-level Ƃnal report 1 Bheki Sindane Periodic high level status report indicating progress per province Electronic high-level status report 4 Mgt@ZA employees Needs to know the beneƂts and impact of the new system Must be kept up to date with the implementation of the new system Motivation 1 Project progress via Facebook on demand Carli Sunshine Needs to be kept abreast of the programme beneƂts realised from all programmes Electronic programme status report 3 Jhan Louis Needs to be kept abreast with on-going project progress Electronic monthly status report Meeting with project manager 3 3 International team Needs to know how effective the South African integration team is coping with the system implementation Periodic electronic issue and risk report 4 Integration team Need to stay In contact with each other as they progress on the separate paths leading to completion Skype meetings 6 (Mon and Fri) 3 (Fri) Local Support team Issues encountered by other local support teams Issue reports – Facebook and Twitter Team meetings Mgt@ZA IT team IT issues encountered during implementation Needs to stay abreast of provincial progress in order to gear up for IT support on completion of the project Issue report Facebook; Twitter Programme status report All Star training Needs to be well informed on local site issues Will be required to report on all training undertaken Site training analysis Needs to know the impact on members during implementation Facebook updates Organised labour Daily update on local progress Electronic weekly status reports Training report daily daily as required as required 3 11 (one per site) 11 (one per site) as required CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 323 PART III: Planning project Ucope the boundaries that scope project deliverables by defining inclusions and exclusions project UcheFule sequence of project activities together with planned durations and time table 324 Step 8: Define the QSPKFDUTDPQF. With the project tactics and the various plans in place, the next task of the project manager and the project team is to define the project so that each member of the team knows exactly what is expected of him or her. A project charter is developed to define the project scope and can include the following: r the beneficiaries of the project r the purpose and objective of the project r the scope of the project r the quality parameters of the project r any factual information and community approval r the planned completion date r the resources required to execute the project r the available resources of the project r the estimated costs, for example of material, components, transport, human resources and so on r any sources of risk that may be an obstacle to attaining the purpose of the project within the time and cost constraints r assumptions made. Table 14.8 on the next page illustrates the project charter for the Management@ZA Customer Relationship Management (CRM) project. Step 9: Develop the QSPKFDU TDIFEVMF. The development of the project schedule involves several actions. Working from the project charter, the work breakdown structure is developed, followed by the network diagram and bar chart. The WBS, network diagram and bar chart forms the basis for the development of the human resources and procurement plans. The project scope results in the development of the WBS which, as discussed earlier, has the objective of deconstructing the project work down to activity level. With the allocation of a code, the accounts section prepares for the allocation of costs or expenses during project implementation. There are two recognised methods of developing a WBS, the first being the facilitation of a brainstorming session. The activities required to deliver the work are identified and recorded before they are organised in groups associated with either deliverables, phases, product or any other grouping that makes sense. The second (and preferred) method starts from the project charter, taking the deliverables identified there and decomposing them to the required level that makes sense. This is done for Management@ZA and is illustrated in Table 14.9 on page 326. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management Table 14.: Project charter CRM project charter Project name Mgt@ZA CRM Roll-Out Approval Project manager Jock Bush Approval Project customer Bheki Sindane Approval Project sponsor Carli Sunshine Approval Project objective To roll out a world-class Customer Relationship Management system for the eZpeditious delivery of new Management@ZA customer interventions within 18 days of commencement with a budget of R1 400 000 What we expect to deliver System roll-out to eleven major sites Integrated customer relationship system CRM policies and procedures Support team training Desktopuser training User guidelines What we expect NOT to do System modiƂcation Hardware upgrades What someone else must do Hardware audit Form an interest group What the customer must do Arrange user training Ensure attendance and participation Project constraints Short roll-out time Current tools and processes Project assumptions Management buy-in Initial deƂned risks Resource availability User availability Management requirements To be determined Skills assessment Tools and system assessment CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 325 PART III: Planning Management@ZA CRM Roll-out Gauteng Johannesburg KZN Durban Free State Cape Worcester Bloemfontein East London Pietermaritzburg Port Elizabeth Port Shepstone George Cape Town Beaufort West Figure 14.3: Work breakdown structure Project managers utilise scheduling tools such as Microsoft Project for small-scale projects and Primavera or even Artemis for largescale projects. These scheduling tools provide views of the different perspectives in projects. The trap that many self-taught project managers fall into is working singularly from the bar chart view without realising that the project planning process starts sequentially with the project charter, from which the WBS is developed, followed by the PERT diagram and finally the bar chart. The Project Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT) diagram, also called the network diagram, is developed by arranging the activities from the WBS into related paths by observing dependencies between activities and sequencing them accordingly. The arrangement is done between an activity defining the start of the project and an activity that ultimately defines the closure of the project. In general the dependency relationship most widely used is called the finish-start (FS) relationship, whereby the successor can only start if all predecessors are complete. There are other dependency relationships but for simplicity we recommend sticking to FS relationships. Once all the paths through the network have been established, the process of determining the critical path and the amount of flexibility through the other paths can begin. The duration of each activity is estimated and then the critical path is determined by undertaking a forward and then a backward pass through the network. With the forward pass the durations of each activity is added to the previous 326 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management activity until we are able to determine the completion date of the project. The backward pass works from the completion date backwards and the activity durations are subtracted to the point where we arrive at the same start date we worked from in doing the forward pass. The forward pass determines the early start and finish dates for each activity and the backward pass calculates the late finish and late start dates of each activity. By subtracting the early finish of each activity from its associated late finish we are able to calculate the float available in the specific path. A path with zero float is critical and a path that has float is as flexible as the amount of float would suggest. Figure 14.4 illustrates the PERT diagram for Management@ZA. 4 F 6 6 G EL 2D 6 8 A 1 1 B JHB 1D 0 1 4 C 1 F=0 4 9 1 I 4 4 4 7 F=3 9 4 8 7 11 F=3 13 8 13 TF=2 13 E WST 4D 15 CT 2D 13 F=0 K DBN 4D free ƃoat 13 9 F=0 J PMB 3D D 11 GRG 2D 11 F=2 11 9 BFW 5D F=0 PE 3D F=2 4 BFN 3D 9 H 8 F=2 0 9 15 F=0 1 PS 2D 11 13 F=3 TF=3 ES EF Name duration LS LF ES = Early start EF = Early + Duration EF = Early Ƃnish LS = Late Finish s Duration LS = Late start Float = Late Finish s Early Finish LF = Late Ƃnish Total Float = LF s ES s Duration F=X Figure 14.4: PERT diagram The bar chart (otherwise called Gantt Chart) is a graphic representation showing the activities on a calendar, scaled to accommodate the timeline. Project managers can monitor the progress of the project by comparing planned progress against actual progress. The activities are represented by bars on the timeline which are informed by the early start and finish CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 327 PART III: Planning times taken from the network diagram calculation. Where there is float available the schedule flexibility is indicated by showing the late finish time. Once the schedule for the project has been drawn up, the necessary funds and resources must be allocated to the project. A budget is drawn up for this purpose. Table 14.9 illustrates the bar chart, human resources and procurement calendar for Management@ZA’s CRM Project. Table 14.9: Bar chart, human resources and procurement calendar – CRM project # A B C D E F G H I J K 328 Activity Name Johannesburg Bloemfontein Beaufort West Worcester Cape Town East London Port Elizabeth George Pietermaritzburg Durban Port Shepstone 1 2 3 4 Work days 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Resource Name Jock Bush Mary Ribbons Barry Jeckyll JHB Local Team BFN Local Team BFW Local Team WST Local Team CT Local Team EL Local Team PE Local Team GRG Local Team PMB Local Team DBN Local Team PS Local Team All Star Team A All Star Team B All Star Team C 1 A 2 B B l 3 B B l 4 B B I Work days 5 6 C C F F J J 7 C G J 8 C G J 9 C G K 10 D H K 11 D H 12 D 13 D 14 E E E 15 E E E B B B C C C D D D D E E E E A C F C F G I I B B I B B I Procurement Budget Training Johannesburg Training Bloemfontein Training Beaufort West Training Worcester Training Cape Town Training East London Training Port Elizabeth Training George Training Pietermaritzburg Training Durban Training Port Shepstone 1 15000 2 Daily Total 15000 30000 G H H K D H K D H I J A G B B I 3 4 J C C F F J J Work days 5 6 J J C G J C G J 7 K C G K 8 9 10 D 11 D 12 13 14 15 15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 15000 0 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 0 45000 0 15000 0 15000 30000 0 0 0 15000 0 CHAPTER 14 Project management With all activities defined, durations estimated, sequenced according to defined relationships, and schedule flexibility determined, resources with the requisite skills can be allocated as called for. The activities as defined and described in the WBS dictionary will inform the skill sets required, the skills level and number of skills for each activity. The next step will be to determine the availability of people with the necessary skill sets within the organisation and skills sets that might have to be contracted into the organisation. A skills audit may be conducted when securing resources that potentially have the requisite skills, which would also be used to develop a training and skills development plan for meeting the project quality requirements. Given the activities and having determined the skills requirement, the project team is able to match people to activities as scheduled on the bar chart. Table 14.10 gives the resource management plan for resource management plan a plan describing project Management@ZA’s CRM Project. resource management, allocation and utilisation Table 14.10: Resource management plan Activity Duration Integration specialist Integration costs @ R5 000 ppd Local support Support costs @ R4000 ppd Man days Total cost per site 1 Meeting JHB 1 day 3 Integration specialist R15 000 3 Support staff R12 000 6 R27 000 2 Install BFN 3 days 2 Integration specialist R30 000 2 Support staff R24 000 12 R54 000 3 Install BFW 5 days 1 Integration specialist R25 000 2 Support staff R40 000 15 R65 000 4 Install WST 4 days 1 Integration specialist R20 000 2 Support staff R32 000 12 R52 000 5 Meeting CT 2 days 3 Integration specialist R30 000 2 Support staff R16 000 10 R46 000 6 Install EL 2 days 1 Integration specialist R10 000 2 Support staff R16 000 6 R26 000 7 Install PE 3 days 1 Integration specialist R15 000 2 Support staff R24 000 9 R39 000 8 Install GRG 2 days 1 Integration specialist R10 000 2 Support staff R16 000 4 R26 000 9 Install PMB 3 days 1 Integration specialist R15 000 2 Support staff R24 000 9 R39 000 10 Install DBN 4 days 1 Integration specialist R20 000 2 Support staff R32 000 12 R52 000 11 Install PS 2 days 3 Integration specialist R30 000 2 Support staff R16 000 4 R46 000 TOTAL R220 000 R252 000 99 R472 000 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 329 PART III: Planning The scale of the procurement function in a project could result in procurement being treated as a project in its own right. Projects that require sourcing of products, materials or services to be contracted into the project will need to establish a procurement plan that would address the policies and procedures around how the project will conduct, control and close the procurement function. In some cases a decision will need to be made whether to make or buy products, services or even people. The procurement plan is informed by the project plan together with a bill of materials that addresses and quantifies product, material and service requirements. In essence the procurement plan results in the generation of work orders through a process that invites and contracts suppliers. Company procurement policy will dictate the invitation process in terms of supplier and purchasing relationships with guidelines in choosing to request information, proposals, quotations or having to go through a tender process. The supplier relationship is governed by a contract that seeks to balance project risk with the contractor’s risk. The type of supplier contract chosen will be influenced by the project environment and must seek to facilitate the need to best deliver quality requirements by exploring cost and price issues. The end result of the procurement plan is captured in alignment with the project bar chart by indicating time scales on the delivery of products, materials or services. In the case of large-scale procurement where the procurement function is treated as a project, the end result will be a procurement charter, WBS, network diagram and bar chart. Management and control of the procurement function is greatly assisted by the availability of these project tools and techniques. Step 10: Compiling the project budget. A budget is a plan that deals with the future allocation and utilisation of various resources with regard to project activities over a given period. Budgets are typically thought of in financial terms, but also in terms of the allocation and utilisation of raw materials, labour, office space, machine hours, computer time and so on. A budget can be seen as a tool that project managers use to translate project plans into quantitative terms. Although budgeting is an important part of planning, it also serves as a control mechanism for evaluating project activities. A budget exercises control in two ways: r It sets limits on the amount of resources that can be used in the project. r It establishes standards of performance against which future projects will be compared. Budgets have the following characteristics: r They are most frequently stated in monetary terms. r They cover a specific period (the duration of the project). r They contain an element of management commitment. r They are reviewed and approved by an authority higher than the one that prepared them. 330 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management r Once approved (baselined), they can only be changed under previously specified conditions. r They are periodically compared with actual performance, and variances are analysed and must be explained. Generally, budgets help managers to coordinate resources and projects and they help to define the standards needed in all control systems. They provide clear guidelines on an organisation’s resources and on their utilisation. Although budgeting is an important aspect of planning and a useful control tool, it has its limitations such as the over-emphasis at the expense of other project constraints. Often one finds that managers focus almost exclusively on meeting their budgets while neglecting elements such as satisfaction that is difficult to measure in quantifiable terms. Table 14.11 gives the DPTUNBOBHFNFOUQMBOof Management@ ZA’s CRM Project. Table 14.11: Cost management plan cost management plan the plan for costing project resources Cost plan item Cost plan Currency Although Management@ZA is an international company and listed as such on the New ;ork stock eZchange, all foreign ofƂces trade in the local currency – ZAR Level of accuracy The allocated budget being R720 400 for accurate reporting purposes is set at increments of R50 000 on all Ƃnancial graphs and reporting tools Units of measure The standard unit of measure on all Ƃnancial reporting instruments will be indicated in units of R1 000 Organisational procedure links (Cost Account Codes in WBS) The standard code of accounts for cost and eZpenditure allocation used by Management@ZA internationally will be allocated on the Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) to facilitate optimal cost collection Control thresholds Upper and lower control limits are set on a per project basis; for the purposes of the CRM roll-out a 15 per cent variance initially and 5 per cent variance at the end of the project will apply These thresholds are stringent due to the number of times the CRM system has been rolled out in various countries Rules of performance measure The CRM roll-out is achieved over a period of 15 working days working in 11 sites country-wide, and with short timelines at each site the Ƃnancial measurement policy for this project will not be applied periodically but at the completion of each site installation Management reports will however be produced weekly with a Ƃnal report at the end of the project Process descriptions The project team will follow the company procurement policy for any acquisitions made, and the International Financial Reporting Standard (IFRS) to govern Ƃnancial management CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 331 PART III: Planning Table 14.12 provides the budget for Management@ZA’s CRM Project. Table 14.12: Budget Budget item Budget Remarks Labour and beneƂts R542 800 Estimated labour plus 15 per cent contingency Overtime R10 900 2 per cent of labour and beneƂts Reward and recognition R15 000 Flat rate allowed according to company policy Training R577 200 5 per cent of labour and beneƂts according to company policy plus R50 000 per site as prescribed Materials R165 000 Material budget based on project requirements Customer relations R18 000 Flat rate based on passed projects Transport R54 000 1 800 km one way Z 6 trips Z R500 per km Total R1 382 900 Total project budget Supporting documentation refers to a manual and information relevant to the improvement of the project as well as instructions to the project team members. When a project is launched, supporting documentation may be needed to assist team members in carrying out activities in each phase of the project. Supporting documentation is particularly needed under the following circumstances: r when team members are inexperienced r when the project is extremely complex and contains a great deal of technical detail r when the project involves high costs r when particular tasks need to be performed in a specific way r when team members are in different places and involved in different project activities r when the project has a huge impact on the community. key performance indicators Step 11: Develop key performance indicators. These are charts charts used for tracking planned used for tracking planned and actual project performance. The checklist and actual project performance on the next page can be used to ensure that the project manager has taken all the important steps in managing the project. If the answer is ‘no’ to any of the following questions, it indicates that not all the phases in project management have been completed yet. The project should not continue until all the steps have been taken. Should the answers to all these questions be ‘yes’, the project is ready for implementation. 332 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management %hecklist for project planning before implementation Questions Yes/No Have all the project activities been identiƂed! Is the time schedule of activities correct! Have responsibilities been assigned to people! Are the instructions and standards clear to everyone! Is the project relevant! Will the plan lead to the realisation of the purpose! Does the project team have the necessary eZpertise and eZperience! Does the project address the needs of the community or institution! Have the correct and sufƂcient resources been identiƂed for the project! Have costs been estimated for all the activities! Is there a budget proposal motivating the project! Is the goal within reach of the project team! Source: Van der Walt, G. & Du Toit, D.F.P. 2005. Managing for Excellence in the Public Sector. 2nd edition. Cape Town: Juta Publishers, p 319. Step 12: Develop a SJTL NBOBHFNFOU QMBO. All projects are in existence to manage the uncertainty associated with particular project constraints, schedule, cost, requirements and quality. Organisations develop methodologies that govern the management of risk, defining risk identification, quantification, response, monitoring and control. Risks are identified as a matter of course throughout the project life cycle and in particular during the planning phases. Initially qualitative analysis might prove sufficient during initial planning, but the formal risk process will include a quantitative analysis that should result in a risk response and contingency plan. Managing actual risks is done during the project evaluation phase. Step 13: Implement the project. In a rapidly changing environment, it is important that the project implementation should follow the planning phase as soon as possible. During the implementation phase, all the activities planned are carried out by the responsible people – they give feedback to the project team, allocate resources and exercise control. Project managers play a crucial role in project implementation. They need to: r coordinate activities r take the lead r motivate project team members r constantly monitor the progress, evaluate deviations and take corrective action if necessary r maintain the enthusiasm and motivation of project team members and the community. risk management plan the plan for managing probable project risks CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 333 PART III: Planning Step 14: Monitor and control project activities. Monitoring and controlling are cross life-cycle activities, done as a matter of course during the initial stages but more formally during project execution. Project activities are evaluated throughout the project management process to ensure that the planned objectives are being achieved. The progress of the project in terms of time, cost, quality and risk as predefined in the project plan should be monitored throughout with consideration to deviations and recommendations for improvement. Key to this process is the effective team utilisation of the project control tools such as the WBS, network diagram, bar chart, Key Performance Indicators and all relevant project reports. Risk and contingency management is also key to the evaluation process followed in project management. The risk plan addresses the process followed in managing risk and where required institution of contingencies. Project risk factors and associated risks are identified and probability and impact measures are assigned which are then analysed and used to decide on a course of action. Table 14.13 illustrates the risk management plan for Management@ ZA’s CRM project. Table 14.13: Risk Management Plan Risk register ID Risk Prob. Impact (1–10) (1–10) Factor (P x I) Priority Action (1–3) (eliminate/ mitigate/ deƃect/ accept) Accountable (owner) 1.0 Due to stringent timelines there is a possibility that the local support teams might not be available when needed to work with the integration specialist 8 4 32 1 Mitigate Jock Bush 2.0 Due to stringent timelines there is a possibility that the users at the local sites might not be able to attend the user training 9 3 27 2 Mitigate Jhan Louis 3.0 Due to international system alignment local management requirements might not be fully met 8 2 16 3 Deƃect Jock Bush Tables 14.14 and 14.15 on the next page illustrate the risk segmentation and risk response plan for Management@ZA. 334 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 14 Project management Table 14.14: Risk segmentation Risk grouping PROJECT RISKS: (Project manager – Mitigate/ Deƃect/Accept) High probability; Low impact: INSTIT7TIONAL RISK: (Portfolio/Programme – Mitigate) High probability; High impact: Risk issues: 1.0 Due to stringent timelines there is a possibility that the local support teams might not be available when needed to work with the integration specialist. 2.0 Due to stringent timelines there is a possibility that the users at the local sites might not be able to attend the user training Risk issues: All institutional risks will be managed centrally through the project and programme ofƂce, since they affect all projects in the organisation LOW RISKS: (Monitor) Low probability; Low impact: DISASTRO7S RISKS: (Disaster Recovery Plan) Low probability; High impact: Risk issues: 3.0 Due to international system alignment local management requirements might not be fully met Risk issues: All disaster recovery plans will be managed centrally and pertain to the organisation as a whole Table 14.15: Risk response Risk response plan P x I > [n] *ID Risk causes Elimination/Mitigation action Responsible Target date 1.1 Stringent timelines Jock Bush Before project kick-off 1.2 Availability of local support teams Determine local ƃexibility Contract alternate dates where required Determine and contract availability of local support teams 2.1 Poor user training attendance Develop self-guided web-based user training Jhan Louis Before project kick-off 3.1 Management requirements not met in CRM system Record local management requirements not met and develop overall management report for submission to international team Jock Bush Project closure Step 15: Close Project. In finalising project planning the project deliverables are baselined (contractually agreed upon) between the project manager, project team and relevant stakeholders. Project closure revisits the delivery of all contractual work to ensure the product or service was delivered to the agreed scope and specification. Administrative duties include audits and reconciliation to check that all authorised work has been completed, accepted and paid for. Final project reports are prepared and presented to management. An advantage of formalising project closure is the contribution that documented lessons learned (experienced during the project life cycle) make to the knowledge base of the organisation. A formal meeting hosted by the project manager reflects on events, project issues and risks encountered during the project. A discussion reflecting on scope and/or engineering changes could prove to be a valuable exercise. The project management process concludes the discussion of the project management chapter and it is the last of the five chapters pertaining to PART III: PLANNING. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 335 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part III: Planning CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Explain the philosophy and meaning of project management. Project management can be defined as a management tool used to plan, organise, implement and control activities in order to attain a predefined objective. Project management uses knowledge, skills, tools and resources to execute activities to meet clients’ needs and expectations. The project manager needs to be in control of time, cost, requirements, quality and risk. Resources that are needed for project execution can include, but are not limited to, human resources, money, equipment, machinery, information systems, organisational processes and time. 2. Distinguish between the various perspectives of project management. Project management has an internal and an external perspective. Internal projects are those launched within an organisation, to use scarce resources more effectively, improve existing procedures and methods, ensure more efficient service and improve the quality of the final product and/or service. External projects strive to develop and improve the quality of life. Projects with an external perspective are undertaken in a competitive environment where the work is acquired through a bidding process through either quotations or tenders. 3. Identify the key role players in project management. • the strategic manager (programme director) • the tactical manager (programme manager) • the project sponsor • the operational manager (project manager) • the project team • the project management office • the client’s needs. 4. Lead and direct the implementation of the project management process and activities. The project management processes comprises the following steps: Step 1: Identify the need for the project Step 2: Choose the project team and appoint the project manager Step 3: Develop a tactical project plan Step 4: Develop the quality management plan Step 5: Define the change control procedure Step 6: Develop the stakeholder plan Step 7: Develop the communication plan Step 8: Define the scope of the project Step 9: Develop the project schedule Step 10: Compiling the project budget 336 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 2:31 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. ChaPter 14 Project management Step 11: Develop the project’s key performance indicators Step 12: Develop the risk management plan Step 13: Implement the project Step 14: Monitor and control project activities Step 15: Close project. KEY TERMS budget client communication plan cost documentation external projects gantt Chart internal projects operational manager pert procurement plan programme director programme evaluation programme manager project budget project centre project change project charter project evaluation project implementation project management project management office project manager project resources project risk management project schedule project scope project sponsor project team quality resource allocation resource management plan risk schedule stakeholder plan strategic manager tactical manager total quality management triple constraint work breakdown structure Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 2:31 PM via UNISA 337 PART III: Planning REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Define the term ‘project management’. 2. Managing any project entails planning, organising, coordinating and control over the project resources. Explain these resources. 3. Explain the situations in which project management can be used effectively. 4. Discuss the advantages pertaining to project management. 5. Differentiate between the internal and external perspective of project management. 6. Identify the various role players in project management and explain the responsibilities of every role player. 7. Explain the steps involved in the project management process. 338 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES PART IV Organising Chapter 15 Principles of organising Tersia Brevis PART IV: Organising OPENING CASE South African Airways1 South African Airways (SAA) is South Africa’s national flag carrier and largest airline. Its headquarters are in Airways Park on the grounds of the OR Tambo International Airport in Kempton Park, Gauteng. Currently, SAA flies to 35 destinations worldwide from its hub at the same airport, using a fleet of 54 aircraft. A brief history, highlighting major changes and advances impacting the structure of the airline is discussed below. South African Airways was founded on February 1, 1934 with the South African government’s acquisition of Union Airways. Forty staff members, one de Havilland DH.60 Gypsy Moth, one de Havilland 80A Puss Moth, three Junkers F.13s and a leased Junkers F.13 and Junkers A50 were acquired to form SAA, under the control of the South African Railways and Harbours Administration (now Transnet). SAA started charter operations in the same year. In 1935, the carrier also acquired South West African Airways and also expanded their fleet of aircrafts. In the same year, SAA moved their operations to Rand Airport as it became obvious that Johannesburg would become South Africa’s aviation hub. During the next year, SAA also took over all Rand-Cape Town services from Imperial Airways and again expanded their fleet of aircraft. The period 1946 to 1952 was a period of extreme growth for the airline. The first intercontinental service was introduced and a spike in passengers and cargo carried was experienced, along with SAA’s fleet and staff. Air hostesses were first introduced in 1946. In 1948, Palmietfontein Airport became SAA’s hub after taking over from Rand Airport in 1948. That year there were a host of changes for the airline in terms of its operations and services and the introduction of films onboard its Skymaster aircraft. The period 1953 to 1973 is known as the jet age in aviation. SAA’s first jet arrived on May 3, 1952 in Palmietfontein after a 24-hour journey, with five refueling stops en route. During 1980, SAA acquired 23 brand new Jumbo Jets, including 340 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES the long range Boeing 747SP, which was especially acquired to overcome the refusal of many countries prohibiting SAA from using their airspace due to the country’s political environment at the time. International condemnation of the apartheid regime in South Africa during the 1980s, also posed many difficulties for SAA. For example, the airline itself faced hostility and their local and foreign offices were attacked. The US banned all flights by South-African owned carriers, including SAA. SAA’s flights to Perth and Sydney in Australia were stopped. With the demise of apartheid in the early 1990s, SAA was able to restore its services to former destinations, introducing services to new destinations and expanding to the rest of Africa and also to Asia. June 1, 1990 was an important date for SAA, as South African companies signed a domestic air travel deregulation act. Flights to New York’s JFK International Airport resumed in November 1991 after the US imposed economic sanctions on South Africa in 1986, and South African’s planes were able to fly over Egypt and Sudan for the first time. Flights to Milan were introduced for the first time and services to Athens were re-introduced. During 1992, the airline entered the Miami market and re-entered Australia flying directly to Perth. During the same year, code sharing agreements were signed with American Airlines and Air Tanzania. In 1997, the airline Alliance was born – a partnership between SAA, Uganda Airlines and Air Tanzania. In 1991, South African Express (SA Express) was granted its operating license as regional airline and began its preparation process. Three years later, SA Express, a feeder airline service for SAA began operating, taking over some of SAA’s lowdensity domestic flights. SAA initially held a 20 per cent share in SA Express. In 1997, SAA adopted a new image. The springbok emblem was dropped and the old national colours of orange, white and blue were replaced with new livery, based upon the new national flag, with a sun. The airline’s name on all the aircraft was changed to South African, and CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising the Afrikaans name Suid-Afrikaanse Lugdiens was dropped. The airline also started online ticket sales and formed an alliance with SA Airlink and SA Express. In March 2004, SAA announced its application to join Star Alliance. The alliance accepted the application in June, with SAA joining as a full member in April 2006. SAA was the first African airline to join Star Alliance and fulfilled 53 requirements during the joining process. In 2003, media reports appeared of the South African government’s plan to restructure and overhaul the state-owned enterprise Transnet, due to dismal financial performance. The government planned the split of SAA from its parent company Transnet whereby SAA would operate under a separate identity. During May 2007, SAA launched an 18-month comprehensive restructuring programme. The main purpose of the restructuring programme was to ensure that the airline became profitable. SAA’s business was streamlined and the airline also re-skilled employees, improved workers’ morale and management/workers’ relations. SAA’s business was divided into seven subsidiaries, whereby SAA was allowed to concentrate on its core business of passenger and cargo transport; rationalising international routes (for example, Paris was dropped); cutting 30 per cent of the airline’s managers as well as other employee retrenchments. The restructuring programme was expected to save SAA R2.7 billion. By June 2009, R2.5 billion had been saved. The brief history of SAA above highlights various changes that impacted directly on the organisation and organisational structure of the airline, starting with the South African government’s acquisition of Union Airways in 1934. The restructuring of the airline continued in 1935, with the acquisition of South West African Airways, and in 1935 when SAA took over all Rand-Cape Town services from Imperial Airways. In 1991, SA Express was granted its operating license as regional airline taking over some of SAA’s low-density domestic flights, a decision which also impacted greatly on SAA’s organisation. They also entered in code sharing agreements with American Airlines and Air Tanzania, impacting again on their organisation, as was the partnership between SAA, Uganda Airlines and Air Tanzania in 1992 and 1997 respectively. A major restructuring followed when the South African government decided to split SAA from its parent company Transnet whereby SAA would operate under a separate identity. LEARNING OBJECTIVES The purpose of this chapter is to provide an overview of organising as the process that creates a structure for the organisation which enaDNes aNN eOpNo[ees to worM effectiveN[ and efƂcientN[ towards the accomplishment of its vision, mission and goals. The objective of studying this chapter is to enable you to: 1. Differentiate between the terms organising, organisation and organisational structure. 2. Expound on the importance of organising in attaining the goals and objectives of the organisation. 3. Describe the steps to follow in designing an organisational structure. 4. Explain the principles of organising that should be considered in designing an organisational structure. 5. Explain the term authority. 6. Describe the departmentalisation approach to organisational structure. 7. Propose recommendations regarding the design or redesign of jobs as a motivational factor. 8. Design and provide implementation guidelines for a delegation process. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 341 PART IV: Organising With its vision, mission, goals and objectives clearly formulated, an organisation has to decide how to organise its resources optimally. Each manager and worker has to know exactly what he or she needs to deliver to ensure that the resources are utilised optimally and that no unnecessary duplication of activities takes place. For plans to be implemented, someone in the organisation must perform the necessary tasks to ensure that the organisation’s goals and objectives are attained. Management must determine an effective way of dividing the major task into sub-tasks, combining these and coordinating them. This chapter deals with the principles and the process of structuring an organisation in such a way that it is aligned with its plans and goals. The structuring of the organisation poses a big challenge to managers, as is so evident in the opening case of this chapter. There is no single best structure that matches a specific plan or strategy. In trying to find the most suitable structure for an organisation, management needs to understand and be guided by the principles of organising. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 Differentiate between the terms organising, organisation and organisational structure. organising the process of creating a structure for the organisation that will enable its people to work effectively towards its vision, mission, goals and objectives organisation the end-result of the organising process organisational structure the basic framework of formal relationships between responsibilities, tasks, and people in the organisation organisational chart a graphic representation of the way an organisation is put together 342 15.1 ORGANISING, ORGANISATION AND ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE Before we focus on a detailed discussion of organising, it is important to differentiate between the terms ‘organising’, ‘organisation’ and ‘organisational structure’. Organising can be seen as an ongoing and interactive process that occurs throughout the life of an organisation. It entails the creation of a structure for the organisation that will enable all employees to work effectively towards its vision, mission, goals and objectives. The process of organising consists of assigning the tasks necessary to achieve the organisation’s goals to the relevant business units, departments or sections, and then providing the necessary coordination to ensure that these business units, departments or sections work synergistically. The end result of the organising process is the creation of an organisation. In a small organisation or a small department this is relatively simple – it is usually a matter of deciding which tasks need to be done and allocating them to various subordinates. In large organisations, such as SAA, the process of organising becomes very complex. It involves dividing the work of the organisation; allocating it logically to business units, departments and sections; delegating authority and establishing coordination, communication and information systems to ensure that everyone is working together to achieve the goals of the organisation. The task of dividing up the work, allocating responsibility and so on, is referred to as the ‘design of the organisational structure’. A typical way of illustrating an organisational structure is by means of an organisational chart. An organisational chart shows, among other things, authority and communication relationships between jobs and units. The organisational charts of listed companies are usually depicted in their annual reports. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising 15.2 THE IMPORTANCE OF ORGANISING LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 Organising is an indispensable function in the management process. Plans devised and strategies formulated will never become a reality if human and other resources are not properly deployed and the relevant activities suitably coordinated. Leadership is not possible if lines of authority and responsibility are not clear. Likewise, control is out of the question if people do not know what tasks they are responsible for. Organising is vital to the attainment of goals and objectives in an organisation because it contributes to: r "MMPDBUJPOPG SFTQPOTJCJMJUJFT0SHBOJTJOHMFBETUPBOPSHBOJTBUJPOBM structure that clearly indicates who is responsible for which tasks. r "DDPVOUBCJMJUZ"DDPVOUBCJMJUZJNQMJFTUIBUUIFSFTQPOTJCMF employees will be expected to account for the outcomes, positive or negative, for that portion of the work directly under their control. Accountability links results directly to the actions of an individual, section, department or business unit. r &TUBCMJTIJOHDMFBSDIBOOFMTPGDPNNVOJDBUJPO5IJTFOTVSFTUIBU communication is effective and that all information required by managers and employees at all levels of the organisation effectively reaches them through the correct channels so that they can perform their jobs effectively. r 3FTPVSDFEFQMPZNFOU0SHBOJTJOHIFMQTNBOBHFSTUPEFQMPZ resources meaningfully, focusing on the essential activities that need to be performed to attain the organisation’s mission and goals. r 4ZOFSHZ5IFQSJODJQMFPGTZOFSHZFOIBODFTUIFFŲFDUJWFOFTTBOE quality of the work performed. r %JWJTJPOPG XPSL5IFUPUBMXPSLMPBEJTEJWJEFEJOUPBDUJWJUJFTUPCF performed by an individual or a group of individuals. r 4ZTUFNBUJDHSPVQJOH0SHBOJTJOHNFBOTTZTUFNBUJDBMMZHSPVQJOHB variety of tasks, procedures and resources. This is possible because the organising process also entails an in-depth analysis of the work to be done, so each person is aware of their duties. r %FQBSUNFOUBMJTBUJPO5IFSFMBUFEUBTLTBOEBDUJWJUJFTPGFNQMPZFFT are grouped together meaningfully in specialised sections, departments or business units so that experts in various fields can deal with their specialised tasks. r $PPSEJOBUJPO5IFPSHBOJTBUJPOBMTUSVDUVSFJTSFTQPOTJCMFGPS creating a mechanism to coordinate the activities in the entire organisation. Expound on the importance of organising in attaining the goals and objectives of an organisation. All the above-mentioned reasons for organising direct the organisation towards attaining its mission and goals. However, managers should follow a logical process in designing an organisational structure. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 343 PART IV: Organising LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 Describe the steps to follow in designing an organisational structure. 15.3 DESIGNING AN ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE The point of departure in designing an organisational structure is the vision, mission, goals and strategy of the organisation that were formulated during the strategic planning phase (see Chapter 10). The first stage in the organising process involves outlining the tasks and activities to be completed in order to achieve the organisational goals. Once these tasks and activities have been outlined, jobs must be designed and assigned to employees within the organisation. Job design is discussed in more detail in Section 15.7. Relationships between individual workers and work groups should also be defined. The next step in the organising process is to develop an organisational design that will support the strategic, tactical and operational plans of the organisation. This entails grouping the organisational members into work units, developing an integrating mechanism to coordinate the efforts of diverse work groups and determining the extent to which decision-making in the organisation is centralised or decentralised. Finally, a control mechanism should be put in place to ensure that the chosen organisational structure does indeed enable the organisation to attain its mission and goals. Figure 15.1 summarises the stages in the organising process. Vision, mission, goals and strategies (strategic plan) Outline tasks and activities Design jobs and assign to employees Control mechanism DeƂne worker relationships Develop organisational design Figure 15.1: Steps in designing an organisational structure 344 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising The design of an organisational structure should be guided by certain organising principles to ensure that the structure is sound. These principles are the focus of the next section. 15.4 PRINCIPLES OF ORGANISING LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 Managers at all levels of an organisation need to organise human, physical, financial and information resources in order to achieve the organisation’s mission and goals. The following principles of organisation should guide managers in this process: r VOJUZPG DPNNBOEBOEEJSFDUJPO r DIBJOPG DPNNBOE r TQBOPG DPOUSPM r EJWJTJPOPG XPSL r TUBOEBSEJTBUJPO r DPPSEJOBUJPO r SFTQPOTJCJMJUZ r BVUIPSJUZ r BDDPVOUBCJMJUZ r QPXFS r EFMFHBUJPO r EPXOTJ[JOH r EFMBZFSJOH Explain the principles of organising that should be considered in designing an organisational structure. These principles are discussed in more detail below. 15.4.1 Unity of command and unity of direction Reporting to more than one supervisor can be very confusing to employees as supervisors may focus on different aspects of the work. The unity of command refers to a situation where each employee reports to only one supervisor. A lack of unity of command can also contribute to a lack of clarity in an organisation – an employee reporting to more than one supervisor may get conflicting messages from the various supervisors. Unity of direction is also important in an organisation. This is achieved when all tasks and activities are directed towards the same mission, goals and objectives. 15.4.2 Chain of command Chain of command is also referred to as the ‘scalar principle’ and means that an unbroken chain of command links every employee in an organisation with an employee at a higher level of the organisational structure. A chain of command creates a hierarchy, which can be illustrated by means of an organisation chart. Every employee in an organisation should know whom he or she reports to and who, if anyone, reports to him or her. unity of command each employee should report to only one supervisor unity of direction all tasks and activities should be directed towards the same mission and goals chain of command a clear, unbroken chain of command should link every employee with someone at a higher level, all the way to the top of the organisation CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 345 PART IV: Organising 15.4.3 Span of control span of control the number of subordinates reporting to one manager or supervisor Span of control is also called ‘span of management’ and it refers to the number of subordinates that report to only one manager or supervisor. A manager can deal with a limited number of employees at a time. If an unrealistic number of employees report to a manager, the manager’s task becomes impossible to perform. The fewer employees supervised, the smaller or narrower the span of control. The more employees supervised, the greater or wider the span of control. The span of control is in proportion to the height of the organisation – or its number of managerial levels. A flat organisation exists when there are few levels with wide spans of control, whereas a tall organisation exists when there are many levels with narrow spans of control. 15.4.4 Division of work division of work how the workload is divided amongst business units, departments, sections and individual employees in an organisation A major challenge faced by managers is to determine how the work should be divided up amongst business units, departments, sections and even individual employees. The division of work is also called the division of labour. With the division of work, employees have specialised jobs. Related jobs can then be grouped together in a section or department. Employees generally have specialised jobs in a functional area such as accounting, administration, marketing, purchasing or human resource management. As managers move up the corporate ladder, they perform less specialised functions. Two terms related to the division of work, are ‘differentiation’ and ‘integration’. Differentiation refers to the need to divide the organisation into various departments, whereas integration refers to the need to coordinate the activities of the various departments in an organisation. 15.4.5 Standardisation Managers should employ the principle of standardisation when structuring the organisation. The purpose of standardisation is to developing uniform practices develop a certain level of conformity, in the sense that it entails the that employees need to follow in development of uniform practices that employees need to follow in doing their jobs doing their jobs. standardisation 15.4.6 Coordination coordination all business units, departments, sections and individuals within the organisation should work together to accomplish the strategic, tactical and operational goals of the organisation 346 Coordination entails integrating all organisational tasks and resources to meet the organisation’s strategic, tactical and operational goals. In general, the degree of coordination between tasks depends on their interdependence. Thompson identified three major forms of interdependence, namely pooled, sequential and reciprocal interdependence2: r Pooled interdependence. In groups that exhibit pooled interdependence, the units operate with little interaction. The outputs of the units are pooled at organisational level. Failure of any single unit could threaten the entire organisation. r Sequential interdependence. In sequential interdependence, the output of one unit becomes the input for the next unit. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising The second unit is directly dependent upon the first unit to finish its work before it can begin its assigned task. Sequential interdependence is typically found in a production-line set-up, such as the assembly plant of a car manufacturer or the production line in a steel-manufacturing organisation. r Reciprocal interdependence. Reciprocal interdependence refers to a situation in which the outputs of one work unit become the inputs for the second work unit, and vice versa. In a hospital, the units such as intensive care, paediatrics and so on, provide inputs to surgery. After surgery, patients are sent back to the respective units. In a restaurant the waiters and chefs are reciprocally interdependent. Unity of command and direction, the chain of command, span of control, division of work and standardisation can be used as coordination principles. In addition, the following can also be used as means of coordination3: r UISPVHIEJSFDUDPOUBDUCFUXFFOQFPQMFXJUIJOBOEBNPOH departments r UISPVHIMJBJTPOT XIPXPSLJOPOFEFQBSUNFOUBOEDPPSEJOBUF information and activities with one or more other departments r UISPVHIDPNNJUUFFTNBEFVQPG QFPQMFGSPNEJŲFSFOU departments r UISPVHIJOUFHSBUPST TVDIBTQSPKFDUNBOBHFST XIPEPOPUXPSL for a particular department, but who coordinate the activities of a single or multiple departments to reach an objective r UISPVHIFNQMPZFFTJOCPVOEBSZSPMFT JODMVEJOHFNQMPZFFTJO sales, customer service, procurement and public relations, who coordinate the efforts with people in the external environment of an organisation. 15.4.7 Responsibility, authority and accountability These three terms are closely related and are often used interchangeably by managers and employees. It is, however, important that managers understand the difference between the concepts when they are involved in the organising process. Managers have responsibility – they have an obligation to achieve the goals and objectives of an organisation by performing certain functions, tasks and activities. When strategic, tactical and operational goals are set, the managers responsible for achieving them should be clearly identified. Authority can be defined as a manager’s right to make decisions, issue orders and use organisational resources in order to attain goals and objectives. Authority is discussed in more detail in Section 15.5. Managers are accountable for everything that happens in their departments or sections and they need to be evaluated on how well they have met their responsibilities. Managers can delegate responsibility and authority, but never their accountability. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 347 PART IV: Organising 15.4.8 Power Managers also have power in an organisation. The following kinds of power can be distinguished in organisations: the ability of an individual to influence the behaviour of others r -FHJUJNBUFQPXFSJTUIFBVUIPSJUZUIBUUIFPSHBOJTBUJPOHSBOUT to a particular position. The position of managing director gives in the organisation more power to its incumbent than does the position of first-line manager. r 5IFQPXFSPG SFXBSEJTUIFQPXFSUPHJWFPSXJUIIPMESFXBSET which can be of a financial or a non-financial nature. The head of a department, for example, has the power to allocate or withhold rewards after a performance appraisal has been done. r $PFSDJWFQPXFSJTUIFQPXFSUPFOGPSDFDPNQMJBODFUISPVHIGFBS either psychological or physical. r 3FGFSFOUQPXFSSFMBUFTUPQFSTPOBMQPXFSBOEJTBTPNFXIBU abstract concept. People follow a person with referent power simply because they like, respect, or identify with them. r &YQFSUQPXFSJTCBTFEPOLOPXMFEHFBOEFYQFSUJTF BOEBMFBEFS who possesses it has special power over those who need their knowledge. power 15.4.9 Delegation Delegation is when managers assign responsibility and authority to their subordinates for attaining goals. Responsibility and authority are the process by which managers delegated down the chain of command from a person at a higher level in assign a portion of their the organisation to a person at a lower level. Subordinates are given new workload to one or more tasks, which may become part of a redesigned job or it may simply be subordinates a one-time assignment. Delegation is discussed in more detail in Section 15.8. delegation 15.4.10 Downsizing and delayering downsizing managerial activity aimed at reducing the size of the workforce delayering reducing the number of layers in the vertical management hierarchy Downsizing may be achieved by reducing the number of employees in one or more departments – leaving the organisational unit intact – or through eliminating a departmental unit by, for example, outsourcing its activities. During re-engineering, organisations often eliminate at least one layer of middle management. This is delayering. Information technology allows contemporary senior management to gain online real-time access to operations without consulting many layers of middle management. This enables the organisation to speed up decision-making. 15.4.11 Flexibility ƃeZibility the ability to adapt to changing circumstances 348 Flexibility in employees is vital for the success of an organisation, since there will always be exceptions to the rule. Flexibility refers to an employee’s ability to adapt to changing circumstances, either inside or outside the organisation or even within the employee himself or herself. Successful organisations realise that flexibility is important to employees and to customer satisfaction. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising The organising principles discussed in this section should enable managers to organise all organisational resources in such a way that the mission and goals of the organisation are achieved. A few of these principles, mainly authority, departmentalisation, job design and delegation are discussed in more detail below. 15.5 AUTHORITY LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 Authority has been defined in the previous section as the right to make decisions, issue orders and use resources. It includes the right to take action to compel the performance of duties and to punish default or negligence. In the formal organisational structure, the owners of an organisation possess the final authority. They may appoint a board of directors and give them authority to manage their investments in the organisation. The directors appoint managers who, in turn, give a certain authority to subordinates – and in this way authority flows down the hierarchical line. This flow of authority is known as delegation of authority. Authority resides in positions rather than in people – managers acquire authority by means of their hierarchical position in the organisation rather than from their personal characteristics. When a manager steps down from his position, that authority is relinquished. For managers to structure an organisation that is well aligned with its mission and goals, they need to understand the different types of authority. These are formal and informal authority, line and staff authority, centralised and decentralised organisational authority and levels of authority. Explain the term authority. delegation of authority formal authority passed downwards from above 15.5.1 Formal and informal authority Formal authority is the sanctioned way of getting things done, illustrated by the organisational chart. It refers to the specific relationships that exist among employees in an organisation. Informal authority is the unsanctioned way of getting things done. It refers to various patterns of relationships and forms of communication that evolve as employees interact and communicate with one another. The right to make decisions, issue orders and use resources, narrow down from top to middle to lower levels of management. This is referred to as the scope of authority. Due to the scope of authority, top managers typically have more authority than middlelevel management, whereas middle managers have more authority than first-line managers. Responsibility and authority are delegated and flow down the organisation, whereas accountability flows up the organisation. formal authority the specified relationships among employees informal authority the patterns of relationships and communication that evolve as employees interact and communicate scope of authority the hierarchy that narrows as it flows down the organisation 15.5.2 Line and staff authority Line managers are those managers in the organisation who are directly responsible for attaining the organisation’s goals. Line authority refers to a manager’s responsibility to make decisions and to issue orders to employees down the chain of command. It originates at top management level, with the directors, and is delegated to the heads of the different line authority the responsibility to make decisions and issue orders down the chain of command CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 349 PART IV: Organising units, departments, or sections, such as the financial department or the operations department. It is then delegated further down the hierarchy to the supervisory levels where the basic activities are carried out. The King II Report 2002 on Corporate Governance addresses the issue of conducting business in an ethical and transparent way. Company secretaries, for instance, are appointed to render services to the chairperson of the board and the CEO and to advise line management regarding issues of ethics and governance in the organisation. The company secretary therefore has staff authority, in other words, the staff authority responsibility to advise and assist other personnel, based primarily on his the responsibility to advise and or her expert power. Partners in a law firm or a firm of architects may assist other personnel appoint managers to run the business side of the firm. The presence of such staff specialists frees lawyers or architects to practise law or architecture – their line function. Certain people in staff positions function only as specialists in an advisory capacity. This means that line managers may choose whether or not to seek the advice of the specialist. A typical example is an economist at a bank. He or she advises the line managers on the prevailing economic variables such as interest rates, inflation and Reserve Bank policy. The concept of advisory personnel is certainly not a contemporary development. In the past, kings, parliamentary governments and dictators also appointed individuals as their advisers. Conflict often arises between people in line and staff positions because line managers regard staff managers as a threat to their authority. Hence staff managers are not consulted and complain that they are under-utilised. As soon as line managers are obliged to rely too heavily on the advice of staff managers, they feel that they are too dependent on the staff managers’ expertise and this may make them feel threatened. Differences in perception may also cause conflict, especially if line managers feel that staff managers are infringing on their lines of authority, have too idealistic a perspective or are usurping the prestige of the line managers. However, the staff manager’s perception may be that the other party unnecessarily opposes all new ideas. In functional authority, staff personnel have the right to issue orders to line personnel in established areas of responsibility. For example, the purchasing department assists the sales personnel by keeping appropriate stock levels. If the purchasing personnel determine that a specific order quantity is the most economical one, they may issue an order to a line manager to order that specific quantity. Staff managers may also have both line and staff authority. This is called ‘dual line authority’. For example, a labour relations manager advises and assists all departments in an organisation. However, such a manager may also have line authority within the HR department and may issue orders (a line function) to their subordinates. With micro-management, the manager normally monitors and micro-management assesses every activity performed by subordinates, avoids delegation, management style whereby requires constant and detailed feedback from subordinates and tends to managers closely observe or be excessively focused on procedural trivia rather than on overall staff control the work of subordinates performance. There are several motivations for micro-management, which can be categorised as either internal or external factors. Internal 350 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising factors include detail-orientedness and insecurity on the part of the manager and doubts regarding the competence of employees and coworkers. Internal factors are related to the unique personality of the individual micromanager. External factors, on the other hand, refer to the factors pertaining to the organisation itself, such as increased time or performance pressure, levels of stress experienced in the organisation and the instability of the managerial position itself. Micro-management is often a source of employee dissatisfaction and disengagement, since micro-management suggests to employees that a manager does not trust their work. Disengaged employees will only invest the necessary time to earn their payment, but they do not put forth effort or any creativity in the work to which they are assigned. Micro-management can also completely eliminate the trust between employees and employers, prevent opportunities for learning and the development of interpersonal skills. Furthermore, micro-management may bring about resentment in both vertical (manager–subordinate) and horizontal (subordinate–subordinate) relationships, and it may harm existing teamwork as well as inhibit future teamwork in both vertical and horizontal relationships. Micro-management is something that can be prevented and rectified in an organisation. For example, managers should clearly articulate what they expect from their subordinates and focus on hiring and placing competent and skilled employees. Furthermore, employees should be given decision-making powers, should be encouraged to ask questions and make suggestions. Managers should also provide subordinates with constructive feedback4. 15.5.3 Centralised and decentralised authority The major difference between centralised and decentralised authority is in who makes the important decisions in an organisation. In the case of centralised authority, important decisions in terms of the success of the organisation, are made by the executive or top managers. On the other hand, decentralised authority refers to situations where important decisions are made by middle and lower levels of management. Decentralised authority or decentralisation has become very popular in South African organisations as a method of empowering employees. By decentralising power and authority, a more democratic organisation is created in which managers at the lower levels can decide on issues such as the allocation of resources in their departments, differentiated salaries for employees, flexible work hours, and so on. In centralised authority important decisions are made by top managers. In deciding whether to centralise or decentralise authority, the following factors should be considered: r 5IFFYUFSOBMFOWJSPONFOU5IFNPSFDPNQMFYUIFFOWJSPONFOU and the greater the uncertainty, the greater the tendency is to decentralise. r 5IFIJTUPSZPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO0SHBOJTBUJPOTUFOEUPEP whatever they have done in the past. Hence there will be a tendency to follow the history of the organisation when it comes to centralisation or decentralisation. decentralised authority important decisions are made by middle and lower management centralised authority important decisions are made by top managers CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 351 PART IV: Organising r 5IFOBUVSFPG UIFEFDJTJPO5IFSJTLJFSUIFEFDJTJPOBOEUIFIJHIFS the costs involved, the more pressure there will be to centralise decision-making. r 5IFTUSBUFHZPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO5IFTUSBUFHZPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO determines the types of market, technological development, and any competition to which the organisation is subject. Alfred Chandler found that large organisations which obtained new products through a strategy of research and development advocated product diversification and therefore used decentralised structures. Organisations that did business in more predictable industries became increasingly centralised. r 5IFTLJMMTPG MPXFSMFWFMNBOBHFST*G MPXFSMFWFMNBOBHFNFOUJT not in a position to make sound decisions, decision-making in the organisation will probably be centralised. If lower-level managers are well qualified, top-level management can make the most of their skills by decentralising. r 5IFTJ[FBOEHSPXUISBUFPG UIFPSHBOJTBUJPO*UJTJNQPTTJCMF to manage a very large organisation without decentralising. The larger and more complex an organisation is, the greater the need for decentralisation will be. In an organisation that is growing rapidly, management will have to bear the burden of an increasing workload, and therefore be obliged to shift some of the decisionmaking authority to lower levels, and thus to decentralise. Centralisation versus decentralisation in business computing5 The decision to centralise or decentralise not only concerns the locus of authority, but managers also need to decide on the centralisation or decentralisation of other important activities such as business computing. Organisations favouring the centralised approach to business computing have benefited from a lower cost of ownership, given that centralised computing architectures require fewer information technology staff for support than decentralised architectures do. As a result, decentralised business computing has failed to become the dominant computing architecture because it is too expensive and difficult to manage hundreds or even thousands of servers spread across the organisation. In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks in New York, however, the conventional wisdom about what constitutes an expense is changing. In today’s global environment centralised operations are a liability. Organisations 352 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES with centralised computing architectures that were affected by the attacks are having a harder time recovering compared to organisations with decentralised computing. Decentralisation has enabled them to move their business functions more easily to other locations. In theory, organisations that build some form of decentralised computing will carry a higher cost of doing business compared to organisations that rely primarily on massive data centers. But in the case of a catastrophic event, the cost now seems minimal compared to the amount of time it would take to recover from an attack that destroyed your computing resources’ location. At the same time, many of those managers affected will take a harder look at decentralising their own business functions to make sure that major elements of the business are not all concentrated in one single location. CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising Advantages of decentralisation Decentralisation has the following advantages for an organisation: r #ZEFDFOUSBMJTJOH UIFXPSLMPBEPGUPQMFWFMNBOBHFNFOUJT reduced, enabling them to devote more attention to strategies. r %FDJTJPONBLJOHJNQSPWFTCFDBVTFEFDJTJPOTBSFDMPTFSUPUIFDPSF of action and time is not wasted by first referring the matter to a higher authority. r 5IFSFTIPVMECFJNQSPWFENPSBMFBOEJOJUJBUJWFBUUIFMPXFS levels of management. These managers feel that they participate in managing the organisation and are prepared for greater responsibilities. They should experience a great deal of job satisfaction. r %FDFOUSBMJTBUJPOPG EFDJTJPONBLJOHSFOEFSTJUGBTUFSBOENPSF flexible, which is imperative in a rapidly changing environment. r %FDFOUSBMJTFEBVUIPSJUZBMTPGPTUFSTBDPNQFUJUJWFDMJNBUFJO the organisation. Managers are motivated to participate in this competition because their performance is constantly compared with that of their colleagues. Disadvantages of decentralisation Decentralisation has the following disadvantages for an organisation: r 5IFSFJTUIFEBOHFSPG MPTTPG DPOUSPM5PPNVDIEFDFOUSBMJTBUJPO will result in sub-units or departments moving away from the centres of decision-making. r 5IFSFJTUIFEBOHFSPG EVQMJDBUJOHUBTLT'PSFYBNQMF UIFSFDPVME be human resources sections in the decentralised sub-units that keep personnel records, while these records are also being kept up to date at head office. r %FDFOUSBMJTBUJPOPG BVUIPSJUZSFRVJSFTNPSFFYQFOTJWFBOE more intensive management training and development to enable managers to execute delegated tasks. r %FDFOUSBMJTBUJPOBMTPEFNBOETTPQIJTUJDBUFEQMBOOJOHBOESFQPSUJOH methods. Even if there is delegation, top-level managers are always accountable for attaining the goals of the organisation, and they must continually receive feedback on the situation. The shift towards decentralisation in organisations in South Africa and abroad does not come without its challenges. More individual authority at middle and lower management levels requires thorough management training and development. Managers need to be aware of the impact that their decisions could have on the survival of the organisation. A prerequisite for such knowledge in the current turbulent business environment is continual management training and development. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 353 PART IV: Organising Organising in action6 Look at a painting. Whether it is a centuries-old masterpiece like the Mona Lisa or a modern work by the South African artist Portchie, you see colour, texture and shape. Look more closely and you’ll see the artist’s study technique in composing and organising the work. Artists start off with a blank canvas. Then they decide whether the picture will be a landscape, a portrait, an abstract or a still life. While many different styles, such as Impressionism and Cubism, have evolved over the centuries, one ideal has held fast: an artist must know the rules of composition. Paint is organised on canvas to convey emotion – awe, anger, love, comfort or knowledge. The artist’s eye organises, but he or she begins by determining the medium and organising materials – colours, brushes, and lighting – that will best bring LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 Describe the departmentalisation approach to organisation structure. organisational design the arrangement of positions into work units or departments and the interrelationship among them within an organisation 354 a personal vision to life. Colours are transferred from their blobs on a palette by personal placement on the canvas. The artist structures the work to embody an emotion, to tell a story, plant an idea, or embody beauty. Managers also organise and deploy resources to achieve a vision and goals. Today’s managers work for organisations, and they support, and must be supported by, the organisation. By organising their resources such as people, technology and knowledge and by marshalling their strengths, managers can support the organisation despite economic downturns or competitive threats to achieve organisational goals. While beauty may not be the manager’s goal, organisational design can be a work of art. 15.6 THE DEPARTMENTALISATION APPROACH TO ORGANISATION STRUCTURE In the earlier sections of this chapter, the principles of organisation are presented and discussed. Managers need to understand these principles in order to structure a sound organisation. As described in the opening case, SAA has been forced to adjust its organisational structure several times since it was founded in 1934, due to changes in the environment, changes in their objectives and changed strategies. The South African government’s decision in 2003 to restructure the state-owned enterprise Transnet by splitting SAA from its parent company, probably caused the biggest change in SAA’s structure. In 2007, SAA again launched a major restructuring programme in order to ensure the airline’s profitability and sustainability. SAA’s business was divided into seven subsidiaries, which allowed them to concentrate on their core business of passenger and cargo transport. Several other restructuring processes made it possible for SAA to save R2.5 billion by June 2009, indicating the importance of restructuring programmes such as these. In what follows, we will focus on departmentalisation as an approach that organisations, such as SAA, can follow in order to structure and restructure their organisations. The term organisational design refers to the arrangement of positions into work units or departments and the interrelationship among them within an organisation7. We shall consider organisational design by demonstrating the organisational chart and discussing the major types of departmentalisation. In doing so, we must bear in mind that the choice of an organisational structure should always be viewed against the strategy of the organisation, as we have seen in the SAA case study. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising 15.6.1 Organisational chart As explained earlier in this chapter, an organisational chart is a graphic representation of the way that an organisation is put together. It shows, among other things, authority and communication relationships between jobs and units. 15.6.2 Departmentalisation The various departments created constitute the organisational structure as it appears on the organisational chart. To support the chosen strategy (or the strategic plan), management must decide on the type of departmentalisation that best supports the strategy. The major options in terms of departmentalisation are discussed below. Functional departmentalisation The functional organisational structure, as shown in Figure 15.2, is the most basic structure. In this form of departmentalisation, the activities belonging to each management function are grouped together into a unit or department. One set of activities, for example, advertising, marketing research and sales, would belong together under the marketing function. Another set of activities, for example debtors and creditors, would be grouped under the financial function. Functional departmentalisation is often used by organisations with a single product focus. In order to build competitive advantage in their products or services, such organisations require well-defined skills and areas of specialisation. Dividing tasks into specialist areas enables personnel to focus on their area of expertise only. However, this structure poses major challenges in terms of coordination of the specialist functions. Specialists may view the organisation solely from their own perspective. The marketing manager for instance, may see an opportunity or threat exclusively from a marketing perspective, whereas the financial manager may approach the same issue from a purely financial perspective. To overcome potential conflict between the different departments, the chief executive must ensure that proper coordination mechanisms are in place. departmentalisation the grouping of related activities into units or departments functional departmentalisation activities belonging to each management function are grouped together into a unit or department Managing director Marketing manager Production manager Research and development manager Human resources manager Financial manager Figure 15.2: Functional departmentalisation CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 355 PART IV: Organising product departmentalisation all activities concerned with the manufacturing of a specific product or group of products, are grouped together in units or departments Product departmentalisation With product departmentalisation, all the specialists associated with such products are grouped in product units or departments. The rationale for this structure is that the marketing, financing and personnel needs involved in the production of, say, diesel engines will differ considerably from those occurring in the manufacture of cigarettes. An example of product departmentalisation is shown in Figure 15.3. Tiger Brands Food brands Spar Healthcare brands Critical care/ hospital products Figure 15.3: Product departmentalisation Product departmentalisation is a logical structure for large organisations providing a wide range of products or services. The advantages of this structure are that the specialised knowledge of employees regarding specific products is used to maximum effect, decisions can be made quickly within a section, and the performance of each group can easily be measured separately. The disadvantages are that the managers in one particular section may concentrate their attention almost exclusively on their particular products and tend to lose sight of those of the rest of the organisation. In addition, overall administrative costs could increase, because each section has to have its own functional specialists, such as market researchers and financial experts. location departmentalisation work and workers are organised into separate units or departments responsible for carrying out their responsibilities in particular geographic areas 356 Location departmentalisation Location departmentalisation is a logical structure for an organisation that manufactures and sells its goods in different geographical regions. Location departmentalisation refers to a structure in which work to be executed and the workers allocated to it, are organised into separate units or departments that are responsible for carrying out their responsibilities in different geographic areas. This kind of structure gives autonomy to the various geographic area managers, which is necessary to facilitate decision-making and adjustment to local business environments. This structure is also suitable for a multinational business because each country in which the multinational operates will be culturally unique and will have to be approached differently. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising SABMiller plc Managing director: Europe Chairman: Pilsner Urquell International Managing director: Africa and Asia Figure 15.4: Location departmentalisation Customer departmentalisation Customer departmentalisation is appropriate when an organisation concentrates on a particular segment of the market or group of consumers or, in the case of industrial products, where the organisation sells its products only to a limited group of users. Figure 15.5 illustrates customer departmentalisation. customer departmentalisation work and workers responsible for providing products or services to a certain segment of the market are grouped together into a unit or department CEO President: Household President: Professional President: Pharmaceutical President: Industrial Figure 15.5: Customer departmentalisation Customer departmentalisation has the same advantages and disadvantages as product departmentalisation. Unlike a functional structure in which activities are grouped according to knowledge, skills, experience or training, a structure based on product, location or customers resembles in some respects a small, privately-owned business. It is more or less autonomous in its actions, and is accountable for its own profits or losses. However, unlike an independent small business, it is still subject to the overall goals and strategies of the organisation as a whole. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 357 PART IV: Organising multiple departmentalisation a combination of the functional, product, location or customer departmentalisation structures Multiple departmentalisation Large and complex organisations in particular often find it necessary to use several of the departmental structures described earlier to create a hybrid organisation. Any mixture of structures can be used. The following are among the most common combinations in multiple departmentalisation: Matrix departmentalisation With matrix departmentalisation, the employee works for matrix departmentalisation a functional department, such as finance, but is also assigned to combines functional and one or more products or projects. The major advantage of matrix product departmental structures departmentalisation is flexibility – it allows the organisation to organise temporarily for a project. The major disadvantage is that each employee reports to two superiors – a functional and a project superior – which violates the unity of command principle. Coordination can also be difficult8. Figure 15.6 illustrates a matrix structure. CEO Manager: Finance Manager: Marketing Manager: Operations Team Team Team Team Team Team Team Team Team Project manager 1 Project manager 2 Project manager 3 Figure 15.6: Matrix departmentalisation 358 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising Divisional departmentalisation Large, complex and global organisations with related products and services usually have divisional departmentalisation. In this case, divisional the organisation is departmentalised in semi-autonomous strategic departmentalisation business units. Figure 15.7 illustrates divisional departmentalisation. departmentalised in semiautonomous strategic business units CEO Product division 2 Human resources Manufacturing Accounting Product division 1 Human resources Manufacturing Accounting Figure 15.7: Divisional departmentalisation With the divisional (or ‘M-form’) structure, any combination of the other forms of departmentalisation may be used by the organisation and within its divisions. When the organisation has unrelated diversified business units, they usually use the conglomerate structure, based on autonomous profit centers. In this case top management focuses on portfolio management to buy and sell businesses without great concern for coordinating the separate divisions. Network structure Network structure describes an interrelationship between different organisations, where the organisation performs core activities itself but subcontracts some of the non-core operations to other organisations. One of the big challenges for a network organisation is to coordinate its network partners’ activities to ensure that they contribute to the network organisation’s mission and goals. Figure 15.8 on the next page illustrates a network structure. New venture units New venture units use a form of matrix structure, and usually consist of groups of employees that volunteer to develop new products or new ventures for an organisation. When the project is complete, it can be adopted into any of the following organisational structures: network structure organisation performs the core activities itself and subcontracts some of its non-core operations to other organisations new venture units consist of groups of employees who volunteer to develop new products or ventures for the organisation CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 359 PART IV: Organising Designer Manufacturing Central hub Human resources agency Marketer Figure 15.8: Network structure r UIFOFXQSPEVDUTPSWFOUVSFTCFDPNFBQBSUPG USBEJUJPOBM departmentalisation, such as functional, product, location or customer departmentalisation, or r UIFQSPEVDUTBSFEFWFMPQFEJOUPBUPUBMMZOFXEFQBSUNFOU PS r UIFOFXQSPEVDUTHSPXJOUPEJWJTJPOT team approach number of people with complementary skills and competencies that hold themselves accountable for pursuing a common purpose, achieving performance goals and improving interdependent work processes Team approach Probably the most widespread trend in departmentalisation in recent years has been the implementation of team concepts. The vertical chain of command is a powerful means of control, but passing all decisions up the hierarchy takes too long and keeps responsibility at the top. The team approach gives managers a way to delegate authority, push responsibility to lower levels and be more flexible and responsive in the competitive global environment. The team approach to departmentalisation refers to a number of workers, with complementary skills and competencies, who work together and hold themselves accountable and responsible for pursuing a common purpose, achieving performance goals and improving interdependent work processes. Figure 15.9 illustrates the team approach. CEO Team 1 Team 2 Team 3 Figure 15.9 The team approach virtual network approach people who are spread out in remote locations work as though they were in one place 360 The virtual network approach The virtual network approach builds on the features of the network organisation. It is no longer necessary for the organisation to have all its employees, teams, departments and subcontractors in one office or facility. Information technologies enable the organisation to integrate its internal employees, teams and departments with its external network CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising of subcontractors in order to achieve specific goals, even in situations where people work in remote locations. The virtual organisation is a streamlined model that fits the rapidly changing environment. It provides flexibility and efficiency because partnerships and relationships with other organisations can be formed or disbanded as needed. However, a disadvantage associated with the virtual organisation is that the levels of reciprocal and sequential interdependence are much higher than those of the network organisation. They tend to be instantaneous – that is, any time and any place – for the networked employees, teams, departments and subcontractors. The boundaries of the virtual organisation are also more open than in a network organisation because of the use of advanced information technologies that seamlessly knit all partners together. Examples of the information technologies used to create the virtual organisation are electronic commerce, extranet and intranet, which were discussed in Chapter 13. Remote control9 Remote working is rapidly spreading beyond its traditional heartland of sales teams and field engineers. But, what are the benefits of remote working and how can managers manage e-workers effectively? Employees and employers can both benefit from remote working. For employers, cost savings due to remote workers are very attractive (fewer desks mean smaller offices and lower overhead costs). Also, there is growing evidence of improved productivity and improved job satisfaction for remote working staff. Fast, reliable broadband connections, remote security systems and webaccessible applications and network systems have never been cheaper and more available, making the practicalities of remote working easier than ever for employers and employees. For many employees, remote working provides them with flexibility, greater fulfillment, high levels of job satisfaction and a better work/life balance. On the downside, remote working can cause remote workers to struggle with work/no-work boundaries, so switching off can be an issue for employees. The big unanswered question about remote working is whether remote workers can wave goodbye to promotion. Despite enthusiasm for remote working, some managers confess that visibility is important, as is being able to coach, mentor and influence decisions. Managers need to understand that it is about the output of their employees and not about presenteeism. 15.7 DESIGNING JOBS THAT MOTIVATE LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7 Once the organisational structure is in place, management must consider the design of jobs to motivate the incumbents of the different positions in the structure to contribute towards the organisation’s goals and objectives. Propose recommendations regarding the design or redesign of jobs as a motivational factor. 15.7.1 Job design Job design is a crucial part of organising as it affects job satisfaction and productivity. It refers to the process of combining the tasks that each employee is responsible for. Empowering employees to be involved in designing their own jobs motivates them and increases their job design the process of combining the tasks that each employee is responsible for CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 361 PART IV: Organising productivity10. This obviously requires employees to have a very clear understanding of the entire organisation and the way it operates. 15.7.2 Job specialisation job specialisation the narrowing down of activities to simple, repetitive routines Job specialisation is often used in South Africa and Africa in industries where many of the employees are illiterate or very inexperienced in the workings of a business. Job specialisation refers to the narrowing down of activities to simple, repetitive routines. The term ‘job specialisation’ should not be confused with ‘person specialisation’, where the latter refers to individuals with specialised training, such as medical specialists, lawyers, geologists and engineers. When designing jobs, managers need to consider motivating elements such as job specialisation and job expansion. The origin of job specialisation11 Job specialisation originated with the work of Adam Smith. The famous opening words of his book Wealth of nations describe a basic form of specialisation in a pin factory and the subsequent increased productivity: ‘One man draws the wire, another straightens it, a third cuts it, a fourth points it, a fifth grids it at the top for receiving the head. Ten persons, therefore, could make among them upwards of 48 000 pins in a day ... But if they had all wrought separately and independently, and without any of them having been educated to this peculiar business, they certainly could not each of them have made twenty. This would have meant that 200 pins at most would have been made instead of 48 000.’ 15.7.3 Job expansion Job expansion is almost the opposite of job simplification. Jobs can be expanded through job rotation, job enlargement and job enrichment. r +PCSPUBUJPOJOWPMWFTQFSGPSNJOHEJŲFSFOUKPCTGPSBTFUQFSJPEPG time. Many organisations appoint management trainees and then develop their conceptual skills by rotating them through the various departments of an organisation. r +PCFOMBSHFNFOUTUFNTGSPNUIFUIJOLJOHPGJOEVTUSJBMFOHJOFFST They wanted to increase a job’s scope in order to break the monotony of a limited routine. A job is enlarged when an employee carries out a wider range of activities of approximately the same level of skill, such as a typist whose job is enlarged to include general administration tasks. The expanded job will be more interesting because it is more varied. r +PCFOSJDINFOUJTJNQMFNFOUFECZBEEJOHEFQUIUPUIFKPC*UJT based on Herzberg’s two-factor theory of motivation, which is described in detail in Chapter 20. Herzberg argued that job rotation and job enlargement do not enhance employee motivation. Instead a worker should be provided with actual control over the task to make the job more motivating12. Job enrichment entails increasing both the number of tasks a worker does and the control the worker has over the job. 362 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising The job of a manager is to get the work done through the efforts of others. It is neither desirable nor is it possible, in many instances, for managers to perform all the work for which they are held responsible. In such instances, managers need to rely on their subordinates to perform various functions and activities on their behalf. The delegation of responsibilities is discussed in the last section of this chapter. 15.8 DELEGATION LEARNING OBJECTIVE 8 With delegation, authority is also passed on to an employee, who then has the authority to deploy the necessary resources in order to complete the delegated task. There are different reasons why managers delegate. Delegation is important from the organisation’s perspective as it promotes succession planning: should the manager retire, resign or get promoted to a higher level, a subordinate will be able to move into the manager’s position more easily. From a manager’s point of view, delegation is used to enable the manager to get more managerial work done. Subordinates also benefit from delegation – by participating in more challenging jobs, they learn to develop their decision-making and problem-solving skills and in the process improve their managerial skills. It is important to note that even though managers delegate authority, they remain accountable for the completion of the job. They are accountable both for their own actions and for those of their subordinates. Managers may hold subordinates responsible for a job, but they are still accountable to their own superiors for the work. The parity principle stipulates that authority and responsibility should be co-equal. According to the parity principle, neither the manager nor the subordinate should be held responsible for things beyond their control or influence. This means that, when a manager assigns the responsibility for a task to be performed, he must also give the subordinate the full authority to perform the task. For example, the employee who is asked to drive across town and pick up a load of timber (responsibility) should also be given the right (authority) to request a vehicle from the vehicle pool to accomplish the task. This principle is often violated – employees almost always feel they have been assigned more responsibility than authority to act. In what follows, we will discuss the principles of effective delegation, the advantages of delegation, obstacles to effective delegation, strategies for overcoming obstacles to effective delegation and the delegation process. Design and provide implementation guidelines for a delegation process. delegation the process whereby managers assign a portion of their total workload to others parity principle the parity principle stipulates that authority and responsibility should be co-equal 15.8.1 Principles of effective delegation The delegation process is essential to every manager, for this is how managers get others to share in the organisation’s drive for performance. A common failing of less effective managers is that they try to be responsible for everything. In so doing, they are overloaded and therefore not very efficient managers. This phenomenon is evident in South Africa, due to the shortage of suitably qualified managers. Consequently, subordinates suffer because of the manager’s failure to delegate and develop them. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 363 PART IV: Organising Below are some principles that can be used as guidelines to help managers become more effective at delegating. r &YQMBJOUIFSFBTPO T GPSEFMFHBUJOH4VCPSEJOBUFTTIPVME VOEFSTUBOEUIBUEFMFHBUJPOIBTBEWBOUBHFTGPSUIFNTFMWFT GPSUIF NBOBHFSBOEGPSUIFPSHBOJTBUJPO r 4FUDMFBSTUBOEBSETBOEHPBMT&NQMPZFFTTIPVMEQBSUJDJQBUFJOUIF QSPDFTTPG GPSNVMBUJOHHPBMTGPSUIFEFMFHBUFEUBTLBOETIPVMEBMTP BHSFFXJUIUIFDSJUFSJBMBJEEPXOGPSNFBTVSJOHUIFJSQFSGPSNBODF 5IJTQBSUJDJQBUJPOXJMMGPTUFSTVDDFTTGVMEFMFHBUJPO r &OTVSFDMBSJUZPG BVUIPSJUZBOESFTQPOTJCJMJUZ4VCPSEJOBUFTNVTU VOEFSTUBOEUIFUBTLTBOEBVUIPSJUZBTTJHOFEUPUIFN SFDPHOJTF UIFJSSFTQPOTJCJMJUZBOECFIFMEBDDPVOUBCMFGPSUIFSFTVMUT r *OWPMWFTVCPSEJOBUFT.BOBHFSTTIPVMENPUJWBUFTVCPSEJOBUFTCZ JODMVEJOHUIFNJOUIFEFDJTJPONBLJOHQSPDFTT JOGPSNJOHUIFNPG UIFJSQSPHSFTT BOEFOBCMJOHUIFNUPJNQSPWFUIFJSLOPXMFEHFPG BOETLJMMTJOUIFEFMFHBUFEUBTL"OJOGPSNFEFNQMPZFFJTNPSF MJLFMZUPBDDFQUXFMMEFTJHOBUFEUBTLTBOEQFSGPSNUIFNQSPQFSMZ r 3FRVFTUUIFDPNQMFUJPOPG UBTLT#ZQSPWJEJOHUIFOFDFTTBSZ EJSFDUJPOBOEBTTJTUBODF NBOBHFSTDBOTFFUPJUUIBUFNQMPZFFT DPNQMFUFUIFUBTLTBTTJHOFEUPUIFNBDDPSEJOHUPUIFBHSFFEVQPO standards and goals. r 1SPWJEFQFSGPSNBODFUSBJOJOH5IFFŲFDUJWFOFTTPGEFMFHBUJPO EFQFOETPOUIFXPSLFSTBCJMJUZUPQFSGPSNUBTLT.BOBHFSTTIPVME DPOUJOVBMMZFWBMVBUFUIFSFTQPOTJCJMJUJFTEFMFHBUFEBOEQSPWJEF USBJOJOHUPIFMQXPSLFSTPWFSDPNFTIPSUDPNJOHT r 1SPWJEFGFFECBDLUPUIFTVCPSEJOBUF5JNFMZBOEBDDVSBUF GFFECBDLTIPVMECFHJWFOUPTVCPSEJOBUFTPOBSFHVMBSCBTJT5IJT TIPVMEJODMVEFCPUIQPTJUJWFBOEOFHBUJWFGFFECBDLSFHBSEJOH UIFTVCPSEJOBUFTQFSGPSNBODF5IFXBZGPSXBSETIPVMEBMTPCF discussed with the subordinate. 15.8.2 The advantages of delegation 8IFOBQQMJFEQSPQFSMZ EFMFHBUJPOIBTTFWFSBMJNQPSUBOUBEWBOUBHFT r .BOBHFSTXIPUSBJOUIFJSTUBŲUPBDDFQUNPSFSFTQPOTJCJMJUZ BSFJOBHPPEQPTJUJPOUIFNTFMWFTUPBDDFQUNPSFBVUIPSJUZBOE SFTQPOTJCJMJUZGSPNIJHIFSMFWFMTPG NBOBHFNFOU r %FMFHBUJPOFODPVSBHFTFNQMPZFFTUPFYFSDJTFKVEHNFOUBOEBDDFQU BDDPVOUBCJMJUZ5IJTJNQSPWFTTFMGDPOųEFODFBOEXJMMJOHOFTTUPUBLF UIFJOJUJBUJWF BOEJTBHSFBUUSBJOJOHNFUIPE r #FUUFSEFDJTJPOTBSFPGUFOUBLFOCZJOWPMWJOHFNQMPZFFTXIPBSF ADMPTFSUPUIFBDUJPOBOELOPXNPSFBCPVUUIFQSBDUJDBMFYFDVUJPO PG UBTLT r 2VJDLFSEFDJTJPONBLJOHUBLFTQMBDF*GTVCPSEJOBUFTIBWFUIF OFDFTTBSZBVUIPSJUZ UIFZEPOPUIBWFUPSFGFSUPUPQNBOBHFNFOU CFGPSFUBLJOHDFSUBJOEFDJTJPOT 364 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising 15.8.3 Obstacles to effective delegation When one is given something to do and one knows how to do it well, there is a natural tendency to do that task rather than to give it to someone else. However, one of the first things managers need to learn is to delegate those tasks that they know best. By delegating the tasks that one knows best, one can move on to other tasks that will offer further personal growth. Also, it is easy to supervise subordinates who are doing things of which one has detailed knowledge. There are a number of personal and psychological barriers that impede the delegation process for managers. A review of these barriers may be helpful to managers: r "NBOBHFSNBZGFBSUIBUIJTPSIFSPXOQFSGPSNBODFFWBMVBUJPO will suffer if subordinates fail to do a job properly. r 5IFNBOBHFSNBZGFFMUIBUUIFTVCPSEJOBUFXJMMOPUEPUIFKPC as well as he or she can do it. This may stem from a lack of confidence in subordinates and/or the perception that they are not competent enough to do the job. r .BOBHFSTBSFPGUFOUPPJOŴFYJCMFPSEJTPSHBOJTFEUPEFMFHBUF or sometimes they feel that it takes too long to explain to subordinates how to do the job and that they may as well do it themselves. r .BOBHFSTNBZCFSFMVDUBOUUPEFMFHBUFCFDBVTFUIFZGFBSUIFJS subordinates will do the job better than they can. Subordinates, on the other hand, sometimes fear that they will fail and thus expose themselves to disciplinary action. They may try to avoid work responsibilities and risk, and feel that there are no additional rewards for completing a task. Sometimes there is confusion about who is actually responsible for the job. r .BOBHFSTPGUFOJOIFSJUPSHBOJTBUJPOTUIBUIBWFCFFOEFTJHOFECZ others. It is possible that the current organisational design may be an impediment to delegation. If there are problems in delegation, managers should review all the elements of the organising function to determine the root cause of such organisational stumbling blocks. A few organisational impediments to delegation should be mentioned here. First, delegation is not effective if authority and responsibility are not clearly defined. If managers do not know which tasks to delegate and what is expected of them, they will not be able to delegate decision-making to their subordinates. This situation requires a clarification of duties from above or from the manager’s superior. Second, when a manager does not make subordinates accountable for task performance, it is likely that this responsibility will be passed on to others, creating additional staff and communication burdens. Lastly, in the absence of or with poorly developed job descriptions individuals may not have a good understanding of what is expected of them. The next section describes strategies that management can implement in order to overcome obstacles that hinder effective delegation. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 365 PART IV: Organising 15.8.4 Overcoming obstacles to effective delegation Most of the impediments to delegation can be minimised by a greater awareness on the part of the manager that such obstacles exist. One way of overcoming obstacles to effective delegation is to create a culture of continuous learning. Managers should realise that there is more than one way to deal with a situation and they should, therefore, not compel subordinates to apply their methods. Managers should clearly state the outcome that the subordinate must deliver, but should give the subordinate maximum freedom to perform their delegated tasks. When mistakes are made, the subordinate should be assisted with finding solutions to problems. Improved communication between subordinates and managers removes obstacles to delegation. Close communication will reveal the strengths and weaknesses of employees, enabling managers to know which tasks can be appropriately delegated in the knowledge that the job will be done properly. Training helps subordinates to understand their responsibilities, authority and accountability. Subordinates should be made aware of the extent of their contribution in achieving the goals of the organisation. Managers should be able to analyse the organisation’s goals and task requirements and determine to what extent employees are capable of performing the task they wish to delegate. They should be able to trust their employees and have faith in their ability to complete the task successfully. When employees cannot perform the job effectively, the manager’s job is to teach them how to do it. 15.8.5 The delegation process We have discussed how essential the delegation process is to the manager. Similarly, the process is also essential to the growth and wellbeing of subordinates. Delegation does not take place automatically – it is something that a manager must initiate. Conditions are constantly changing in today’s organisations, so it is important for managers to review the changing requirements with their subordinate staff. Of course, in the case of new staff members, more time is required to ensure that they understand their jobs. Figure 15.10 illustrates the steps to be followed in the delegation process. 1 Decide on the tasks to be delegated 2 Decide who should perform the tasks 3 Provide resources 4 Delegate 6 Feedback Figure 15.10: The delegation process 366 CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 5 Step in CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising Each of the steps in the delegation process is discussed in more detail below: 1. Decide on the tasks to be delegated. Tasks of a repetitive nature, or minor chores, can easily be delegated. It is important, however, to delegate more challenging tasks in order to develop employees and create self-confidence. Try delegating the tasks that you know how to do best. 2. Decide who should perform the tasks. In this instance, the time available, the competency required, and the experience of the subordinate should be taken into account. You may also want to rotate certain tasks among employees in order to create a more flexible workforce. 3. Provide sufficient resources for carrying out the delegated task. These resources include people, financial, physical (such as computers) and information resources. Without sufficient resources, the subordinate cannot perform the task. This is the nature of authority. All too often the manager delegates the work to be done, but fails to give the individual control over the necessary resources to perform the task. 4. Delegate the assignment. The delegating manager should brief the employee by providing all the relevant information on the task to be performed, including expected outcomes. He or she will not normally prescribe the methods to be used in performing the task, unless they are not known to the subordinate. Open channels of communication should exist between the manager and the subordinate regarding the delegated tasks. 5. Be prepared to step in, if necessary. Problems could be experienced with the execution of a task if resources are insufficient, or if the subordinate experiences difficulties or lacks performance skills. Managers should be prepared to assist in cases where it may be necessary, and the subordinate should be made aware of this. 6. Establish a feedback system. This is vital because the outcome of the delegation process is important information that serves as input for the next delegation process. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 367 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part IV: Organising CHAPTER SUMMARY 1. Differentiate between the concepts organising, organisation and organisational structure. The term ‘organising’ refers to the process of creating a structure for the organisation that will enable its employees to work effectively towards its vision, mission, goals and objectives. The end result of the organisation process is referred to as the ‘organisation’. The basic framework that illustrates the formal relationships between responsibilities, tasks, and people in the organisation, is referred to as the ‘organisational structure’. 2. Expound on the importance of organising in attaining the goals and objectives of the organisation. Reasons why organising is indispensible for the attainment of goals and objectives in an organisation, include the following: • leads to an organisational structure that indicates clearly who is responsible for which tasks • employees will be expected to account for the outcomes, positive or negative, for that portion of the work directly under their control • ensures that communication is effective and that all information required by managers and employees at all levels of the organisation effectively reaches them • helps managers deploy resources meaningfully • enhances the principle of synergy, effectiveness and quality of the work performed • workload is divided into activities to be performed by an individual or a group of individuals • means that a variety of tasks, procedures and resources can be grouped systematically • related tasks and activities of employees are grouped together meaningfully in specialised sections, departments or business units so that experts in various fields can deal with their specialised tasks • organisational structure is responsible for creating a mechanism to coordinate the activities in the entire organisation. 3. Describe the steps to follow in designing an organisational structure. These steps are: 1. outline the tasks and activities 2. design jobs and assign them to employees 3. define relationships between individual workers and work groups 4. develop an organisational design 5. implement a control mechanism to ensure that the chosen organisational structure enables the organisation to attain its mission and goals. 4. Explain the principles of organising that should be considered in designing an organisational structure. The following principles play an important role in designing an organisational structure: • unity of command 368 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 1:22 PM via UNISA Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Chapter 15 Principles of organising • chain of command • span of control • division of work • standardisation • coordination • responsibility • authority • accountability • power • delegation • downsizing • delayering • flexibility. 5. Explain the term authority. Authority is the right to make decisions, issue orders and use resources. The following are important principles pertaining to authority: • delegation of authority • formal authority • informal authority • scope of authority • line authority • staff authority • micro-management • centralised authority • decentralised authority. 6. Describe the departmentalisation approach to organisational structure. An organisational structure refers to the arrangement of positions into work units or departments and the interrelationship among them within an organisation. Departmentalisation refers to the grouping of related activities into units or departments. Various options in terms of departmentalisation exist, such as the following: • functional departmentalisation • product departmentalisation • location departmentalisation • customer departmentalisation • multiple departmentalisation • matrix departmentalisation • divisional departmentalisation • network structure Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 1:22 PM via UNISA 369 Copyright © 2014. Juta and Company. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced in any form without permission from the publisher, except fair uses permitted under U.S. or applicable copyright law. Part IV: Organising • new venture units • team approach • virtual network approach. 7. Propose recommendations regarding the design or redesign of jobs as a motivational factor. Once the organisational structure is in place, jobs need to be designed to motivate the incumbents of the various positions in the structure to contribute to the organisation’s success. The following principles relate to this: • job design – the process of combining the tasks that each employee is responsible for • job specialisation – narrowing down of activities to simple, repetitive routines • job expansion – making jobs less specialised • job rotation – performing different jobs for a set period of time • job enlargement – job carries a wider range of activities of approximately the same level of skill • job enrichment – the process of increasing the number of tasks and the control over the job. 8. Design and provide implementation guidelines for a delegation process. Delegation is the process whereby managers assign a portion of their workload to others. The following principles are important as far as delegation is concerned: 1. Explain the reason(s) for delegating. 2. Set clear standards and goals. 3. Ensure clarity of authority and responsibility. 4. Involve subordinates. 5. Request the completion of tasks. 6. Provide performance training. 7. Provide feedback to the subordinate. There are numerous advantages and disadvantages associated with delegation. It is important for a manager to be aware of these, as well as of the various obstacles to effective delegation and ways or strategies to overcome obstacles. The delegation process, of which the steps are listed below, provides a framework for managers to assign a portion of their workload effectively to others: Step 1: Decide on the tasks to be delegated Step 2: Decide who should perform the tasks Step 3: Provide sufficient resources for carrying out the delegated task Step 4: Delegate the assignment Step 5: Be prepared to step in if need be Step 6: Establish a feedback system. 370 Contemporary management prinCiples EBSCO Publishing : eBook Collection (EBSCOhost) - printed on 5/3/2018 1:22 PM via UNISA CHAPTER 15 Principles of organising KEY TERMS accountability authority centralisation chain of command coordination decentralisation delayering delegation departmentalisation division of work downsizing high involvement job design network structures new venture units organisation organisational chart organisational design organisational structure organising pooled interdependence power product departmentalisation reciprocal interdependence responsibility sequential interdependence span of control specialisation standardisation team approach unity of command virtual network organisation REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. Differentiate between the concepts ‘organising’, ‘organisation’ and ‘organisational structure’. 2. Organising is one of the fundamental functions of management. Explain the reasons for its importance. 3. To design an organisational structure, managers need to follow a sequence of steps. Describe these steps. 4. Explain the principles of organising that should be considered when designing an organisational structure. 5. Discuss the term ‘authority’ and differentiate between the various kinds of authority. 6. Describe the departmentalisation approach to organisational structure. In your answer, you should refer to the various options in terms of departmentalisation and the circumstances in which each option is appropriate. 7. Explain how a manager can design jobs to motivate incumbents of the different positions in the formal organisational structure so that it contributes towards the organisation’s goals and objectives. 8. Provide an explanation of delegation, by referring to the principles pertaining to effective delegation, the advantages thereof, obstacles associated with effective delegation and the steps involved in the delegation process. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES 371 PART IV: Organising END NOTES 1 [Online] Available: http://www.flysaa.com/. Accessed on 23 May 2013. 2 Thompson, J.D. 1976 in Organisations and Beyond. Rushing, W.A. & Zald, M.N. (Editors). Lexington, Mass: DC Heath, p 41. 3 Lussier, R.N. 2012. Management fundamentals. 5th edition. South-Western: Cengage Learning, p 174. 4 Lussier, op. cit., pp 178–179. 5 Vizard, M. 2001. Above the noise: When computing is an organisational liability – after the September 11 attacks, companies are rethinking decisions to centralise computing. InfoWorld, 23(42): 8. 6 Daft, R.L. 2005. Management. 7th edition. Australia: Thomson, p 347. 7 Lussier, R.N. 2006. Management Fundamentals: Concepts, Applications, Skill Development. 3rd edition. Mason: Thomson South-Western College Publishing, p 204. 8 Lussier, op. cit., p 183. 9 Kennett, M. 2011. Remote control. Management today. March: 46–47. 10 West, M. & Patterson, M. 1998. Profitable personnel. People Management, 4(1): 28–32. 11 Campbell, R.H., Skinner, A.S. & Todd, W.B. (Editors).1976. Adam Smith: An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Oxford: Clarendon Press, p 15. 12 372 Herzberg, F. 1968. Work and the Nature of Man. London: Crosby Lockwood Staples. CONTEMPORARY MANAGEMENT PRINCIPLES Chapter 16 Value chain and e-business Tersia Brevis OPENING CASE The Benetton Group1 The Benetton Group is a global fashion brand based in Treviso, Italy. The name comes from the Benetton family who founded the company in 1965. The Group now employs more than 10 000 people and is represented in 120 countries with an annual turnover exceeding 2 billion euro per year. The company’s core business is their clothing lines, namely the United Colors of Benetton, Undercolors of Benetton, Sisley and Playlife. Their products include womenswear, menswear, childrenswear and underwear and they have expanded into perfumes, stationery, eyewear and travel bags. The Group had its beginning with Giuliana Benetton, one of four siblings, who started knitting brightly coloured wool sweaters from home. In the late fifties through the early sixties, wool sweaters were not available in many colours. Brother Luciano recognised his sister’s talents in producing brightly coloured wool sweaters. With the sale of a bicycle and an accordion for 30 000 lire, they purchased a secondhand hosiery knitting machine and founded the Benetton Group. The other two Benetton siblings (Gilberto and Carlo) were involved from the start of the business. Giuliana put together a collection of brightly coloured sweaters which sold immediately to local stores in their area. The collection soon expanded to 36 pieces. Giuliana soon had to employ some young women whom Luciano had to transport to work. Luciano, being an innovative leader, instituted a number of key initiatives that took Benetton from a small family business to a giant company. Sales were only done through specialised knitwear stores with whom Benetton formed close relations. Next, an incentive discount was offered for cash payment towards inventory on delivery. In a drive to lower production cost, a technique observed in Scotland was introduced to beat raw wool in water for softening it to have a cashmere feel to it. Second hand knitting machines were also bought and refurbished which worked perfectly well. Benetton further concentrated on expanding their production and distribution capabilities. A new dyeing technique they patented enabled them to produce unbleached woollen sweaters on demand through 450 subcontractors. A stateof-the-art warehouse enabled them to efficiently manage inventory and distribution. The acknowledged reasons contributing